A Short History of Wales/end matter

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2925034A Short History of Wales — end matterSir Owen Morgan Edwards

THE STORY OF THE NATIONS
A SERIES OF POPULAR HISTORIES.


Each Volume is furnished with Maps, Illustrations, and Index. Large Crown 8vo, fancy cloth, gold lettered, or Library Edition, dark cloth, burnished red top, 5s. each. Or may be had in half Persian, cloth sides, gilt tops; Price on application.

  1. Rome. By Arthur Gilman, M.A.
  2. The Jews. By Prof. J. K. Hosmer.
  3. Germany. By Rev. S. Baring-Gould, M.A.
  4. Carthage. By Prof. Alfred J. Church.
  5. Alexander's Empire. By Prof. J. P. Mahaffy.
  6. The Moors in Spain. By Stanley Lane-Poole.
  7. Ancient Egypt. By Prof. George Rawlinson.
  8. Hungary. By Prof. Arminus Vambéry.
  9. The Saracens. By Arthur Gilman, M.A.
  10. Ireland. By the Hon. Emily Lawless.
  11. Chaldea. By Zénaīde A. Ragozin.
  12. The Goths. By Henry Bradley.
  13. Assyria. By Zénaīde A. Ragozin.
  14. Turkey. By Stanley Lane-Poole.
  15. Holland. By Prof. J. E. Thorold Rogers.
  16. Mediæval France. By Gustave Masson.
  17. Persia. By S. G. W. Benjamin.
  18. Phœnicia. By Prof. G. Rawlinson.
  19. Media. By Zénaīde A. Ragozin.
  20. The Hansa Towns. By Helen Zimmern.
  21. Early Britain. By Prof. Alfred J. Church.
  22. The Barbary Corsairs. By Stanley Lane-Poole.
  23. Russia. By W. R. Morfill, M.A.
  24. The Jews under the Romans. By W. D. Morrision.
  25. Scotland. By John Mackintosh, LL.D.
  26. Switzerland. By Mrs Lina Hug and R. Stead.
  27. Mexico. By Susan Hale.
  28. Portugal. By H. Morse Stephens.
  29. The Normans. By Sarah Orne Jewett.
  30. The Byzantine Empire. By C. W. C. Oman.
  31. Sicily: Phœnician, Greek and Roman. By the late Prof. E. A. Freeman.
  32. The Tuscan Republics. By Bella Duffy.
  33. Poland. By W. R. Morfill, M.A.
  34. Parthia. By Prof. George Rawlinson.
  35. The Australian Commonwealth. By Greville Tregarthen.
  36. Spain. By H. E. Watts.
  37. Japan. By David Murray, Ph.D.
  38. South Africa. By George M. Theal.
  39. Venice. By Alethea Wiel.
  40. The Crusades. By T. A. Archer and C. L. Kingsford.
  41. Vedic India. By Z. A. Ragozin.
  42. The West Indies and the Spanish Main. By James Rodway.
  43. Bohemia. By C. Edmund Maurice.
  44. The Balkans. By W. Miller, M.A.
  45. Canada. By Sir J. G. Bourinot, LL.D.
  46. British India. By R. W. Frazer, LL.B.
  47. Modern France. By André Le Bon.
  48. The Franks. By Lewis Sergeant.
  49. Austria. By Sidney Whitman.
  50. Modern England. Before the Reform Bill. By Justin McCarthy.
  51. China. By Prof. R. K. Douglas.
  52. Modern England. From the Reform Bill to the Present Time. By Justin McCarthy.
  53. Modern Spain. By Martin A. S. Hume.
  54. Modern Italy. By Pietro Orsi.
  55. Norway. By H. H. Boyesen.
  56. Wales. By O. M. Edwards.
  57. Mediæval Rome. By W. Miller. M.A.
  58. The Papal Monarchy. By William Barry, D.D.
  59. Mediæval India under Mohammedan Rule. By Stanley Lane-Poole.
  60. Buddhist India. By Prof. T. W. Rhys-Davids.
  61. Parliamentary England. Edward Jenks, M.A.
  62. Mediæval England. By Mary Bateson.
  63. The Coming of Parliament. By L. Cecil Jane.
  64. The Story of Greece. From the Earliest Times to A.D. 14. By E. S. Shuckburgh.

