INDEX OF VOLUME I
(The Names of Books and Newspapers are in Italics.)
- Aerenthal (Count) and the bombs, [206].
- — — and Bosnia, [204].
- Agram, see [Zagreb].
- Albania, part of, offered to the Serbs, [251].
- Albanian activities, [72] et seq., [219].
- — language, [13], [14].
- Alexander (King of Serbia), the lamentable, [194] et seq.
- — (King of Yugoslavia), [232] et seq.
- — (Pope), [40].
- — (Prince), the frigid, [117], [122].
- Alphabet, Slav, [29].
- Andrássy (Count Julius), his confidence, [290].
- Apponyi on mad ambitions, [295].
- Arad and the Serbs, [117]-[118].
- — Executions at, [125].
- — the Magyar slaughter-house, [235] et seq.
- Arbeiter-Zeitung on Berchtold, [229].
- Austria and Macedonia, [220].
- — — some atrocities, [225] et seq.
- — — some intrigues (and see [Habsburgs]), [25], [30], [118], [176], [177], [187], [193] et seq.
- Avenire, a newspaper, [67].
- Bach, his "huzzars," [127].
- Bačka, [62], [72] et passim.
- Bahr (H.), his Dalmatinische Reise, [201].
- Banat, the frontier regiments, [82] et seq.
- — German colonists, [82] et seq.
- — Migrants to, [62], [72].
- — Revolt in, [71], [121].
- — Serbs and Roumanians, [188] et seq.
- Baranja, [62] et passim.
- Barbulescu (Prof.) on Macedonian language, [166].
- Bartlett (C. A. H.) on Treaty of London, [246], [247].
- Battisti, how he died, [284].
- Beaumont, of the Daily Telegraph, [284].
- Bečirović, the Macedonian schoolmaster, [169].
- Belgrade, [7], [62], [149], [243]-[244], [260].
- Belloc (H.), his pronouncements, [163], [164].
- Beneš (Dr. E.), his Détruisez l'Autriche-Hongrie, [192].
- — — in Italy, [288]-[289].
- Berchtold (Count) and the Great War, [213]-[214], [229].
- Berlin Congress, [24]-[25].
- Bilinski (Dr.), his tears, [228].
- Bismarck on the Balkans, [24].
- Bissolati, the gallant Minister, [287].
- Blackwood's Magazine, quoted, [10].
- Bogomile heresy, [37], [45] et seq., [126].
- Bonchocat, a murderer's testimony, [291].
- Boppe, the French Minister, on the Serbs, [260].
- Bosnia and the Magyars, [235].
- — and Michael, [148].
- — and the Powers, [153], [177], [204].
- — under the Turks, [56], [117], [176].
- — see [Tvertko].
- Boué (Ami), his La Turquie d'Europe, [138]-[139].
- Brailsford (H. N.), his Macedonia, [72]-[73], [198], [199], [219].
- Branković, the despot, [47], [58].
- — George (a descendant), [71]-[72].
- — Vuk, [48], [62].
- Bratti (R.), his La Fine della Serenissima, [39].
- Bresse (L.), his Le Monténégro Inconnu, [210].
- Brkić (Patriarch), his description, [80], [277].
- Bulgarian language, [13]-[14], [34], [80]-[81], [139], [140], [166].
- — origins, [33] et seq.
- Bulgars, attitude to Serbia and Yugoslavia, [11] et seq., [44]-[45], [149], [166] et seq., [193].
- — enter the War, [248] et seq.
- Bulletin Hellénique, quoted, [37].
- Bulwer (Sir H.), his advice, [158].
- Bunjevci, [86] et seq.
- Buric, the patriotic merchant, [262].
- — (Vassilje), his brother, [268]-[269].
- Buxton (Leland), his Black Sheep of the Balkans, [289], [290].
- — — his unfortunate proposal, [221].
- Čabrinović and the Sarajevo crime, [216], [218].
- Čačak and Miloš, [137].
- Cahun (L.), his Introduction à l'Histoire de l'Asie, [36].
- Čarnoević (Arsenius), the Patriarch, [72] et seq.
- Cattalinich, his Memorie, [92].
