The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 1

Chapter 30

Chapter 303,429 wordsPublic domain

[Footnote 91: I think that, in so far as concerns this article in the _New Europe_ (July 8, 1920), it is fairer to describe Mr. Trevelyan as an Italian exponent rather than apologist. Although we cannot agree with various remarks of his, he makes it clear that he is out of sympathy with the Italian extremists. He deprecates also the views of those English publicists who are altogether on the side of the Yugoslavs. "The truth, perhaps," says he, "lies somewhere hid in the centre." And if that is not a very happy observation, it is at any rate much more moderate than the average views of those English writers whose spiritual home is in Italy.]

[Footnote 92: Byron, _Childe Harold_.]

[Footnote 93: About 36,000 boys--partly recruits and partly boys of more tender years--started over the mountains, and some 20,000 of them perished.]

[Footnote 94: This officer, aided by others, was charged with having organized an attempt to overthrow the Yugoslav National Council soon after its constitution in the autumn of 1918. The day of the counter-revolution was to be November 25, according to the _Hrvatska Rije[vc]_ of November 23. The General and others were arrested, but as he was able to prove his innocence he was liberated.]

[Footnote 95: _With Serbia into Exile._ New York, 1916.]

[Footnote 96: Cf. _The Question_, by Isidora Sekuli['c].]

[Footnote 97: _Revue des Deux Mondes_, January 1, 1917.]

[Footnote 98: In contrast with this attitude that was adopted at Nikita's command one must mention the transactions of a Podgorica merchant, M. Buri[vc], and his partners, who sold 150,000 kilos of grain to the retreating army at cost price, that is, at one dinar per kilo when they could have obtained five. Two million kilos of hay they sold at 8 paras per kilo instead of at 50 or more. There were at this time only 20 tons of flour in all Montenegro. Undoubtedly the refusal of Buri[vc] and his friends to profit from the distress of their brother Serbs was much more typical of the Montenegrins than the conduct which Nikita drew forth from the weak side of their character.]

[Footnote 99: Cf. an article in the _Gazette de Lausanne_, November 29, 1917, by Danilo Gatalo, a former Montenegrin Minister of War.]

[Footnote 100: Cf. p. 204.]

[Footnote 101: _Ex-King Nicholas and his Court_ (Collection of eighteen original documents in facsimile). Sarajevo, 1919.]

[Footnote 102: These almost incredible facts are vouched for by Dr. Sekula Drljevi['c], ex-Minister of Justice and Finance, who was one of the internees at Karlstein.]

[Footnote 103: _The Black Sheep of the Balkans._ London, 1920.]

[Footnote 104: In 1919 this very popular physician became Minister of Public Health in a Coalition Cabinet, and in 1920 he became Minister of Posts and Telegraphs.]

[Footnote 105: A couple of months before the triumph of the Yugoslav idea one of these priests, Dr. Alexius U[vs]eni[vc]nik, Professor of Theology, published at Ljubljana a little book packed with ancient and modern quotations from Latin and French, Italian and German sources. He called it _Um die Yugoslavija; Eine Apologie_; and in the strongest terms he combated the reproach that the Slovene bishop, the clergy and the people were not loyal to the Habsburgs. Dr. U[vs]eni[vc]nik proved that the poor Slovenes were suffering an almost intolerable subjection at the hands of the Germans, but he persisted in demanding nothing more than freedom within the Habsburg Monarchy. "The Monarchy," said our unhappy author, "is in the midst of its development." And this priest, who was so deaf to the grand Yugoslav idea, quoted with approval the words of Gustave le Bon: "Ideas take a long time in possessing the people's soul."]

END OF VOLUME I.

INDEX OF VOLUME I

(_The Names of Books and Newspapers are in Italics._)

Aerenthal (Count) and the bombs, 206. -- -- and Bosnia, 204.

Agram, _see_ Zagreb.

Albania, part of, offered to the Serbs, 251.

