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 Bibliography xv Political History of Europe since 1814, chaps, xx-xxi. SLOANE, The Balkans, a recent study. GIBBONS, The New Map of Europe, very readable. HOLLAND, The European Concert in the Eastern Question. ABBOTT, Turkey in Transition. BUXTON, Turkey in Revolution. COURTNEY (Editor), Nationalism and War in the Near East. DAVEY, The Sultan and his Subjects (2 vols.). LANE-POOLE, The Story of Turkey. MILLER, The Ottoman Empire and The Balkans. ROSE, The Development of the European Nations (2 vols.), Vol. I. Source Material. ROBINSON and BEARD, Readings, chap. xxix. The Expansion of Europe. Cambridge Modern History, Vol. XII, chaps, xv-xxii. DOUGLAS, Europe and the Far East, excellent. HAZEN, Europe since 1813, chaps, xxiii, xxx. HOLDERNESS, Peoples and Problems of India (Home University Series). JOHNSTON, The Opening tip of Africa (Home University Series). REINSCH, World Politics. ROSE, The Development of the European Nations. DENNIS, Christian Missions and Social Progress. GILES, The Civiliza- tion of China (Home University Series) ; China and the Chinese. HUNTER, The Indian Empire. Ycs.Q'X., Japanese Life in Town and Country. HARRIS, In- tervention and Colonization in Africa, a recent, reliable guide. KELTIE, The Partition of Africa. WEALE, The Reshaping of the Far East (2 vols.). Source Material. ROBINSON and BEARD, Readings, chap. xxx. BOOK X. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND THE WORLD WAR Diplomatic Negotiations preceding the War. For the conditions which led up to the World War see GIBBONS, The New Map of Europe, 1911-1914 : the Story of the Recent Diplomatic Crises and Wars and of Europe's Present Catastrophe. Admirable account of the chief international issues before the war, especially of the Balkan troubles. BUI.LARD, The Diplomacy of the Great War, deals in a sprightly manner with the negotiations preceding the conflict. SEYMOUR, The Diplomatic Background of the War, 1916. LOREBURN, How the War Came, a sober and thoughtful study made after the war closed. Points of View on the War. ROSE, The Origins of the War, from an Eng- lish standpoint. VON MACH, Germany's Point of View, an attempt to justify Germany's policy in America's eyes. DAVIS, The Roots of the War, from an ardent American point of view. For German ideas of government and war, see JOHN DEWEY, German Phi- losophy and Politics, 1915, a survey of thought in the last century ; Out of their Own 'Mouths, 1917 ; Gems (?) of German Thought, edited by WILLIAM ARCHER; BANG, Hurrah and Hallelujah ; BERNHARDI, Germany and the Next War, a plea for war as a civilizing force. Works on the War and the Settlement at Paris. The American works on the war, in moderate compass, are McMASTER, The United States in the World War (2 vols.) ; SPENCER, Our War with Germany.