- Cattaro, see [Kotor].
- Cavour, [66], [123], [140] et seq.
- Chiala (Gl.), his Letters of Count Cavour, [141].
- Chopin (J.), his Le Complot de Sarajevo, [218].
- Christić (Annie) on Serb women in the War, [260].
- Christoff, see [Tartaro-Bulgar].
- Cippico (Antonio), his arguments, [144]-[145].
- Čiprovtsi, its outbreak, [71].
- Clergy in Croatia, [129].
- — in Czecho-Slovakia, [130] et seq.
- Codelli (Baron), his rules, [96].
- Constantine (King) and the Serbs, [252]-[253].
- Corfu, Declaration of, [271]-[272].
- — Serbs at, [270].
- Crijević (Elias), the renegade, [65].
- Croats, their history, [25], [29], [30]-[31], [38], [40], [46] et seq., [69], [112] et seq., [119] et seq., [125].
- — relations with Serbs, [177], [187]-[188], [205], [239] et seq., [254] et seq., [275] et seq.
- Čuk (Madame), her good work, [228].
- Čuplikac (Colonel), the voivoda, [119], [123].
- Cvijić (Prof.), [14], [36], [175].
- Cyril (Saint), [29].
- Czecho-Slovakia, disapproval of, [10].
- — its national Church, [130] et seq.
- Daily Telegraph, quoted, [284].
- Dalmatia, its Christianity, [29].
- — suggested settlers, [94].
- — and Venice, [40], [41], [47], [50] et seq., [64].
- — see [Morlaks] and [Tommaseo].
- Dandolo (Vincenzo), [100].
- Danica, the brotherhood, [113].
- Danilo (Crown Prince), the financier, [201] et seq., [209] et seq., [264], [276].
- — (Prince), his death, [145]-[146].
- Deak (Francis), his liberal methods, [143], [160].
- Debidour, his Histoire diplomatique, [154].
- Democracy of Serbs, [61], [233].
- Devil, see [Alphabet].
- Devine (A.), the apologist, [204], [211].
- D'Intignano (F. M.), his I Morlacchi, [54].
- Djakovica, some years ago, [73].
- Dobrila (Bishop George), [142].
- Dolci, his fate, [99], [100].
- Drašković, his Exhortation, [112].
- Drljević (Dr. S.) on Danilo, [209].
- — — on Montenegrin Red Cross, [274].
- Dubourdieu, [104]-[105].
- Dubrovnik, her dissolution, [101].
- — her glory, [41], [48]-[49], [64] et seq.
- — her moral height, [91].
- — her poets, [54], [65]-[66].
- Durham (Edith), her High Albania, [73].
- — — her partiality, [206].
- — — in praise of Albanians, [198], [259].
- — — her Twenty Years of Balkan Tangle, [206].
- Dušan (Emperor), [26].
- — — his ambitions, [43].
- — — his Code, [43].
- — — his greatness, [42], [69].
- — — his sister, [68].
- Eliot (Sir Charles), his Turkey in Europe, [36], [167].
- England in the Adriatic, [104] et seq.
- Essad Pasha, at Scutari, [211].
- Evans (Sir Arthur), [39], [176].
- Exarchate, its beginning, [159].
- — and the Serbs, [168].
- Ex-King Nicholas of Montenegro and his Court, [217], [270].
- Fiume, see [Rieka].
- Francis Ferdinand (Archduke), his murder, [212]-[213].
- — — — various mysteries, [214] et seq.
- Francis Joseph, [123], [133], [143], [162].
- Frankopan (Christopher), [71].
- Frederick Barbarossa, [37].
- Friedjung (Prof.) and the forgeries, [205]-[206].
- Gaj (Ljudevit), the patriot, [112] et seq., [119].
- Gatalo (Danilo) exposes Nikita, [266].
- Gauvain exposes Nikita, [269].
- Gavrilović (Dr. Michael), [16], [98].
- Gazette de Lausanne, quoted, [266].
- George (Prince), his ways, [231]-[232].
- Georgov (Prof.), [35].
- German colonists, [82] et seq.
- Germans favoured by Habsburgs, [127]-[128], [143].