Albanian activities, 72 _et seq._, 219. -- language, 13, 14.

Alexander (King of Serbia), the lamentable, 194 _et seq._ -- (King of Yugoslavia), 232 _et seq._ -- (Pope), 40. -- (Prince), the frigid, 117, 122.

Alphabet, Slav, 29.

Andrássy (Count Julius), his confidence, 290.

Apponyi on mad ambitions, 295.

Arad and the Serbs, 117-8. -- Executions at, 125. -- the Magyar slaughter-house, 235 _et seq._

_Arbeiter-Zeitung_ on Berchtold, 229.

Austria and Macedonia, 220. -- -- some atrocities, 225 _et seq._ -- -- some intrigues (and _see_ Habsburgs), 25, 30, 118, 176, 177, 187, 193 _et seq._

_Avenire_, a newspaper, 67.

Bach, his "huzzars," 127.

Ba[vc]ka, 62, 72 _et passim_.

Bahr (H.), his _Dalmatinische Reise_, 201.

Banat, the frontier regiments, 82 _et seq._ -- German colonists, 82 _et seq._ -- Migrants to, 62, 72. -- Revolt in, 71, 121. -- Serbs and Roumanians, 188 _et seq._

Baranja, 62 _et passim_.

Barbulescu (Prof.) on Macedonian language, 166.

Bartlett (C. A. H.) on Treaty of London, 246, 247.

Battisti, how he died, 284.

Beaumont, of the _Daily Telegraph_, 284.

Be[vc]irovi['c], the Macedonian schoolmaster, 169.

Belgrade, 7, 62, 149, 243-4, 260.

Belloc (H.), his pronouncements, 163, 164.

Bene[vs] (Dr. E.), his _Détruisez l'Autriche-Hongrie_, 192. -- -- in Italy, 288-9.

Berchtold (Count) and the Great War, 213-4, 229.

Berlin Congress, 24-5.

Bilinski (Dr.), his tears, 228.

Bismarck on the Balkans, 24.

Bissolati, the gallant Minister, 287.

_Blackwood's Magazine_, quoted, 10.

Bogomile heresy, 37, 45 _et seq._, 126.

Bonchocat, a murderer's testimony, 291.

Boppe, the French Minister, on the Serbs, 260.

Bosnia and the Magyars, 235. -- and Michael, 148. -- and the Powers, 153, 177, 204. -- under the Turks, 56, 117, 176. -- _see_ Tvertko.

Boué (Ami), his _La Turquie d'Europe_, 138-9.

Brailsford (H. N.), his _Macedonia_, 72-3, 198, 199, 219.

Brankovi['c], the despot, 47, 58. -- George (a descendant), 71-2. -- Vuk, 48, 62.

Bratti (R.), his _La Fine della Serenissima_, 39.

Bresse (L.), his _Le Monténégro Inconnu_, 210.

Brki['c] (Patriarch), his description, 80, 277.

Bulgarian language, 13-4, 34, 80-1, 139, 140, 166. -- origins, 33 _et seq._

Bulgars, attitude to Serbia and Yugoslavia, 11 _et seq._, 44-5, 149, 166 _et seq._, 193. -- enter the War, 248 _et seq._

_Bulletin Hellénique_, quoted, 37.

Bulwer (Sir H.), his advice, 158.

Bunjevci, 86 _et seq._

Buric, the patriotic merchant, 262. -- (Vassilje), his brother, 268-9.

Buxton (Leland), his _Black Sheep of the Balkans_, 289, 290. -- -- his unfortunate proposal, 221.

[vC]abrinovi['c] and the Sarajevo crime, 216, 218.

[vC]a[vc]ak and Milo[vs], 137.

Cahun (L.), his _Introduction à l'Histoire de l'Asie_, 36.

[vC]arnoevi['c] (Arsenius), the Patriarch, 72 _et seq._

Cattalinich, his _Memorie_, 92.

