i8 
PUBLICATIONS OF 
CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF GREEK HISTORY. 
Accompanied by a short narrative of events, with references to the 
sources of information and extracts from the ancient authorities, by 
Carl Peter. Translated from the German by G. Chawner, M.A., 
Fellow and Lecturer of King’s College, Cambridge. Demy 4to. ictf. 
HISTORY OF THE COLLEGE OF ST JOHN 
THE EVANGELIST, 
by Thomas Baker, B.D., Ejected Fellow. Edited by John E. B. 
Mayor, M.A., Fellow of St John’s. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. 24 s. 
“To antiquaries the book will be a source 
of almost inexhaustible amusement, by his- 
torians it will be found a work of considerable 
service on questions respecting our social 
progress in past times ; and the care and 
thoroughness with which Mr Mayor has dis- 
charged his editorial functions are creditable 
to his learning and industry.” — Athenaeum. 
“ The work displays very wide reading, 
and it will be of great use to members of the 
college and of the university, and, perhaps, 
of still greater use to students of English 
history, ecclesiastical, political, social, literary 
and academical , who have hitherto had to be 
content with ‘Dyer.’” — Academy. 
HISTORY OF NEPAL, 
translated by Munshi Shew Shunker Singh and Pandit Shri 
Gunanand ; edited with an Introductory Sketch of the Country and 
People by Dr D. Wright, late Residency Surgeon at Kathmandu, 
and with facsimiles of native drawings, and portraits of Sir Jung 
Bahadur, the King of Nepal, &c. Super- royal 8vo. Price 21 j-. 
'‘The Cambridge University Press have 
'done well in publishing this work. Such 
translations are valuable not only to the his- 
torian but also to the ethnologist; Dr 
Wright’s Introduction is based on personal 
inquiry and observation, is written intelli- 
gently and candidly, and adds much to the 
value of the volume. The coloured litho- 
graphic plates are interesting.” — Nature. 
“The history has appeared at a very op- 
portune moment... The volume... is beautifully 
printed, and supplied with portraits of Sir 
Jung Bahadoor and others, and with excel- 
lent coloured sketches illustrating Nepaulese 
architecture and religion.” — Examiner. 
SCHOLAE ACADEMICAE 
Some Account of the Studies at the English Universities in the 
Eighteenth Century. By Christopher Wordsworth, M.A., 
Fellow of Peterhouse ; Author of “Social Life at the English 
Universities in the Eighteenth Century.” Demy 8vo. cloth. 15s. 
“The general object of Mr Wordsworth’s “Only those who have engaged in like la- 
book is sufficiently apparent from its title. bours will be able fully to appreciate the 
sustained industry and conscientious accuracy 
discernible in every page. ... Of the whole 
volume it may be said that it is a genuine 
service rendered to the study of University 
history, and that the habits of thought of any 
writer educated at either seat of learning in 
the last century will, in many cases, be far 
better understood after a consideration of the 
materials here collected.” — Academy. 
He has collected a great quantity of minute 
and curious information about the working 
of Cambridge institutions in the last century, 
with an occasional comparison of the corre- 
sponding state of things at Oxford.... To a 
great extent it is purely a book of reference, 
and as such it will be of permanent value 
for the historical knowledge of English edu- 
cation and learning .” — Saturday Review. 
THE ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY OF THE 
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGES OF CAMBRIDGE, 
By the late Professor Willis, M.A. With numerous Maps, Plans, 
and Illustrations. Continued to the present time, and edited 
by John Willis Clark, M.A., formerly Fellow 
of Trinity College, Cambridge. [In the Press. 
London : Cambridge Warehouse, 1 7 Faiernoster Row. 