- — appraised by Haeckel, [243].
- Geschichte der Franzfelder Gemeinde, [82].
- Ghevgeli, a typical Macedonian town, [168] et seq.
- Giacich on Rieka, [122].
- Giesl (Baron) and the Montenegrins, [209], [211]-[212].
- Gladstone and Montenegro, [210].
- — his preface, [152].
- — and Strossmayer, [133].
- Glagolitic, [29], [30], [63]-[64], [120].
- Goad (H. E.), Comments on, [18]-[19].
- Gopčević, his bad book, [178].
- Gorica, [39], [127], [278].
- Gortchakoff, his inspirations, [153], [177].
- — his instructions, [159].
- Greek in Macedonian churches, [155] et seq., [218].
- — — schools, [137] et seq. [169].
- Gregory (Pope), quoted, [29].
- Grimm (Jacob), his enthusiasm, [109].
- Grün (Anastasius), the Slovene, [112].
- Gundulić, his works, [65]-[66].
- Habsburgs and the Croats (and see [Rieka]), [69], [127].
- — and the Magyars, [119] et seq.
- — and Montenegro (and see [Lovčen]), [201]-[202], [209], [211]-[212].
- — and the Pragmatic Sanction, [78].
- — and the Serbian regiments, [82].
- — and the Serbs, [213].
- — and the Slovenes (and see [Triest]), [127]-[128].
- Hajduković, Nikita's Minister, [268].
- Hajić (Dr.), against grammar, [109].
- Hartwig, the Russian Minister, [214]-[215].
- Hegedüs, the villain, [235] et seq.
- Heiduks, [59] et seq.
- Hektorović, the famous poet, [66].
- Helen (Queen), [42].
- Herbert (Hon. Aubrey, M.P.), considers the Magyars, [236].
- — — considers the Magyars' neighbours, [192].
- Herzegović (Achmet Pasha), [56].
- Herzegovina, the dialect (and see [Bosnia]), [65].
- Hibben (Paxton), on Venizelos, [252].
- Hodges (Colonel), [112].
- Homer, on atrocities, [14].
- Hoste (Commodore), [104], [105].
- Hupka (Lieut.-Colonel) and Lovčen, [263].
- Hussarek (Baron), his optimism, [297]-[298].
- Hussein, the Dragon, [117].
- Hvar, bombarded by Russians, [101].
- — in the Middle Ages, [50], [66].
- — revolts against Napoleon, [102].
- Ignatieff (Count), and the Exarchate, [159].
- Iorga (Prof.), his suggestion, [189], [190].
- Irby (Miss), benefactress and traveller, [12], [152].
- — — her The Turks, the Greeks and the Slavons, [152], [176].
- Isonzo, important river (and see [Mazzini]), [39], [102].
- Istria in distress, [69], [70].
- — its population, [141]-[142].
- Italianized party, [94], [108], [115].
- Italians, their Austrian testimonials, [282] et seq.
- — help the Serbs, [265].
- — Surrendering to, [281], [285] et seq.
- Italians, their union, [140] et seq.
- — against Yugoslavia, [243], [245] et seq., [261], [282] et seq.
- Ivanović, the Russian, [126].
- Jeglić (Prince-Bishop), [30], [298], [299].
- Jellačić (J. J.), his decline, [125]-[126].
- — — his expedition, [121].
- — — Governor of Dalmatia, [123].
- — — his proclamation, [119].
- Jireček (Dr. C.), his History of the Bulgars, [33].
- — — on the Morlaks, [54].
- Jones (Fortier), his With Serbia into Exile, [258].
- Jovius (Paulus), the historian, [56].
- Julia (Princess), and Palmerston, [147].
- Kačić, his long work, [66].
- Kanchov (Basil) and the Macedonians, [168].
- Kara George, his end, [110].
- — — his first insurrection, [57], [81], [98].
- — — his internal enemies, [107].
- Karajić (Vuk), his great work, [61], [109], [113].
- Karaveloff (Ljuba), his articles, [139], [154], [172].
- Khuen-Héderváry (Count), [186], [188].
- Kiepert (H.), the geographer, [23], [173].