Cattaro, _see_ Kotor.

Cavour, 66, 123, 140 _et seq._

Chiala (Gl.), his _Letters of Count Cavour_, 141.

Chopin (J.), his _Le Complot de Sarajevo_, 218.

Christi['c] (Annie) on Serb women in the War, 260.

Christoff, _see_ Tartaro-Bulgar.

Cippico (Antonio), his arguments, 144-5.

[vC]iprovtsi, its outbreak, 71.

Clergy in Croatia, 129. -- in Czecho-Slovakia, 130 _et seq._

Codelli (Baron), his rules, 96.

Constantine (King) and the Serbs, 252-3.

Corfu, Declaration of, 271-2. -- Serbs at, 270.

Crijevi['c] (Elias), the renegade, 65.

Croats, their history, 25, 29, 30-1, 38, 40, 46 _et seq._, 69, 112 _et seq._, 119 _et seq._, 125. -- relations with Serbs, 177, 187-8, 205, 239 _et seq._, 254 _et seq._, 275 _et seq._

[vC]uk (Madame), her good work, 228.

[vC]uplikac (Colonel), the voivoda, 119, 123.

Cviji['c] (Prof.), 14, 36, 175.

Cyril (Saint), 29.

Czecho-Slovakia, disapproval of, 10. -- its national Church, 130 _et seq._

_Daily Telegraph_, quoted, 284.

Dalmatia, its Christianity, 29. -- suggested settlers, 94. -- and Venice, 40, 41, 47, 50 _et seq._, 64. -- _see_ Morlaks and Tommaseo.

Dandolo (Vincenzo), 100.

Danica, the brotherhood, 113.

Danilo (Crown Prince), the financier, 201 _et seq._, 209 _et seq._, 264, 276. -- (Prince), his death, 145-6.

Deak (Francis), his liberal methods, 143, 160.

Debidour, his _Histoire diplomatique_, 154.

Democracy of Serbs, 61, 233.

Devil, _see_ Alphabet.

Devine (A.), the apologist, 204, 211.

D'Intignano (F. M.), his _I Morlacchi_, 54.

Djakovica, some years ago, 73.

Dobrila (Bishop George), 142.

Dolci, his fate, 99, 100.

Dra[vs]kovi['c], his _Exhortation_, 112.

Drljevi['c] (Dr. S.) on Danilo, 209. -- -- on Montenegrin Red Cross, 274.

Dubourdieu, 104-5.

Dubrovnik, her dissolution, 101. -- her glory, 41, 48-9, 64 _et seq._ -- her moral height, 91. -- her poets, 54, 65-6.

Durham (Edith), her _High Albania_, 73. -- -- her partiality, 206. -- -- in praise of Albanians, 198, 259. -- -- her _Twenty Years of Balkan Tangle_, 206.

Du[vs]an (Emperor), 26. -- -- his ambitions, 43. -- -- his Code, 43. -- -- his greatness, 42, 69. -- -- his sister, 68.

Eliot (Sir Charles), his _Turkey in Europe_, 36, 167.

England in the Adriatic, 104 _et seq._

Essad Pasha, at Scutari, 211.

Evans (Sir Arthur), 39, 176.

Exarchate, its beginning, 159. -- and the Serbs, 168.

_Ex-King Nicholas of Montenegro and his Court_, 217, 270.

Fiume, _see_ Rieka.

Francis Ferdinand (Archduke), his murder, 212-3. -- -- -- various mysteries, 214 _et seq._

Francis Joseph, 123, 133, 143, 162.

Frankopan (Christopher), 71.

Frederick Barbarossa, 37.

Friedjung (Prof.) and the forgeries, 205-6.

Gaj (Ljudevit), the patriot, 112 _et seq._, 119.

Gatalo (Danilo) exposes Nikita, 266.

Gauvain exposes Nikita, 269.

Gavrilovi['c] (Dr. Michael), 16, 98.

