2 BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



THE STORY OF THE CAMPAIGN OF SEBASTOPOL. 



Written in the Camp. By Lieut. -Col. E. BRUCE HAMLEY. With Illus- 

 trations drawn in Camp by the Author. 8vo, 21s. 



" We strongly recommend this ' Story of the Campaign ' to all who would gain a just comprehension 

 of this tremendous struggle. Of this we are perfectly sure, it is a book unlikely to be ever superseded. 

 Its truth is of that simple and startling character which is sure of an immortal existence ; nor is it paying 

 the gallant author too high a complement to class this masterpiece of military history with the most pre- 

 cious of those classic records which have been bequeathed to us by the great writers of antiquity who 

 took part in the wars they have described."— j(7te Fr«^. 



THE INVASION OF THE CPJMEA: 



Its Origin, and Account of its Progress down to the Death of Lord Raglan. 

 By ALEXANDER WILLIAM KIXGLAKE, M.P. Vols. I. and II., bringing 

 the Events down to the Close of the Battle of the Alma. Fourth Edition. 

 Price 32s. To be completed in 4 vols. 8vo. 



TEN YEARS OF IMPERIALISM IN FRANCE. 



Impressions of a " Flaneur." Second Edition. In Svo, price 9s. 



" There has not been published for many a day a more remarkable book on France than this, which 

 professes to be the impressions of a Flaneur. . . . It has all the liveliness and sparkle of a work written 

 only for amusement ; it has all the solidity and weight of a State paper ; and we expect for it not a little 

 political influence as a fair, full, and masterly statement of the Imperial policy— the first and only good 

 account that has been given to Europe of the Kapoleonic system now in force."— TtTOe*. 



FLEETS AND NAVIES. 



By Captain CHARLES HAMLET, R.M. Originally published in 'Black- 

 wood's Magazine.' Crown Svo, 6s. 



HISTORY OF GREECE UNDER FOREIGN DOMINATION. 

 By GEORGE FINLAY, LL.D., Athens— viz. : 



Greece under the Romans, b.c. 146 to a.d. 717. A Historical View of 

 the Condition of the Greek Nation from its Conquest by the Romans until 

 the Extinction of the Roman Power in the East. Second Edition, 16s. 



History of the Byzantine Empire, a.d. 716 to 1204 ; and of the 

 Greek Empire of Niciiea and Constantinople, a.d. 1204 to 1453. 2 vols., 

 £1, 7s. 6d. 



Medieval Greece and Trebizond. The History of Greece, from its Con- 

 quest by the Crusaders to its Conquest by the Turks, a.d. 1204 to 1566 ; 

 and the History of the Empire of Trebizond, a.d. 1204 to 1461. 12s. 



Greece under Othoman and Venetian Domination, a.d. 1453 to 

 1821. 10s. 6d. 



History of the Greek Revolution. 2 vols. Svo, £1, 4s. 



" His book is worthy to take its place among the remarkable works on Greek history, which form 

 one of the chief glories of English scholarship. The history of Greece is but half told without it."— 

 London Guardian. 



THE NATIONAL CHARACTER OF THE ATHENIANS. 



By JOHN BROWN PATTERSON. Edited from the Author's revision, by 

 Professor PILLANS, of the University of Edinburgh. With a Sketch of 

 his Life. Crown 8vo, 4s. 6d. 



STUDIES IN ROMAN LAW. 



With Comparative Views of the Laws of France, England, and Scotland. By 

 Lord MACKENZIE, one of the Judges of the Court of Session in Scotland. 

 Svo, 12s. Second Edition. 



" We know not in the English language where else to look for a history of the Roman law so clear, and, 

 at the same time, so short .... More improving reading, both for the general student and for the 

 lawyer, we cannot well imagine ; and there arc few, even among learned professional men, who will not 

 gather some novel information from Lord Mackenzie's simple pages."— ioiido/i Bevieui. 



THE EIGHTEEN CHRISTIAN CENTURIES. 



By the Rev. JAMES WHITE. Fourtli Edition, with an Analytical Table of 

 Contents, and a Copious Index. Post Svo, 7s. 6d. 



THE MONKS OF THE WEST, 



From St Benedict to St Bernard. By the COUNT DE MONTALEMBERT. 

 Authorised Translation. 2 vols. Svo, 21s. 



