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"The Russian Revolution; the Jugo-Slav Movement"

von
Schierbrand's _Austria-Hungary: The Polyglot Empire_ (New York, 1917); H.
W. Steed's _The Habsburg Monarchy_ (London, 1914, 2d ed.) is one of the
ablest surveys in the English language. It is thoroughly worked out in the
general features, but slights many of the national and provincial aspects
of the Austrian question. V. Gayda's _La crisi di un impero_ (2d ed.,
1915), English ed., _Modern Austria_ (New York, 1915) is an unusually able
work by an Italian who sees clearly on every question except that of Italia
Irredenta. A. Toynbee's _Nationality and the War_ (London, 1915) is another
very useful summary of the question. The official Austro-Hungarian point of
view has been stated in such works, among many others, as Hitter von Sax,
_Die Wahrheit ueber die serbische Frage und das Serbentum in Bosnien_
(Vienna, 1909); L. Mandl, _Oesterreich-Ungarn und Serbien_ (Vienna, 1911);
C. M. Knachtbull-Hugessen, _The Political Evolution of the Hungarian
Nation_ (London, 1908, 2 vols.); and numerous official publications and
dossiers.
The works thus far mentioned were based on numerous studies in Slavic and
other languages, only a few of which can be mentioned here.
For the Slovenes one will look into Josef Apih's _Slovenci in 1848 leto_
(Lubla[n], 1888); Lon[c]ar's _Politi[c]no [z]ivljenje Slovencei_ (in
Bleiweis's _Zbornik._ Published by the Matica Slovenska, Lubla[n], 1909);
and Vos[n]jak's _Spomini_ (Lubla[n], 1906, 2 vols.


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