Frappa, Jean José, “A Salonique sous l’Œuil des Dieux.” (Paris, Flammarion, 1917.)
Photiades, Constantin, “La Victoire des Alliés en Orient.” (Revue de Paris, September 15th and November 15, 1919, and February 15, 1920.)
Ancel, Jacques, “La Croisade Française en Macédoine.” (Revue des Deux Mondes, February 1 and 15, 1920.)
Marshal von Hindenburg’s “Out of My Life” (London, 1920) contains some useful information, especially on the reaction in Germany produced by the last phase of the Balkan campaign.
Colonel F. Feyler, “La Campagne de Macédoine” in two parts. (Geneva, Boissonnas, 1921.)
FOOTNOTES
[1] The official designation of the Macedonian force was “Allied Armies in the Orient,” but it was often abbreviated to “Army of the Orient.”
[2] I use the expression “Old Greece” to indicate the territory of the Greek Kingdom as it was before the acquisition of Southern Macedonia in consequence of the Balkan War of 1912–13.
[3] It is not true, as is generally believed, that Bulgarian units were employed on other fronts except in Roumania.
[4] From private sources of information. See also in this connexion, Une Episode de Drame Serbe, by Senator M. Sarraut and Lieut.-Colonel Revol (Paris, Hachette 1919), passim.