OBI VIUKS, FOREIGN, \( 'AMKI-I in iu HILL.) 



but the wrtronc Kepublieans in the 

 i.ooorof 





.-.-- .... !!.. I. "I 



funeral to M the aooouipTioe of Uiu 



J^taM, M ! ?talian historian, born in 

 Milan, iHc, , 1W6; died March 11, lb 

 Aeon be became Professor of 1 n the 



OolleMofSoodrio. He afterward in, bo- 



eame an anleiit Liberal, and on account <-< thu senti- 

 . . ,- . :, ' II,,: M ..I 



Lombard* in the Seventeenth Century" was im- 

 prisoned ror three years by the Austrian Government 

 - i .1 ) i . ..i i" i. .-i ' i - 

 I ivaaoBoav^Maivhenta 1'uMvrla (!& 

 Storia Uaiveraale" (1697) has been translat< 

 fioflMi. French, Danish, and Gen -^ his 



otftor worka are : - Storia degli lul. a- 

 lory of Italian Literal. 



, ,. - . . . "Milano, Storia de 

 i' -. . , i-;; . "<-r,,m>t'.rm dellu In 

 drpoodonu Italia .-n.-nio Storioo at 



Promea-i 8pol,o la Lombsrdio nel Sen \\ 11 



(IS74>: - Dooatood Kr> ->ti di Him. 



with C. Korida (1876); "Carstter; Ibbl): 



BooaarU et le droil penal " ( 1886). 



Carrier*, Morit*. a German philosopher, born in 

 Oriedei, Howe, March .' . in Muni, < 



. ., 



Iln, and spent some years in Italy, where he devoted 

 himself to avthetics amid the master works of art 

 Kcturning to Uennany, he became a privat docent at 

 the University of G Jensen, and in 1849 was made 

 professor. In 1869 he went to Munich, and lectured 

 on esthetics in the university, and later also in the 

 Academy of Arts on the history of art 1 le acquired 

 lame as a philosopher, starting as a Hegelian, of 

 original views, and diverging more and more from 

 his master. His fin* essays in this field were u Vorn 

 GoisUiehea" and -Die Religion in Ihrctn U 

 both published in 1841. In 1843 appeared 

 KoUierDomalsrreiedeutMheKirche.^ His transla- 

 tion of the letters of Ab41ard and Heloiso passed 

 through several editions. Carrier's system of philos- 

 ophy Bought to reconcile pantheistic conceptions of 

 tne world with deism. HUohief works ure " Die 

 bisohe Wrltanschsuengen der Rcformations- 

 Reliciose Reden nndBetraclituugen 

 i Volk"; -Das Wesen und die Form- n der 





Povsie"; Aosthetik " ; - Die Kunst im Zusammen- 

 hsn/ dor Kulturcntwickelutu' und die Id. -ale der 

 MeiMohheit " : - Krhsuunjp.1 henkende"; 



and - Die sittlicbe Weifeordnung." He also wrote an 

 : N'ai dor Girondisten," 

 an eMiy on Cromwell, si he Qeiateshelden 



im Kls* 



OMsa, WUllaai Uist Baldwin, sn Knirlish writer, bora 

 in 1WI ; died in Hayes, Middlesex, Deo. 9, 1895. Mr. 

 Galas was a well-known scholar whose 

 of Uoaoral Biography" (1867) passed through four 

 editions, the latest, revised and enlarged, sppelrin* in 

 l*l. He was also the author of 



of Edward the Confessor to the Death of King John " 



v.<l. with li. B. Woodward, of an "Encyclo- 



pe>Jis of Chropology* H87S). His translation of 



^M*>. - Hirtory of the Reformation was is- 



JJf'"!- J 1 * 1 ^ English msthcmatician, bora in 



fwry. Aug. 1. 1821 ; died in Cambridge, 



Jan. ff. latfc. |{ e WM rradnaUMl mt Trimtv < v,ll..,rf. 



r. aastnior wrangler, was soon called to the 

 ntom years was a conveyancer at 

 jnn. Wheo the Sadlerian professor 

 HMwrnaoataJbiishedst CsmVidm. in IMS. 



he was one of 

 his abilities 

 de- 



_ many 



-~~ VVM.U*. His talents 

 ortde ieW. sod he was learned in many 



-a: ^_.~._ ' wiaiujnii ne was on 



Uiam in his Drofewiom snd his abil 



oi iMOfiriasd and testified to by 



2* and medals received from ni 



to yarioos eoontries. Hin tal 



*"7 over a arid* teUL and he wa IMTH^I \ n 



sciences besides his own. A collected 

 works is in proceitft <>t j-ubli. .. 



Pruss. ' parati- JM, 



ry Tlftttim; <.n Kliij 

 i'n t. MI-III..II-> <>n 

 Kllij.t. 



Quuutics" (l7t ngUj and 1' 



run- 1). 



Ohesney. Sir 0org Tomkyni, m. 

 ii inao; di< 



KlijTM.. . . lie WJL- 



in 1886, and IP.,, ^ President 



Koyul ImliJiv Liege. ll 



"I ' ln.l.:ili i 



miration in India 1 ' (IN 



u Volunteer M (1 - 

 i-lM " A 

 (1871); 1 



. 

 anonymouhlv tn>t in Biaokwoodv M^' 



into a liltl, 

 1-hKt which is said to have sold to th,- nm 



Christian, Ewan. an Kn^li.^li arr).. 

 1814; tlu-'t in II;. 

 Was educaU'd at ( hri-tV ll"-|.it:tl, an-i 



on 1 1 all -tim bored Bouses" 



1887 he traveled on the Contitu u- 



he established liimx-lt'in M. 



was the parish rliun-h of Hildenboroug 



. and Inn tii>t iiui<irtant c-hr<-li 



<l<-]>artm<-nt in \\ hi.-li he became rmi: 



arborough. H. n-Mop-d t 



of Carlisle and Southwell unwell as s- 



London Citv i-huri-lu-s. His ino.-t im; 



ttonal P'-rtrait <ialli-rv, alj 

 (Jallery in London, he dil not live to M . 

 From l^.Vi he la-td the \^[ ol 



,-ti<-al ('onimi--i'.rnTi und hi 

 appointments. He was President of ti 

 British Architects from 1884 to 1880, and r 

 the Institute ^>ld medal in 1887. 



Churchill. Randolph Henry Spenocr. -tales- 



man, iM.rn in Blenheim l'al;i 

 I.ondiin. -Fan. -J4. 1^'.'.'.. He was the tic: 

 seventh Duke of Marl borough and of a dim 

 the Marquis of Lon- 

 donderry, who was a 

 irrand-nicce of l.'-rd 

 <'a>tlercagh. 

 Randolph Churehill 

 was educated at 

 School and 

 College, <> 



Eton, where he was a 

 contemporary ot 

 thur Bulfour and I. "id 

 mani- 

 fested liis erii TL'V and 



lity in frol'i' 



pranks, and at the uni- 



nt on 



a gay and reckless ca- 



.it applied him- 

 self U) study in "rdi r 



took 

 honom in n, 



tory and jurisprudence. He trav. ]d thr- 

 rope, spending much time in Austria. H 



-n a military or a diplomatic car- 

 no opportunity in either for Un- 

 less energies, embraced Uie char, 

 by the oissolution of Parliament early 

 into politics. He was elected to }*''"' 



ituency of Woodstock. A it wtw a farm 

 boroutrh, he was not called upon to unfold ! 

 cal principles, nor did he profess any e 

 ' n to dladstone. Though his father 



