1 84 BOOKS ON FALCONRY. 



It has not been translated. It is divided into two parts, of 

 which the first contains descriptions of the different kinds of 

 hawks, while the second relates to the treatment of their 

 diseases. 



330. '^IspaKOfTo^LP els larpsLap ogviiov^ Kai e\q 

 Koirag kol KpM/ia, olov t,ayavo)Pi (paXKOplcDV^ 



TTETpiTCOP, lepaKLMP, T^OVpaKlCJP KttL O^VTTTSQVyoiP. 



Printed by Hammer-Purgstall, in his Falknerklee i^o. 112), 

 pp. 81-85, "^^ 3, commentary by von Eichenfeld, pp. 86-88. 

 The MS., in semi-modern Greek, is preserved in the Imperial 

 Library at Vienna. It is virtually an extract from the last- 

 named, and is perhaps the second Greek treatise on the subject 

 referred to by Gesner in his work De Avibus. 



1Ru06ian» 



331. qAPfl AJEKCBfl MHXAHiOBIiqA KIOirA OArO- 

 JEMCfl yPfl^HIIK'L : IIOBOE yiOafEIIIE DA yCTPOEHIE 



HHHA coKOJbiiiiqAro iiyiPi. lees. 



Tsarya Aleksyiya Mi^ailovicha Knigha glago- 

 lemsya uryddnik' : ndvoe ulozhhiie 71a ustroenie china 

 sokolnichova pMi. 1 668."^ 



Of the Tsar Alexis Michaelovltch The Book 

 CALLED THE Law : New Rules and Regulations for the 

 Practice of Falconry. 1668. 



Of all the Russian Sovereigns whose names in history have 



* The system of transliteration here adopted is phonetic; but such that the 

 words may be easily found by any one able to use a Russian dictionary. The 

 vowels are pronounced as in Italian ; the consonants as in English. The hard 

 sign is indicated in the body of a word by doubling the consonant ; the soft sign, 

 when necessary, by <>=. The guttural German d) is so written ; the thick i ( I>I) 

 is written i. 