_Gazette de Lausanne_, quoted, 266.

George (Prince), his ways, 231-2.

Georgov (Prof.), 35.

German colonists, 82 _et seq._

Germans favoured by Habsburgs, 127-8, 143. -- appraised by Haeckel, 243.

_Geschichte der Franzfelder Gemeinde_, 82.

Ghevgeli, a typical Macedonian town, 168 _et seq._

Giacich on Rieka, 122.

Giesl (Baron) and the Montenegrins, 209, 211-2.

Gladstone and Montenegro, 210. -- his preface, 152. -- and Strossmayer, 133.

Glagolitic, 29, 30, 63-4, 120.

Goad (H. E.), Comments on, 18-9.

Gop[vc]evi['c], his bad book, 178.

Gorica, 39, 127, 278.

Gortchakoff, his inspirations, 153, 177. -- his instructions, 159.

Greek in Macedonian churches, 155 _et seq._, 218. -- -- schools, 137 _et seq._ 169.

Gregory (Pope), quoted, 29.

Grimm (Jacob), his enthusiasm, 109.

Grün (Anastasius), the Slovene, 112.

Gunduli['c], his works, 65-6.

Habsburgs and the Croats (and _see_ Rieka), 69, 127. -- and the Magyars, 119 _et seq._ -- and Montenegro (and _see_ Lov[vc]en), 201-2, 209, 211-2. -- and the Pragmatic Sanction, 78. -- and the Serbian regiments, 82. -- and the Serbs, 213. -- and the Slovenes (and _see_ Triest), 127-8.

Hajdukovi['c], Nikita's Minister, 268.

Haji['c] (Dr.), against grammar, 109.

Hartwig, the Russian Minister, 214-5.

Hegedüs, the villain, 235 _et seq._

Heiduks, 59 _et seq._

Hektorovi['c], the famous poet, 66.

Helen (Queen), 42.

Herbert (Hon. Aubrey, M.P.), considers the Magyars, 236. -- -- considers the Magyars' neighbours, 192.

Herzegovi['c] (Achmet Pasha), 56.

Herzegovina, the dialect (and _see_ Bosnia), 65.

Hibben (Paxton), on Venizelos, 252.

Hodges (Colonel), 112.

Homer, on atrocities, 14.

Hoste (Commodore), 104, 105.

Hupka (Lieut.-Colonel) and Lov[vc]en, 263.

Hussarek (Baron), his optimism, 297-8.

Hussein, the Dragon, 117.

Hvar, bombarded by Russians, 101. -- in the Middle Ages, 50, 66. -- revolts against Napoleon, 102.

Ignatieff (Count), and the Exarchate, 159.

Iorga (Prof.), his suggestion, 189, 190.

Irby (Miss), benefactress and traveller, 12, 152. -- -- her _The Turks, the Greeks and the Slavons_, 152, 176.

Isonzo, important river (and _see_ Mazzini), 39, 102.

Istria in distress, 69, 70. -- its population, 141-2.

Italianized party, 94, 108, 115.

Italians, their Austrian testimonials, 282 _et seq._ -- help the Serbs, 265. -- Surrendering to, 281, 285 _et seq._

Italians, their union, 140 _et seq._ -- against Yugoslavia, 243, 245 _et seq._, 261, 282 _et seq._

Ivanovi['c], the Russian, 126.

Jegli['c] (Prince-Bishop), 30, 298, 299.

Jella[vc]i['c] (J. J.), his decline, 125-6. -- -- his expedition, 121. -- -- Governor of Dalmatia, 123. -- -- his proclamation, 119.

Jire[vc]ek (Dr. C.), his _History of the Bulgars_, 33. -- -- on the Morlaks, 54.

Jones (Fortier), his _With Serbia into Exile_, 258.

Jovius (Paulus), the historian, 56.

Julia (Princess), and Palmerston, 147.

Ka[vc]i['c], his long work, 66.

