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Browsing History by Issue Date
Now showing items 1-20 of 226
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The Treaty of Brest, 1595
Michael, Metropolitain of Kiev, et al. (unknown, 1595) -
The Tears of Poland, 1795
Galloway, George (1795)Poem of sorrow (nationalist) relating to the second partition of Poland in 1793. -
The Phanariots of Moldavia, 1809
Thorton, Thomas (Joseph Mawman/ Twayne, 1809) -
The Romanian Principalities, 1818
Neale, Adam (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown/ Twayne, 1818) -
The Court at Bucharest, 1819
MacMichael, William (John Murray, Twayne, 1819) -
The Treaty of London for Greek Independence, July 6, 1827, excerpts
Unknown author (Harrison and Sons, Twayne, 1827) -
Wallachia in 1657
Archdeacon of Aleppo, Paul (Oxford Univ. Press/Twayne, 1836) -
A Voyage Down the Danube, 1836
Quin, Michael J. (Richard Bentley/ Twayne, 1836) -
Encyclical of the Eastern Patriarchs, 1848 A Reply to the Epistle of Pope Pius IX, "to the Easterns"
Eastern Patriarchs (1848) -
Letter from an Austrian Officer in Hungary, 1848-1849
Baron, W. (E.H. Butler and Company, 1850)The letter of an Austrian soldier describing the military frontier and the border soldiers (Grenzer or Granicari) around the Hungarian periphery. Covers the following themes: Military Frontier of Hungary; its Extent and ... -
Presentation of a Committee of the Hungarian Diet to Ferdinand, 1848
Unknown author (Phinney & Co., 1852)Appeal of Hungarian Diet to Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I to help put a stop to Croat rebellion -
Archduke Palatine Stephen to the Hungarian Diet, July 8, 1848
Archduke Palatine Stephen (Phinney & Co., 1852)Archduke Palatine Stephen speaks to the Hungarian Diet about "preserving the integrity of the Hungarian realm" in the face of assaults by "evil-disposed, rebellious agitators" (especially in Croatia). Also speaks of ... -
Kossuth's Address to the People of the United States, 1850
Kossuth, Lajos (Phinney & Co., 1852)Former regent of revolutionary Hungary (1848-1849), Lajos Kossuth, writes an address to the people of the US following the defeat of Hungarian revolutionary forces. Kossuth praises the ideas of liberty and independence and ... -
Hungarian Declaration of Independence, 1849
Unknown author (Phinney & Co., 1852) -
Kossuth's Speech at Dinner Sponsored by U.S. Congress, 1852
Kossuth, Lajos (Globe Office, 1852)Former leader of revolutionary Hungary (1848-1849), Lajos Kossuth (in exile), appeals to US Congress to help Hungary and other nations in their struggle against European (neo-)absolutism -
Proclamation of Ferdinand to Jellachich and the Croats, June 1848
Ferdinand I, Emperor of Austria (Phinney & Co., 1852)Austrian (Habsburg) Emperor Ferdinand I's reprimand of Croatian Ban Jelacic (Jellachich) and his supporters for attempting separation from the Hungarian crown -
Speech at the Pittsburgh Banquet, 1852
Kossuth, Lajos (Common Council of the City of New York, 1852)Lajos Kossuth was the leader of the 1848 revolution in Hungary, which was defeated with the help of imperial Russia in 1849. His speech outlines the goals of the Hungarian nationalist cause to an American audience in 1852, ... -
"Retrospect and Prospect," Speech given in Utica, NY, 1852
Kossuth, Lajos (C. S. Francis, 1854)Hungary's former revolutionary leader, Lajos Kossuth, bemoans the fate of Hungary's crushed revolution of 1848-1849 and expresses bitterness that the US did not come to Hungary's aid then. -
The Claims of Hungary on the Female Sex, Speech given in New York City, 1851
Kossuth, Lajos (C. S. Francis, 1854)Former Hungarian president, Lajos Kossuth, speaks to the Ladies of New York in 1851 about the sorrows of Hungary as they relate to women. -
The Perils of Travel Through Moldavia, 1854
Spencer, Captain (Routledge/Twayne, 1854)