[226] [In Polish, Targowica, a town in the Ukraina.]

[227] [See p. [243], n. 1.]

[228] [More exactly, Kościuszko, pronounced Koshchushko.]

[229] [Berek, or Berko, popular Polish form of the Jewish name Baer.—Yoselovich, in Polish Joselowicz, son of Yosel, or Joseph.]

[230] In the province of Zhmud [or Samogitia, corresponding practically to the present Government of Kovno.]

[231] That the habits of the Shlakhta were but little changed by the revolution may be gauged from the fact that in 1794 the revolutionary Central Council passed a law ordering the sale of crown lands for the purpose of paying the national debt, but limiting this sale to persons of the Christian faith.

[232] [See p. [85], n. 1.]

[233] [In Polish, Kock, near Warsaw.]