Kanchov (Basil) and the Macedonians, 168.

Kara George, his end, 110. -- -- his first insurrection, 57, 81, 98. -- -- his internal enemies, 107.

Karaji['c] (Vuk), his great work, 61, 109, 113.

Karaveloff (Ljuba), his articles, 139, 154, 172.

Khuen-Héderváry (Count), 186, 188.

Kiepert (H.), the geographer, 23, 173.

Klobu[vc]ari['c], the police-captain, 257.

Kohler (Prof.), the jurist, 215, 217.

Kolomon (King), 40.

Kossovo, the great battle, 46, 47, 49.

Kossuth, 121 _et seq._, 125, 132, 200.

Kot[vc]a (Captain), 81.

Kotor, 7, 285 _et seq._

Kova[vc]ica, Magyar excesses at, 292-3.

Krk, 51.

Kronimirovi['c], the chieftain, 31.

"Krpitsa," 162.

Kuku[vs], the strange movement, 155, 157, 159.

Ladislas, the traitor, 47.

Laffan (Rev. R. G. D.), his _The Guardians of the Gate_, 196.

Lajn[vs]i['c] (Dr. S.) and the rise of the Slovenes, 299, 300.

Lamartine, quoted, 57.

Landowners in Croatia, 128. -- in Macedonia, 134 _et seq._

Language, Serbo-Croat (and _see_ Albanian and Bulgar), 112 _et seq._

Lansdowne (Lord) on Macedonia, 220.

Lazar (Prince), 45 _et seq._

Lazarevi['c] (Lazar), the militant priest, 101.

Leiper (R.) on Montenegro, 183.

Liubica (Princess), the strong-minded, 110.

Loiseau (C.), his _Le Balkan Slave_, 44, 66.

Lov[vc]en, 126, 201, 262 _et seq._

Luci['c], the lyric poet, 66.

Macedonia and the Allied advance, 239, 240. -- examined, 43, 166 _et seq._ -- in old times, 33, 42. -- under the Turks, 134 _et seq._, 137 _et seq._, 218 _et seq._

Machiedo (Dr.), what he read, 263.

Magyars, atrocities at Arad, 235 _et seq._ -- against Croats, 116, 119 _et seq._, 200-1. -- measures in the War, 290 _et seq._ -- _see_ Kossuth and Rieka.

Maister (General), patriot and poet, 299, 300.

_Manchester Guardian_, quoted, 238.

Maravi['c], the good policeman, 257.

Maribor, 39.

Marko Kraljevi['c], 44-5.

Markovi['c] (Dr. Lazar), his _Serbia and Europe_, 216.

Markovi['c] (Svetozar), 139.

Marmont (General), 102-3.

Martinovi['c] (General), friend of Russia, 202, 203.

Massarechi (Gregory), a missionary, 74.

Matthew Corvinus (King), 62.

Mazurani['c], poet and ban, 114, 143.

Mazzini and the Isonzo, 102.

Meletios, the savage bishop, 156.

Methodus (Saint), 29.

Metternich, 39, 108, 119.

Michael (Prince) of Serbia, 12, 117, 145 _et seq._, 154.

Miklosi['c] (F.), his _Monumenta Serbica_, 49.

Miladinoff (Dimitri), 132-3, 137-8.

Milan (Prince, afterwards King), his abdication, 194. -- -- -- his aims, 175-6. -- -- -- considered, 179 _et seq._

Mileti['c] (Dr. Slavko) in the War, 291.

Mileti['c] (Dr. Svetozar), against the Magyars, 191-2.

Millo (Admiral), 19.

Milo[vs] (Prince), 110 _et seq._, 137.

Milovanovi['c] (Dr.) on Macedonia, 220.

Milutine (King), 42.

Mirko (Prince), the unregretted, 210, 264, 267.

Mi[vs]i['c] (Marshal), commander-in-chief, 243, 290. -- -- on officials in Macedonia, 221.

