THE STORY OF THE NATIONS 



A SERIES OF POPULAR HISTORIES. 



Each Volume is furnislied -vrttli Maps, Illustrations, and Index. Large Crown 

 8vo, fancy cloth, gold lettered, or Library Edition, dark cloth, burnished red 

 top, 5s. each.— Or may be had in half Persian, cloth sides, gilt tops; Price 

 on application. 



By Arthur Gil- 



Ho 



Emily 



1. Rome. Ijy Arthur GiLMAN, M. A. 



2. The Jews. ByPro . J. K. Hosmeu. 



3. Germany. By Rev. S. Baring- 



GouLu, M.A. 



4. Carthage. By Prof. Alfred J. 



Church. 



5. Alexander's Empire. By Pror" 



J. P. Mahaffy. 



6. The Moors in Spain. By Stanley 



Lane-Poole. 



7. Ancient Egypt. By Prof. George 



Rawlinson. 



8. Hungary. By Prof. Arminius 



Vamb^kv. 

 g. The Saracens. 

 man, M.A. 



10. Ireland. By the 



Lawless. 



11. Chaldea. ByZ^NAioE A. Ragozin. 



12. The Goths. By Henry Bradley. 



13. Assyria. ByZENAiDEA. Ragozin. 



14. Turkey. By Stanley Lane-Poole. 



15. Holland. By Prof. J. E. Thorold 



Rogers. 



16. Mediaeval France. By Gustave 



Masson. 



17. Persia, By S. G. W. Benjamin. 



18. Phoenicia. Bv Prof. G. Rawlinson. 

 Media. By Zenaide A. Ragozin. 

 The Hansa Towns. By Helen 



ZiMMERN. 



21. Early Britain, By Prof. Alfred 



J. Church. 



22. The Barbary Corsairs. By 



Stanley Lane-Pcole. 



23. Russia. By W. R. Morfill, M.A. 



24. 1 he Jews under the Romans. By 



W. D. Morrison. 



25. Scotland. By John Mackintosh, 



LL.D. 



26. Switzerland. By Mrs Lina Hug 



an-l R. Stead. 



27. Mexico, By Susan Hale. 



28. Portug-al. By H. Morse Stephens. 



29. The Normans. By Sarah Orne 



Jewett. 



30. The Byzantine Empire. By C. 



W. C. Oman. 

 Sicily: Phoenician, Greek and 



Roman. By the late Prof. E. A. 



Freeman. 

 The Tuscan Republics. By Bella 



Duffy. 

 Poland. By W. R. Morfill, M.A. 

 Parthia. By Prof. George 



Rawlinson. 

 The Australian Commonwealth. 



By Grevili e Tregarthen. 



19, 



31- 



32. 



35 



43' 



44. 



45' 



Spain. By H, E, Watts, 



Japan. By David Murray, Ph.D. 



South Africa. By George M. 

 Theal. 



Venice. By Alethea Wiel. 



The Crusades, ijy T. A. Archer 

 and C. L. Kingsford. 



Vedic India, By Z. A, Ragozin, 

 42. The West Indies and the Span- 

 ish Main By James Rodway, 



Bohemia. Py C. Edmund 

 Maurice. 



The Balkans. By W. Miller, 

 M.A. 



Canada. By Sir J. G. Bourinot, 

 LL.D. 



46. British India. By R. W. Frazer, 



LL.B. 



47. Modern France. By Andk6 Le 



Bon. 



48. The Franks, By Lewis Sergeamt. 



49. Austria. By Sidney Whitman. 



50. Modern England. Before the Re- 



formBili. By Justin McCarthy. 



51. China. By Prof. R. K. Douglas. 



52. Modern England. From the 



Reform Bill to the Present Time. 

 By Justin McCarthy. 



53. Modern Spain. By Martin A. S. 



Hume. 



54. Modern Italy. By Pietro Orsi. 

 55 Norway. By H. H. Boyesen. 



56. Wales. By O. M. Edwards. 



57. Mediaeval Home. By W.Miller, 



M.A. 



58. The Papal Monarchy. By 



William Barry, D.D, 



59. Medisval India under Moham- 



medan Rule. By Stan ley 

 Lane-Poole. 



60. Buddhist India. By Prof. T. W. 



Rhys-Davids. 



61. Parliamentary Eng-land. By 



Edward Jenks, M.A. 



62. Mediaeval England. By Mary 



Bateson. 



63. ihe Coming of Parliament. By 



L, Cecil Jane. 



64. The Story of Greece. From tlie 



Earliest Times to a.d. 14. By 

 E. S Shuckburgh. 

 /'I Pj'cpay-ation. 

 The Story of Greece. From the Roman 

 Occupation to a.d. 145J. By E. S. 

 Si[L-LKia'Ki,n. 

 The Story of the Roman Empire (b.c. 

 -'q to a.d. 476). By H. Stuart 

 Junes. 



London: T. FISHLR UNWIN, I'aikrnoster S..>uare, V.X 