- Klobučarić, the police-captain, [257].
- Kohler (Prof.), the jurist, [215], [217].
- Kolomon (King), [40].
- Kossovo, the great battle, [46], [47], [49].
- Kossuth, [121] et seq., [125], [132], [200].
- Kotča (Captain), [81].
- Kotor, [7], [285] et seq.
- Kovačica, Magyar excesses at, [292]-[293].
- Krk, [51].
- Kronimirović, the chieftain, [31].
- "Krpitsa," [162].
- Kukuš, the strange movement, [155], [157], [159].
- Ladislas, the traitor, [47].
- Laffan (Rev. R. G. D.), his The Guardians of the Gate, [196].
- Lajnšić (Dr. S.) and the rise of the Slovenes, [299], [300].
- Lamartine, quoted, [57].
- Landowners in Croatia, [128].
- — in Macedonia, [134] et seq.
- Language, Serbo-Croat (and see [Albanian] and [Bulgar]), [112] et seq.
- Lansdowne (Lord) on Macedonia, [220].
- Lazar (Prince), [45] et seq.
- Lazarević (Lazar), the militant priest, [101].
- Leiper (R.) on Montenegro, [183].
- Liubica (Princess), the strong-minded, [110].
- Loiseau (C.), his Le Balkan Slave, [44], [66].
- Lovčen, [126], [201], [262] et seq.
- Lucić, the lyric poet, [66].
- Macedonia and the Allied advance, [239], [240].
- — examined, [43], [166] et seq.
- — in old times, [33], [42].
- — under the Turks, [134] et seq., [137] et seq., [218] et seq.
- Machiedo (Dr.), what he read, [263].
- Magyars, atrocities at Arad, [235] et seq.
- — against Croats, [116], [119] et seq., [200]-[201].
- — measures in the War, [290] et seq.
- — see [Kossuth] and [Rieka].
- Maister (General), patriot and poet, [299], [300].
- Manchester Guardian, quoted, [238].
- Maravić, the good policeman, [257].
- Maribor, [39].
- Marko Kraljević, [44]-[45].
- Marković (Dr. Lazar), his Serbia and Europe, [216].
- Marković (Svetozar), [139].
- Marmont (General), [102]-[103].
- Martinović (General), friend of Russia, [202], [203].
- Massarechi (Gregory), a missionary, [74].
- Matthew Corvinus (King), [62].
- Mazuranić, poet and ban, [114], [143].
- Mazzini and the Isonzo, [102].
- Meletios, the savage bishop, [156].
- Methodus (Saint), [29].
- Metternich, [39], [108], [119].
- Michael (Prince) of Serbia, [12], [117], [145] eet seq., [154].
- Miklosić (F.), his Monumenta Serbica, [49].
- Miladinoff (Dimitri), [132]-[133], [137]-[138].
- Milan (Prince, afterwards King), his abdication, [194].
- — — — his aims, [175]-[176].
- — — — considered, [179] et seq.
- Miletić (Dr. Slavko) in the War, [291].
- Miletić (Dr. Svetozar), against the Magyars, [191]-[192].
- Millo (Admiral), [19].
- Miloš (Prince), [110] et seq., [137].
- Milovanović (Dr.) on Macedonia, [220].
- Milutine (King), [42].
- Mirko (Prince), the unregretted, [210], [264], [267].
- Mišić (Marshal), commander-in-chief, [243], [290].
- — — on officials in Macedonia, [221].
- Miuškević, the Premier, [203], [264], [267].
- M'Neill (Ronald, M.P.), champion of Nikita, [217], [276]-[277].
- Momchiloff (Dr.), his pronouncement, [35].
- Montenegrin Bulletin, [268]-[269].
- Montenegrin Vespers, [75].
- Montenegro, a disgrace, [230]-[231].
- — her purity, [36].
- — and the Turks, [134].
- — see [Nicholas], [Peter I]. and [Peter II].
- Morlaks, of Dalmatia, [39], [54]-[55], [91].
- Morning Post, quoted, [183].
- Morrison (Colonel) and Serbia's wounded, [244]-[245].
- Mousset (A.), his Le Progrès politique, etc., [226].