Miu[vs]kevi['c], the Premier, 203, 264, 267.

M'Neill (Ronald, M.P.), champion of Nikita, 217, 276-7.

Momchiloff (Dr.), his pronouncement, 35.

_Montenegrin Bulletin_, 268-9.

Montenegrin Vespers, 75.

Montenegro, a disgrace, 230-1. -- her purity, 36. -- and the Turks, 134. -- _see_ Nicholas, Peter I. and Peter II.

Morlaks, of Dalmatia, 39, 54-5, 91.

_Morning Post_, quoted, 183.

Morrison (Colonel) and Serbia's wounded, 244-5.

Mousset (A.), his _Le Progrès politique, etc._, 226.

Muhammedan ascendancy, 48, 73.

Muir Mackenzie (Miss), 12, 152-3.

Murko (Dr.), his _Die südslavischen Literaturen_, 65.

Musachi, the chronicler, 45.

Nally (Rev. Dr.) on the chivalrous Magyars, 238.

Napoleon and Dalmatia, 100 _et seq._ -- his fleet in the Adriatic, 104-5. -- his Illyria, 102 _et seq._ -- and the Slovenes, 39, 91.

Nationality, unstable in those parts, 171.

Naumovi['c] (Risto), a Macedonian victim, 169.

_Near East_, quoted, 13.

Nekludoff, his _Diplomatic Reminiscences_, 194, 204.

Nemania (Stephen), 37-8, 41.

Ne[vs]i['c] (Ljuba), his varied activities, 199, 200.

_Neue Freie Presse_, admits Austria's guilt, 217.

Newton (Lord and Lady), on the Magyars, 238.

Nicholas of Montenegro, his early fame, 145-6. -- -- the secret clause, 147. -- -- dealings with the Press, 204, 275. -- -- the cloven hoof, 147-8, 181 _et seq._, 201 _et seq._, 259, 273 _et seq._ -- -- works against the Serbs, 217, 234-5, 261 _et seq._

Nikita, _see_ Nicholas of Montenegro.

_Nineteenth Century and After_, quoted, 217, 238.

Nodier (Charles), the editor, 103.

Novi Bazar, and the Austrians, 192.

Novi Sad, 7, 118.

Obilic, the hero, 46.

Obradovi['c], monk and Minister, 80-1.

Omladina, a society, 137, 145 _et seq._

_Omladinac_, their review, 136 _et seq._

Omortag, his inscription, 34. -- his sons, 35.

Oraovac (Tomo), his grandfather, 185. -- -- his _Red House_, 182-3. -- -- his seventy-five questions, 269.

Padua University, its diplomas, 52.

Païssu, the monk, 80-1.

Paneff (Theodore), his ideas, 35, 36.

Paravia (P. A.), his judgment, 53.

Pa[vs]i['c] (Nicholas), his exile, 180. -- -- his methods, 180-1, 195, 254, 271.

Pasvantoölu (Osman Pasha), 57.

Pavlovi['c] (Count) and Austrian atrocities, 225-6.

Pe['c], 56, 61, 63, 72, 198, 199, 258-9.

Pe[vs]i['c] (General) and Nikita, 234-5, 236.

_Pester Lloyd_, quoted, 35.

Peter I., the energetic bishop, of Montenegro, 99, 106.

Peter I. (King) of Serbia and Yugoslavia, his accession, 196. -- -- -- his good work, 197, 202. -- -- -- his old age, 232, 243-4, 259, 261.

Peter II., the great poet, of Montenegro, 123 _et seq._

Peter (Prince) of Lov[vc]en, 263, 266. -- -- -- the lover, 269, 270.

Pharos (Prof.), his _The Trial of the Authors of the Sarajevo Crime_, 215.

Pisani (Abbé), his _La Dalmatia_, 105.

Pius X. (Pope), and the liturgy, 30.

Podgorica Skup[vs]tina, 275.