In Preparation.

  • The Story of Greece. From the Roman Occupation to A.D. 1453. By E. S. Shuckburgh.
  • The Story of the Roman Empire (B.C. 29 to A.D. 476). By H. Stuart Jones.

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COMPLETE POPULAR EDITIONS. ILLUSTRATED.

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The Life of Richard Cobden.

By John Morley.

"One of the most important and interesting works of its class in the English language."—Daily Chronicle.


The Life and Times of Savonarola.

By Professor Pasquale Villari.

"The most interesting religious biography that we know of in modern times. It is difficult to speak of its merits without seeming exaggeration."—Spectator.


The Life and Times of Machiavelli.

By Professor Pasquale Villari.

"Machiavelli is represented for all time in the pages of Villari."—Guardian.


The Lives of Robert and Mary Moffat.

By John Smith Moffat.

"A loving record of a noble life, which has left the world a lesson for all time of the power of earnest labour and simple faith."—Daily Chronicle.


The History of Florence.

By Professor Pasquale Villari.

"This volume is indeed worthy of the reputation of its author.... We feel very grateful to him for having given us the most concise, and at the same time perhaps the most complete constitutional history that has yet appeared of the first two centuries of the Florentine Republic."—Speaker.


English Wayfaring Life in the Middle Ages (XlVth Century).

By J. J. Jusserand, French Ambassador at Washington.

"One of those enchanting volumes which only Frenchmen have the gift of writing. Buy it if you are wise, and keep it as a joy for ever."—Dr Augustus Jessopp in the Nineteenth Century.


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Lord Beaconsfield: A Biography.

By T. P. O'Connor.

"Clever and brilliant.... Worth reading by everybody who either admires or hates his subject."—Guardian.

"A slashing and vastly interesting book."—Pall Mall Gazette.


Rome and Pompeii. Archæological Rambles.

By Gaston Boissier.

"M. Gaston Boissier is one of the few living archæologists who can make the dead bones of the past live again. While his researches show the accuracy and thoroughness which we associate with German scholarship, he has a gift of exposition which is wholly French. We can imagine therefore, no better handbook for traveller or archæologist than this one."—Daily Mail.


Holyoake: Sixty Years of an Agitator's Life.

By George Jacob Holyake.

"A valuable contribution to the political, social, intellectual, and even revolutionary history of our time."—Times.

"The book is full of interest; it produces a vivid, personal impression, it contains contemporary notes on men and women of the century, it has shrewd and vigorous sentences, and illustrates our own progress in civilising thought."—Spectator.


Sir Walter Raleigh.

By Major Martin A. S. Hume.

"An admirable book which ought to be read by every one who takes any interest in things that ought to interest all—the building of the Empire and the men who built it. There is not a dull page in it, and with his skilful telling of it, the story of Raleigh's life and of his times reads like a romance."—Pall Mall Gazette.


The "How To" Series of Practical Handbooks.

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Stops, or How to Punctuate;

A Practical Handbook for Writers and Students.

By Paul Allardyce.

"Admirably adapted to remove all confusion."—Publishers' Circular.


How to Become a Private Secretary.

By Arthur Shepherd, Private Secretary to the Archbishop of Canterbury.

"A most useful and entertaining volume."—St James's Gazette.


How to Become a Commercial Traveller.

By Ed. B. Grieve.

"Full of sound business advice."—Yorkshire Post.


How to Arrange with your Creditors.

By R. Shuddick.

"A useful and instructive manual."—Scotsman.


How to Become a Teacher.

By T. W. Berry, Director of Education, Withington, Lancs.

"It gives the most authentic information in a most readable and handy form."—National Teacher.


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