[209] Parl. Papers, Turkey, No. 1 (1886), p. 424.
[210] Parl. Papers, Turkey, No. 2 (1886).
[211] Ibid. pp. 96-98.
[212] Parl. Papers, Russia (1886), p. 828.
[213] A. von Huhn, op. cit. chap. iv.
[214] See Mr. Minchin's account in the Morning Advertiser for September 23, 1886.
[215] A. von Huhn, The Kidnapping of Prince Alexander, chap. xi. (London, 1887). Article III. of the Treaty of Berlin ran thus: "The Prince of Bulgaria shall be freely elected by the population and confirmed by the Sublime Porte, with the assent of the Powers." Russia had no right to choose the Prince, and her assent to his election was only that of one among the six Great Powers. The mistake of Prince Alexander is therefore inexplicable.
[216] Histoire de l'Entente franco-russe, by Élie de Cyon, p. 158.
[217] Élie de Cyon, Histoire de l'Entente franco-russe, pp. 177-178.
[218] The Russophil Drandar (op. cit. p. 214) calls these demands "remarqueblement modérées et sages"! For further details of Kaulbars' electioneering devices see Minchin, op. cit. pp. 327-330.