_Politika_, quoted, 11.

Pomaks, 60, 223.

Popoff (S.), his engaging monograph, 220-1.

Popov (Prof.), his _Obzor Chronografov_, 34.

Popovi['c] (Eugene), the aged Premier, 268.

Porphyrogenetos (Constantine), 31.

Potiorek (General) in Bosnia, 213. -- -- in the War, 214, 239.

Pragmatic Sanction, and the Croats, 78.

Premrou (M.), his _Monimenta Sclavenica_, 27-8.

Preradovi['c] (Peter), poet and general, 113-4.

Prezzolini (G.), his arguments, 144-5. -- -- his _La Dalmazia_, 66.

Pribram (Dr.), on eastern Roumelia, 193.

Pribi[vc]evi['c] (Svetozar), his zeal, 205.

Price (Crawfurd), his _Serbia's Part in the War_, 230.

Prizren, as it was, 73.

Propaganda, Albanian, 198. -- Austrian, 272. -- Bulgarian, 14, 15. -- German, 299. -- Italian, 277. -- Serbian, 14, 15, 272, 277. -- Roumanian, 167.

Putnik (Marshal), his end, 243, 259.

Ra[vc]ki (F.), the historian, 29, 133, 161.

Radeff (S.), his _La Macedoine_, 32.

Radi['c] (S.) of Croatia, 187.

Radoni['c] (Dr. Y.), Croat historian, 29.

Radoslavoff (Dr.) and the War, 248, 249.

Radovanovi['c], and Michael's death, 147.

Radovi['c] (Andrija), 203, 264, 267-8.

Raduli['c] and his son's nationality, 291-2.

Ragusa, _see_ Dubrovnik.

Rajacsich (Baron Joseph), 296-7.

Rajacsich (Patriarch), 119, 120.

Raji['c] (Bla[vs]ko), the priest, 87.

Rakovski, 139, 149 _et seq._

Ra[vs]ka, 28, 30 _et seq._, 37.

Rauch (Baron), the drastic Ban, 162, 200-1.

_Resto del Carlino_, quoted, 247.

_Revue de Paris_, quoted, 269.

_Revue des Deux Mondes_, quoted, 260.

Rieka, 7, 42, 122. -- "corpus separatum," 78, 115. -- Magyar machinations, 161.

Rilski (Neophyte), 111.

Rizvanbegovi['c] (Ali Pasha), 117.

Romanzoff (Count), quoted, 16.

Roumanians in Banat, 58-9, 188 _et seq._ -- and the Serbian Church, 79.

Rukavina (General), 92.

Russia, her activities in the Balkans, 25, 153-4, 172 _et seq._ -- in the Adriatic, 99 _et seq._ -- and Macedonia, 220. -- and Montenegro, 185.

Samo, an old Prince, 28, 38.

San Stefano, the unfortunate Treaty, 172 _et seq._

Sarajevo and the World War, 213 _et seq._, 234. -- _see_ [vC]abrinovi['c], Francis Ferdinand, Potiorek and Tankosi['c].

Sarpi (Fra Paolo), his warning, 52.

Sava (Saint), 17, 38, 41-2, 45.

Saxons in the Balkans, 24.

Sazonov, restrains Serbia, 252.

Schools, Croats' vain demand for, 115-6, 129, 163. -- in Macedonia, 137-8, 169, 170, 178, 222-3. -- in Montenegro, 185. -- and the Pomaks, 60.

Schools in Serbia, 226. -- Serbo-Croat, under Napoleon, 100. -- Slovene, 127-8.

Scutari, 7, 208 _et seq._, 260, 266.

_Secolo_, on reception of Italians in Austria, 283.

Sekuli['c] (Isidora), her _The Question_, 259.

Serbo-Croat Coalition, 200-1. -- language (and _see_ Gaj and Karaji['c]), 139, 140, 144.

