Albania: hotbed of rebellions, but partial to Moslem rule, [210]; a thorn in the flesh to the chancelleries of Europe, [351]; her political status before and during the Balkan War, [353]; put in the hands of the Powers by the Treaty of London, 1913, [360]; Prince William of Wied made ruler of new kingdom, [364]; his abdication, [366]; now under the provisional government of Essad pasha, [366]
Algeciras, Conference of European Powers on the Moroccan question at, [73]; provisions of the Convention, signed April 7, 1906, [74]
Alsace-Lorraine, annexed to Germany in 1871, [1]; political status in the Empire, [6]; new Constitution granted in 1911, [11]; autonomy demanded, [12]; persecutions suffered from Prussian military arrogance, [15-20]
Analogy between German Socialists of to-day and the Jacobins of 1793, [32]
Anglo-French agreement of 1904 published, [81]
Arabs in Ottoman Empire oppose Young Turk hegemony, [214-218]
Armenia, Turkish and Moslem oppression in, [187]; horrors of the Adana massacres, [190]
Austria-Hungary, and her south Slavs, [142-160]; the Dual Monarchy's Balkan policy and problems, [144-160]; acts the bully against Servia, [156]
Austro-Hungarian ultimatum to Servia, [368-385]; the direct sequence of the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908, [368-371]; exciting cause: the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand and his wife at Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, [374]; Austria's note to Servia and demands for reparation, [376]; the Servian reply, [381]; declared not satisfactory by Austro-Hungarian Minister, [384]; war declared on Servia, July 28, 1914, [384]
Bagdadbahn, The, [58-70], [216]; the Pan-Germanist conception of it, [62]; concession granted in 1899, and company constituted in 1903, [65]; British oppose successfully German schemes in Asiatic Turkey, [66]