Page:Cambridge Modern History Volume 1.djvu/784

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748 Hungary and the Slavonic Kingdoms. Marki, A. Ddzsa Gyorgy 4s forradalma (George Dozsa and his rebellion), 1886. Neustadt. Ungarn's Verfall am Beginn des xvi. Jahrhunderts. Ungarische Revue for 1885. Thury, J. Torok tortdnetirdk (Turkish historians). Budapest. 1890. Minor monographs can cosily be found by means of the bibliographies under (7). IV. HISTORICAL MAPS; BATTLE-PLANS. There are as yet no special historical atlases for the history of Hungary, Bohemia, or Poland. For Hungary a historical gazetteer is supplied in D. Csanki's very elaborate Magyarorszag Foldrajza a Hunyadiak koraban (The topography of Hungary in the time of the Hunyadis : fifteenth century). Consult also the map of Hungary in 1490 in article Magyarorszag in the Hungarian Encyclopedia Pallas. Some battle-plans will be found in the Hadi kronika mentioned above. See also the general Historical Atlases of Spruner-Menke and Droysen, and the Oxford Historical Atlas. The best general history of Poland in Polish is Bobrzynski's Dzieje Polski n zarysie (Sketch of Polish history), Warsaw, 1879. There is much historico-geographical material in Lelewels' work Polska dziej (1868); and the great Polish History of Adam Naruszewicz in Polish is always helpful, chiefly in the Lelewel edition with the atlas (1803). In German the most authoritative History of Poland is the Ge- schichte Polen's by R. Roepell, continued by J. Caro in vols. i.-v., Hamburg and Gotha, 1840-86 (Gesch. d. europ. Staaten). All the requisite details for closer research will be found in the bibliographical work of Finkel (see above); and in Pawinski's report in Jastrow for 1891. On early Russian history consult A. llambaud, Histoire de la ilussie, new ed. Paris. 1893.