402 ROSENGARTEN—EARE OF CRAWFORD’S MS. HISTORY. [Dec. 18, 
tions on the whole and several plans drawn under the direction of 
his lordship. 
No. 1. The journal of all the motions made by the Imperial and 
Turkish armies, from the opening of the campaign in 1739 until 
the peace of Belgrade; together with a plan of operations. ... . 
No. 2. A description of the battle of Krotzka, .... with 
observations . . . . by the late Earl of Craufurd. 
Chapter 2. A short introduction to the siege of Belgrade; a 
journal of the siege, wrote under the direction of the Earl of Crau- - 
furd. 
Chapter 3. . . . A journal of his voyage up the Danube from 
Belgrade to Vienna... .. 
Book IV, Chapter 1. His journey to Milan and Genoa in 1743, 
when he joined the Austrian army commanded by Marshal Traun 
. his campaign of 1743 in Germany and the battle of Det- 
Chapter 2... . The campaign in Flanders in 1744... . his 
opinion at a council of war. .... 
Chapter 3. His remarks on the opening of the campaign in 
1745, and his account of the battle of Fontenoy. 
Chapter 4. His conduct toward suppressing the rebellion in 
Scotland. The campaign of 1746 in the Netherlands, with a par- 
ticular instance of the respect shown to his lordship by Marshal 
Saxe... . his remarks on the battle of Roticoux. A short account 
of the campaign of 1747 in the Netherlands, and of that of 1748. 
The author of the maps, both in this Life and in the MS. volumes, 
is Henry Képp, for whom the Life was printed. He was secretary 
and draughtsman for Lord Crawford, although Rolt says in his Life 
of Crawford, on p. 87, that ‘‘the Earl’s greatest amusement (in his 
periods of inactivity) was in revising his journal . . . . making 
observations of what he had seen, and in embellishing the plans of 
the marches and encampments of which he had been a spectator.’’ 
Rolt says (p. 116, etc.) that he sent eleven horses to Vienna, 
following (on the advice of Prince Cantemir, the Russian Ambassa- 
dor to England) five months later, with three servants and as many 
horses and three friends, who were desirous of acting as volunteers. 
. One of the maps, that of the operations on the Danube in 
tee campaign of 1739, is dedicated to General Oglethorpe by 
Henry Képp; three others printed in the Life, and identical with 
those in the MS. volumes, are dedicated to the Earl of Loudoun: 
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