Footnote 691: Law III. of 1848, § 13. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, I., 94.[(Back)]

Footnote 692: Law III. of 1848, § 37. Ibid., I., 97.[(Back)]

Footnote 693: Law VII. of 1885 altering the Organization of the Table of Magnates. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, I., 100-105.[(Back)]

Footnote 694: The number is, of course, variable. The old Table of Magnates was a very large body, consisting of more than 800 members.[(Back)]

Footnote 695: Law V. of 1848 concerning the Election of Representatives, § 5. Dodd, Modern Constitutions, I., 105.[(Back)]

Footnote 696: On the status of the Croatian kingdom see p. [507].[(Back)]

Footnote 697: It is but fair to say that in Hungary proper the Magyar percentage in 1900 was 51.4.[(Back)]

Footnote 698: Of the 413 representatives of Hungary at Budapest in 1909, but 26 were non-Magyars, and after the elections of June, 1910, but 7.[(Back)]

Footnote 699: Equivalent to the completion of one-half of the course of secondary instruction.[(Back)]

Footnote 700: On the question of the Hungarian suffrage see S. Aberdam, La crise hongroise, in Revue Politique et Parlementaire, Oct. 10, 1909, and Les récentes crises politiques en Hongrie, in Revue des Sciences Politiques, May-June and July-Aug., 1912; G. Louis-Jaray, Le suffrage universel en Hongrie, in Questions Diplomatiques et Coloniales, February 16, 1909; R. Henry, La crise hongroise, ibid., June 1, 1910; J. Mailath, Les élections générales hongroises, ibid., Aug. 16, 1910, and The Hungarian Elections, in Contemporary Review, Oct., 1910; F. de Gerando, Le radicalisme hongroise, in Revue Politique et Parlementaire, July, 1911; A. Duboscq, La réforme électorale en Hongrie, in Questions Diplomatiques et Coloniales, July 1, 1912; S. Huszadik, La Hongrie contemporaine et le suffrage universel (Paris, 1909); and B. Auerbach, Races et nationalités en Autriche-Hongrie (2d ed., Paris, 1910).[(Back)]