- Muhammedan ascendancy, [48], [73].
- Muir Mackenzie (Miss), [12], [152]-[153].
- Murko (Dr.), his Die südslavischen Literaturen, [65].
- Musachi, the chronicler, [45].
- Nally (Rev. Dr.) on the chivalrous Magyars, [238].
- Napoleon and Dalmatia, [100] et seq.
- — his fleet in the Adriatic, [104]-[105].
- — his Illyria, [102] et seq.
- — and the Slovenes, [39], [91].
- Nationality, unstable in those parts, [171].
- Naumović (Risto), a Macedonian victim, [169].
- Near East, quoted, [13].
- Nekludoff, his Diplomatic Reminiscences, [194], [204].
- Nemania (Stephen), [37]-[38], [41].
- Nešić (Ljuba), his varied activities, [199], [200].
- Neue Freie Presse, admits Austria's guilt, [217].
- Newton (Lord and Lady), on the Magyars, [238].
- Nicholas of Montenegro, his early fame, [145]-[146].
- — — the secret clause, [147].
- — — dealings with the Press, [204], [275].
- — — the cloven hoof, [147]-[148], [181] et seq., [201] et seq., [259], [273] et seq.
- — — works against the Serbs, [217], [234]-[235], [261] et seq.
- Nikita, see [Nicholas of Montenegro].
- Nineteenth Century and After, quoted, [217], [238].
- Nodier (Charles), the editor, [103].
- Novi Bazar, and the Austrians, [192].
- Novi Sad, [7], [118].
- Obilic, the hero, [46].
- Obradović, monk and Minister, [80]-[81].
- Omladina, a society, [137], [145] et seq.
- Omladinac, their review, [136] et seq.
- Omortag, his inscription, [34].
- — his sons, [35].
- Oraovac (Tomo), his grandfather, [185].
- — — his Red House, [182]-[183].
- — — his seventy-five questions, [269].
- Padua University, its diplomas, [52].
- Païssu, the monk, [80]-[81].
- Paneff (Theodore), his ideas, [35], [36].
- Paravia (P. A.), his judgment, [53].
- Pašić (Nicholas), his exile, [180].
- — — his methods, [180]-[181], [195], [254], [271].
- Pasvantoölu (Osman Pasha), [57].
- Pavlović (Count) and Austrian atrocities, [225]-[226].
- Peć, [56], [61], [63], [72], [198], [199], [258]-[259].
- Pešić (General) and Nikita, [234]-[235], [236].
- Pester Lloyd, quoted, [35].
- Peter I., the energetic bishop, of Montenegro, [99], [106].
- Peter I. (King) of Serbia and Yugoslavia, his accession, [196].
- — — — his good work, [197], [202].
- — — — his old age, [232], [243]-[244], [259], [261].
- Peter II., the great poet, of Montenegro, [123] et seq.
- Peter (Prince) of Lovčen, [263], [266].
- — — — the lover, [269], [270].
- Pharos (Prof.), his The Trial of the Authors of the Sarajevo Crime, [215].
- Pisani (Abbé), his La Dalmatia, [105].
- Pius X. (Pope), and the liturgy, [30].
- Podgorica Skupština, [275].
- Politika, quoted, [11].
- Pomaks, [60], [223].
- Popoff (S.), his engaging monograph, [220]-[221].
- Popov (Prof.), his Obzor Chronografov, [34].
- Popović (Eugene), the aged Premier, [268].
- Porphyrogenetos (Constantine), [31].
- Potiorek (General) in Bosnia, [213].
- — — in the War, [214], [239].
- Pragmatic Sanction, and the Croats, [78].
- Premrou (M.), his Monimenta Sclavenica, [27]-[28].
- Preradović (Peter), poet and general, [113]-[114].
- Prezzolini (G.), his arguments, [144]-[145].
- — — his La Dalmazia, [66].
- Pribram (Dr.), on eastern Roumelia, [193].
- Pribičević (Svetozar), his zeal, [205].
- Price (Crawfurd), his Serbia's Part in the War, [230].
- Prizren, as it was, [73].
- Propaganda, Albanian, [198].
