Berkeley, George Monck. Literary Relics; containing Original Letters from King Charles II., King James, the Queen of Bohemia, Swift, Berkeley, Addison, Steele, Congreve, The Duke of Ormond and the Bishop Rundle; with an Inquiry into the Life of Dean Swift. London. 1789.

Blazé, de Bury (Marie Rose Stewart). Memoirs of the Princess Palatine of Bohemia; including her correspondence with the great men of her day. 8º. 400 pp. R. Bentley. London. 1853.

Bohemia. Elizabeth, Queen of ——. Twenty-five Unpublished Letters from the Queen of Bohemia, daughter of James I. to Sir Edward Nicholas between April, 1655 to January, 1656. Footnotes by John Evans. The letters which passed between the Queen and Sir Edward, from August, 1654 to January, 1655, fifteen in number, have been published in the Appendix to Evelyn’s Diary, edited by Bray. Archælogia: or, Miscellaneous Tracts relating to Antiquity. Society of Antiquaries of London. 37:244-43.

—— General Index to Dodsleys Annual Register from its Commencement in 1758 to the Year 1819. London. 1826. Invaded by the King of Prussia, 1:9, 16, 42; Battle of Prague, 1:16; Prince Henry enters, 2:9; Ravaged by the Prussians, 14:83, 16:43; Mortality in, 15:152, 16:43; Abridgment of statute work, 18:153; Insurrections in, 18:151, 103, 187; Abolition of slavery, 27:13; Enrolment of a militia, 38:283.

—— A Brief Evaluation of Bohemia’s Contribution to Civilization. Illustrated. Edited by J. J. Zmrhal and Vojta Beneš. Articles by: Harry Pratt Judson, Bohemia—A Foreword. J. J. Zmrhal, Contribution to Literature. J. E. S. Vojan, Music. Vojta Beneš, Art. L. J. Fisher, The Sokols. 64 pp. The Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1917.

Bolton, Henry Carrington. The Follies of Science at the Court of Rudolph II., 1552-1612. 217 pp. Illustrated. Plates and portraits. The Pharmaceutical Review Publishing Co. Milwaukee. 1904.

Čapek, Thomas. Bohemia Past and Present. 12 pp. Reprint of an article in the Omaha Bee, on Bohemian Day at the Trans-Mississippi Exposition, held at Omaha, Nebraska, Aug. 27, 1898.

—— The Slovaks of Hungary, Slavs and Panslavism. 8º. 214 pp. The Knickerbocker Press. New York. 1906.

Carleton, Sir Dudley. Letters from and to ... during his Embassy in Holland, from January to December 1620. 510 pp. London. 1780. The Bohemian Estates have a secret agent at the Hague, p. 317. Queen Elizabeth gains the love of the Bohemians by her free and gracious demeanor, p. 419. King Frederick (of the Palatinate) not supported by his father-in-law, King James I. Aid given him by the Holland states general, p. 425. His ambassador to the states, pp. 436, 438, 442. Not acknowledged by King James I., his father-in-law, nor the French King, p. 436. His election disliked by the latter, p. 440. The Bohemians desire to borrow the sum of 600,000 florins of the states general, p. 314. Assistance for them from the states general solicited, p. 337. Preparations in all parts against them, p. 339. Suspension of arms between them and the emperor, p. 347. They send two agents to the states general, p. 355. Troops raised for them, p. 357. A letter written in their favor by the states general to King James I., p. 359. The Bohemian agents furnished by the states with two months advance, p. 369.

Chapman, Benjamin. The History of Gustavus Adolphus and of the Thirty Years’ War, up to the King’s Death: with some account of its conclusion by the Peace of Westphalia, anno 1648. 8º. 441 pp. Bohemia, chap. 5. Longmans, Brown, Green and Longmans. London