Page:Englishhistorica36londuoft.djvu/652

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

8 The English Historical Review Advertiser, October 1921 CamBrib ge Q^niu tzitg (preea The Renaissance of Roman Architecture. Part 1, itaiy. By SIR THOMAS GRAHAM. JACKSON, Bart., R.A. With a frontispiece in colour, 47 plates (6 in colour), and 26 illustrations in the text. Crown 4to. 42s net. A History Of Pisa, Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries. By WILLIAM HEY WOOD. Author of A Pictorial Chronicle of Siena, Palio and Ponte, A History of Perugia, and other works. With a map and 16 pictures. Demy 8vo. 21s net. " Mr William Heywood, so well knownfor his intimate acquaintance with medieval Italy, exhibits all that exhaustive knowledge and conscientious accuracy that was to be expected from a man of his reputation. . . . All students of Italian history will be grateful to the late Mr Heywood for his extremely informative and interesting book."— Truth. Cosimo I, Duke of Florence. B y cecily booth, with 15 illus- trations. Demy 8vo. 25s net. " It would be difficult to choose a subject for a monograph fitter or more ripe for treatment than Cosimo I, Duke of Florence. . . . He can no longer be dismissed as a ' ruthless tyrant.' .. . If he held Florence with a tight hand it was because she needed it. His conquests he treated with extra- ordinary leniency and far-seeing statesmanship. ... On the domestic side of Cosimo's life Miss Booth contributes much, and besides giving us some picturesque and intimate details of Italian Court life, she provides the material for forming a balanced judgment of Cosimo's character. "— The Times. Essays on the Latin Orient. By william miller, m.a. (Oxon.). With 7 plates, 2 illustrations in the text, and a map. Royal 8yo. 40s net. This volume consists of articles and monographs upon the Latin Orient and Balkan History, pub- lished between 1897 and the present year. All the articles have been revised and brought up to date by the light of recent research in a field of history which is no longer neglected in either the Near East or Western Europe. A Short History of Scotland. By charles sanford terry, Litt.D., Burnett-Fletcher Professor of History in the University of Aberdeen. With 3 maps and 4 pedigree tables. Crown 8vo.. 8s net. This book is based upon the author's " History of Scotland ' published in 1920. It is intended to supply the needs of those for whom the larger Histories are both too detailed and too expensive. Readings in English Social History from Contemporary Liter- ature. Edited by R. B. MORGAN, M.Litt. Vol III, A.D. 1485-1603, now ready. Illustrated. Crown 8vo. 4s net. Matthew Prior. A study of his public career and correspondence. By L. G. WICKHAM LEGG, Fellow and Tutor of New College, Oxford. With a frontispiece. Demy 8vp. 22s 6d net. _ As a writer of light verse, Prior stands second to none in the Augustan age of English Literature but it is only recently that attention has been drawn to him as a writer of prose of unusual excellence the dis- covlSes made by Mr Waller at Longleat and the correspondence printed in the reports of the Historical MSS cSiissfor 1 and elsewhere having brought this aspect of Prior into greater prominence. From these and I maeria?hUherto unpublished it has now proved possible to reconstruct in detail and to estimate the value of the work done by Prior in the diplomatic service. Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel. - Father of vertu in England." His Life, Correspondence and Collections. By the late MRYF S HERVEY With a portrait of Miss Hervey and 24 plates. Royal 8vo. 63snet ' " A real contribution to l'iterature, the work of a creative mind. . . Collector, statesman, a friend of InigoJ A ons,tt wrhTmeTodaiVfYg^t^S «n — ^ ^^ *~» ™» historical importance."— The Bookman s Journal. The Collected Historical Works of Sir Francis Palgrave, K. H. Edited by his son, Sir R. H. INGLIS PALGRAVE, F.R.S. Volumes III and IV, containing volumes 3 and 4 of The History of Normandy and of England, and no one has done more to make possible its c »»cal study. • • j £ ,. Palgrave's works will be not only a worthy monument to his memory, but a vaiuaoie * of the historical student. "—The Saturday Review. &iitx feane, £onbon. «.€••*: C. % €fag. QUnftgcr