Sesan (Ante), his enterprise, 285 _et seq._

Seton-Watson (Dr. R. W.), 162, 271, 272. -- -- his _The Southern Slav Question_, 133, 205.

_Shade of the Balkans_, 59.

Shishmanoff (Prof.), 152, 166.

[vS]ibenik, 30-1, 41, 51.

Simeon (Tzar), 32, 42.

Sinan Pasha, 56.

Sindjelini['c], the hero, 107.

Si[vs]i['c] (F.), a writer, 29, 243.

Slava, a Serbian custom, 165.

Slovenia, suggested name, 26.

Slovenes free themselves, 298 _et seq._ -- their history, 25, 27-8, 38, 48, 91, 127-8. -- their language, 13.

[vS]okci, of Baranja, 88.

Sokolovi['c] (Mehemet), 56, 61.

Sokolski, who decamped, 158.

Sonnino (Baron) and the Adriatic, 247-8.

_Spectator_, quoted, 246.

Split, 54.

Stability of Yugoslavia, 11, 223, 270.

Stamboulüsky, 11.

Star[vc]evi['c] party, 186.

Steed (H. Wickham) and Corfu Declaration, 271, 272.

Stephen the Little, 93.

Stiljanovi['c] (Stephen), his corpse, 62.

Stojanovi['c], his measures against Austria, 199.

Strossmayer, the great bishop, 114. -- his origin, 132. -- his work, 132 _et seq._, 138, 161, 162, 186 _et seq._

Stulli (J.), his _Vocabulario_, 103.

Südland (L. von), his _Die Südslavische Frage_, 213.

Susmel (Edoardo) of Rieka, 116, 122, 162 _et seq._

Tajsi['c] (Ranko) answered by Pa[vs]i['c], 180. -- -- his blunt demand, 179.

Tankosi['c] and the Sarajevo crime, 216.

Tartaro-Bulgar, 34, 36.

Taylor (A. H. E.), his _The Future of the Southern Slavs_, 12-3.

Teme[vs]var and the Serbs, 118.

Temperley (H. W. V.), his _History of Serbia_, 209.

Teodosijevi['c] (A.), his device, 226.

Thoreau, quoted, 17.

Thurn (Count Raymond von), 91-2, 108.

_Times_, quoted, 193, 229.

Tisza (Count) and the Great War, 213.

Tolerance among Yugoslavs, 37, 48, 129.

Tomassich (General), 106.

Tomi['c] (Vladimir) and Nikita, 183.

Tomi['c] (Yovan), the librarian, 73.

Tomislav (Prince), 31.

Tommaseo (Nicolo), 53, 142 _et seq._

Treaty of Berlin, 176. -- of London, 245 _et seq._, 254. -- of Pressburg, 100. -- of San Stefano, 172 _et seq._ -- of Schoenbrunn, 102. -- of Tilsit, 101. -- between Milan and Austria, 193.

Trevelyan (G. M.), 246-7.

Triest, Slovene efforts at, 127, 141, 164. -- against Venice, 47, 70.

Trogir, 31, 50.

Trumbi['c] (Dr. Ante), 278, 288.

Turks and Dubrovnik, 67. -- in Macedonia, 134 _et seq._, 178. -- in Montenegro, 134, 145-6. -- against Serbs, 62, 107, 110 _et seq._ -- in Yugoslavia, 55 _et seq._, 70.

Tvertko, the Ban, 45-6.

Tzankoff, 154, 155, 157.

Ulrich (Count), his funeral, 38.

Urach, its printing-press, 63.

U[vs]eni[vc]nik (Prof.), his deafness, 298.

Varady (F.), his _Baranja multja es jelenje_, 62.

Veglia, _see_ Krk.

Velimirovi['c] (Bishop), 17.

Venetians and Dalmatia, 40-1, 47, 50 _et seq._, 64. -- and Du[vs]an, 43. -- their last stand, 39, 91. -- their submission, 30, 31.