- — Austrian, [272].
- — Bulgarian, [14], [15].
- — German, [299].
- — Italian, [277].
- — Serbian, [14], [15], [272], [277].
- — Roumanian, [167].
- Putnik (Marshal), his end, [243], [259].
- Rački (F.), the historian, [29], [133], [161].
- Radeff (S.), his La Macedoine, [32].
- Radić (S.) of Croatia, [187].
- Radonić (Dr. Y.), Croat historian, [29].
- Radoslavoff (Dr.) and the War, [248], [249].
- Radovanović, and Michael's death, [147].
- Radović (Andrija), [203], [264], [267]-[268].
- Radulić and his son's nationality, [291]-[292].
- Ragusa, see [Dubrovnik].
- Rajacsich (Baron Joseph), [296]-[297].
- Rajacsich (Patriarch), [119], [120].
- Rajić (Blaško), the priest, [87].
- Rakovski, [139], [149] et seq.
- Raška, [28], [30] et seq., [37].
- Rauch (Baron), the drastic Ban, [162], [200]-[201].
- Resto del Carlino, quoted, [247].
- Revue de Paris, quoted, [269].
- Revue des Deux Mondes, quoted, [260].
- Rieka, [7], [42], [122].
- — "corpus separatum," [78], [115].
- — Magyar machinations, [161].
- Rilski (Neophyte), [111].
- Rizvanbegović (Ali Pasha), [117].
- Romanzoff (Count), quoted, [16].
- Roumanians in Banat, [58]-[59], [188] et seq.
- — and the Serbian Church, [79].
- Rukavina (General), [92].
- Russia, her activities in the Balkans, [25], [153]-[154], [172] et seq.
- — in the Adriatic, [99] et seq.
- — and Macedonia, [220].
- — and Montenegro, [185].
- Samo, an old Prince, [28], [38].
- San Stefano, the unfortunate Treaty, [172] et seq.
- Sarajevo and the World War, [213] et seq., [234].
- — see[Čabrinović],[ Francis Ferdinand], [Potiorek] and [Tankosić].
- Sarpi (Fra Paolo), his warning, [52].
- Sava (Saint), [17], [38], [41]-[42], [45].
- Saxons in the Balkans, [24].
- Sazonov, restrains Serbia, [252].
- Schools, Croats' vain demand for, [115]-[116], [129], [163].
- — in Macedonia, [137]-[138], [169], [170], [178], [222]-[223].
- — in Montenegro, [185].
- — and the Pomaks, [60].
- Schools in Serbia, [226].
- — Serbo-Croat, under Napoleon, [100].
- — Slovene, [127]-[128].
- Scutari, [7], [208] et seq., [260], [266].
- Secolo, on reception of Italians in Austria, [283].
- Sekulić (Isidora), her The Question, [259].
- Serbo-Croat Coalition, [200]-[201].
- — language (and see [Gaj] and [Karajić]), [139], [140], [144].
- Sesan (Ante), his enterprise, [285] et seq.
- Seton-Watson (Dr. R. W.), [162], [271], [272].
- — — his The Southern Slav Question, [133], [205].
- Shade of the Balkans, [59].
- Shishmanoff (Prof.), [152], [166].
- Šibenik, [30]-[31], [41], [51].
- Simeon (Tzar), [32], [42].
- Sinan Pasha, [56].
- Sindjelinić, the hero, [107].
- Sišić (F.), a writer, [29], [243].
- Slava, a Serbian custom, [165].
- Slovenia, suggested name, [26].
- Slovenes free themselves, [298] et seq.
- — their history, [25], [27]-[28], [38], [48], [91], [127]-[128].
- — their language, [13].
- Šokci, of Baranja, [88].
- Sokolović (Mehemet), [56], [61].
- Sokolski, who decamped, [158].
- Sonnino (Baron) and the Adriatic, [247]-[248].
- Spectator, quoted, [246].
- Split, [54].
- Stability of Yugoslavia, [11], [223], [270].
- Stamboulüsky, [11].
- Starčević party, [186].
- Steed (H. Wickham) and Corfu Declaration, [271], [272].
- Stephen the Little, [93].
- Stiljanović (Stephen), his corpse, [62].
- Stojanović, his measures against Austria, [199].
- Strossmayer, the great bishop, [114].
- — his origin, [132].
- — his work, [132] et seq., [138], [161], [162], [186] et seq.
- Stulli (J.), his Vocabulario, [103].
- Südland (L. von), his Die Südslavische Frage, [213].
- Susmel (Edoardo) of Rieka, [116], [122], [162] et seq.
- Tajsić (Ranko) answered by Pašić, [180].
- — — his blunt demand, [179].
- Tankosić and the Sarajevo crime, [216].
- Tartaro-Bulgar, [34], [36].
- Taylor (A. H. E.), his The Future of the Southern Slavs, [12]-[13].
- Temešvar and the Serbs, [118].
- Temperley (H. W. V.), his History of Serbia, [209].
- Teodosijević (A.), his device, [226].
- Thoreau, quoted, [17].
- Thurn (Count Raymond von), [91]-[92], [108].
- Times, quoted, [193], [229].
- Tisza (Count) and the Great War, [213].
- Tolerance among Yugoslavs, [37], [48], [129].
- Tomassich (General), [106].
- Tomić (Vladimir) and Nikita, [183].
- Tomić (Yovan), the librarian, [73].
- Tomislav (Prince), [31].
- Tommaseo (Nicolo), [53], [142] et seq.
- Treaty of Berlin, [176].
- — of London, [245] et seq., [254].
- — of Pressburg, [100].
- — of San Stefano, [172] et seq.
- — of Schoenbrunn, [102].
- — of Tilsit, [101].
- — between Milan and Austria, [193].
- Trevelyan (G. M.), [246]-[247].
- Triest, Slovene efforts at, [127], [141], [164].
- — against Venice, [47], [70].
- Trogir, [31], [50].
- Trumbić (Dr. Ante), [278], [288].
- Turks and Dubrovnik, [67].
- — in Macedonia, [134] et seq., [178].
- — in Montenegro, [134], [145]-[146].
- — against Serbs, [62], [107], [110] et seq.
- — in Yugoslavia, [55] et seq., [70].
- Tvertko, the Ban, [45]-[46].
- Tzankoff, [154], [155], [157].
- Ulrich (Count), his funeral, [38].
- Urach, its printing-press, [63].
- Ušeničnik (Prof.), his deafness, [298].
- Varady (F.), his Baranja multja es jelenje, [62].
- Veglia, see [Krk].
- Velimirović (Bishop), [17].
- Venetians and Dalmatia, [40]-[41], [47], [50] et seq., [64].
- — and Dušan, [43].
- — their last stand, [39], [91].
- — their submission, [30], [31].
- Vis, after the battle, [141].
- — and the British, [104]-[105].
- Vlacić (Matthew), [63].
- Voujošević (N.), the hero, [183].
- Vukalović of Herzegovina, [148].
- Vukotić (Yanko), denounces Nikita, [267].
- Wallisch (Dr.) on Serbian schools, [226].
- Waring (Miss), her Serbia, [29], [176].
- Weigand (Gustav) and the Aromunes, [167].
- Weisner (Baron), his report, [213].
- Wendel (H.), his Südosteuropäische Fragen, [43].
- Westlake (Prof.), his International Law, [245].
- Wiles (J. W.), the translator, [114].
- Xenia (Princess), the "femme fatale," [201]-[202], [268].
- Yovanović (Ljuba), the idealist, [200].
- Yugoslav Committee, [245], [271].
- Yugoslavia, the word, [8], [26]-[27], [271].
- Yugoslavs in America, [272]-[273].
- — in Russia, [281]-[282].
- Zadar, [31], [40]-[41], [51] et seq., [66], [91], [106], [282].
- Zagreb, Military Courts, [278], [279].
- — Trial, [205]-[206].
- — see[ Croats].
- Zara, see [Zadar].
- Zeta, [31], [32], [37].
- Ziliotto (Dr.) of Zadar, [261], [282].
- Zmejanović (Bishop), [61].
- Zoranić, of Zadar, [66].
- Zrinsky (Peter), [71].
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