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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61375 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61375)
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-Project Gutenberg's The Historical Geography of Europe., by Edward A. Freeman
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Historical Geography of Europe.
- Vol. I.--Text
-
-Author: Edward A. Freeman
-
-Release Date: February 11, 2020 [EBook #61375]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY I ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Transcriber’s note: Sidenotes are shown enclosed in diamond symbols
-and multiple notes are separated by bars, as shown: ♦Note 1 | Note 2♦.]
-
-
-
-
-THE
-
-HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE
-
-VOL. I.
-
-
-
-
-LONDON: PRINTED BY
-SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
-AND PARLIAMENT STREET
-
-
-
-
-THE
-
-HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
-
-OF
-
-EUROPE
-
-BY
-
-EDWARD A. FREEMAN, D.C.L., LL.D.
-
-HONORARY FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, OXFORD
-
-IN TWO VOLUMES
-
-_VOL. I.—TEXT_
-
-
-LONDON
-LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
-1881
-
-_All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-It is now several years since this book was begun. It has been delayed
-by a crowd of causes, by a temporary loss of strength, by enforced
-absence from England, by other occupations and interruptions of various
-kinds. I mention this only because of the effect which I fear it has
-had on the book itself. It has been impossible to make it, what a book
-should, if possible, be, the result of one continuous effort. The
-mere fact that the kindness of the publishers allowed the early part
-to be printed some years back has, I fear, led to some repetition and
-even contradiction. A certain change of plan was found unavoidable.
-It proved impossible to go through the whole volume according to the
-method of the earlier chapters. Instead of treating Europe as a whole,
-I found it needful to divide it into several large geographical groups.
-The result is that each of the later chapters has had to go over again
-some small amount of ground which had been already gone over in the
-earlier chapters. In some cases later lights have led to some changes
-of view or expression. I have marked these, as far as I could, in the
-Additions and Corrections. If in any case I have failed to do so, the
-later statement is the one which should be relied on.
-
-I hope that I have made the object of the work clear in the
-Introductory Chapter. It is really a very humble one. It aims at little
-more than tracing out the extent of various states at different times,
-and at attempting to place the various changes in their due relation to
-one another and to their causes. I am not, strictly speaking, writing
-history. I have little to do with the internal affairs of any country.
-I have looked at events mainly with reference to their effect on the
-European map. This has led to a reversal of what to many will seem the
-natural order of things. In a constitutional history of Europe, our own
-island would claim the very first place. In my strictly geographical
-point of view, I believe I am right in giving it the last.
-
-I of course assume in the reader a certain elementary knowledge of
-European history, at least as much as may be learned from my own
-General Sketch. Names and things which have been explained there I
-have not thought it needful to explain again. I need hardly say that
-I found myself far more competent to deal with some parts of the work
-than with others. No one can take an equal interest in, or have an
-equal knowledge of, all branches of so wide a subject. Some parts of
-the book will represent real original research; others must be dealt
-with in a far less thorough way, and will represent only knowledge
-got up for the occasion. In such cases the reader will doubtless find
-out the difference for himself. But I have felt my own deficiencies
-most keenly in the German part. No part of European history is to me
-more attractive than the early history of the German kingdom as such.
-No part is to me less attractive than the endless family divisions and
-unions of the smaller German states.
-
-In the Slavonic part I have found great difficulty in following any
-uniform system of spelling. I consulted several Slavonic scholars. Each
-gave me advice, and each supported his own advice by arguments which I
-should have thought unanswerable, if I had not seen the arguments in
-support of the wholly different advice given me by the others. When
-the teachers differ so widely, the learner will, I hope, be forgiven,
-if the result is sometimes a little chaotic. I have tried to write
-Slavonic names so as to give some approach to the sound, as far as I
-know it. But I fear that I have succeeded very imperfectly.
-
-In such a crowd of names, dates, and the like, there must be many small
-inaccuracies. In the case of the smaller dates, those which do not mark
-the great epochs of history, nothing is easier than to get wrong by a
-year or so. Sometimes there is an actual difference of statement in
-different authorities. Sometimes there is a difference in the reckoning
-of the year. For instance, In what year was Calais lost to England? We
-should say 1558. A writer at the time would say 1557. Then again there
-is no slip of either pen or press so easy as putting a wrong figure,
-and, except in the case of great and obvious dates, or again when the
-mistake is very far wrong indeed, there is no slip of pen or press so
-likely to be passed by in revision. And again there is often room for
-question as to the date which should be marked. In recording a transfer
-of territory from one power to another, what should be the date given?
-The actual military occupation and the formal diplomatic cession are
-often several years apart. Which of these dates should be chosen? I
-have found it hard to follow any fixed rule in such matters. Sometimes
-the military occupation seems the most important point, sometimes the
-diplomatic cession. I believe that in each case where a question of
-this sort might arise, I could give a reason for the date which has
-been chosen; but here there has been no room to enter into discussions.
-I can only say that I shall be deeply thankful to any one who will
-point out to me any mistakes or seeming mistakes in these or any other
-matters.
-
-The maps have been a matter of great difficulty. I somewhat regret
-that it has been found needful to bind them separately from the text,
-because this looks as if they made some pretensions to the character of
-an historical atlas. To this they lay no claim. They are meant simply
-to illustrate the text, and in no way enter into competition either
-with such an elaborate collection as that of Spruner-Menke, or even
-with collections much less elaborate than that. Those maps are meant
-to be companions in studying the history of the several periods. Mine
-do not pretend to do more than to illustrate changes of boundary in a
-general way. It was found, as the work went on, that it was better on
-the whole to increase the number of maps, even at the expense of making
-each map smaller. There are disadvantages both ways. In the maps of
-South-Eastern Europe, for instance, it was found impossible to show
-the small states which arose in Greece after the Latin conquest at all
-clearly. But this evil seemed to be counterbalanced by giving as many
-pictures as might be of the shifting frontier of the Eastern Empire
-towards the Bulgarian, the Frank, and the Ottoman.
-
-In one or two instances I have taken some small liberties with my
-dates. Thus, for instance, the map of the greatest extent of the
-Saracen dominion shows all the countries which were at any time under
-the Saracen power. But there was no one moment when the Saracen power
-took in the whole extent shown in the map. Sind and Septimania were
-lost before Crete and Sicily were won. But such a view as I have
-given seemed on the whole more instructive than it would have been to
-substitute two or three maps showing the various losses and gains at a
-few years’ distance from one another.
-
-I have to thank a crowd of friends, including some whom I have never
-seen, for many hints, and for much help given in various ways. Such
-are Professor Pauli of Göttingen, Professor Steenstrup of Copenhagen,
-Professor Romanos of Corfu, M. J.-B. Galiffe of Geneva, Dr. Paul Turner
-of Budapest, Professor A. W. Ward of Manchester, the Rev. H. F. Tozer,
-Mr. Ralston, Mr. Morfill, Mrs. Humphry Ward, and my son-in-law Arthur
-John Evans, whose praise is in all South-Slavonic lands.
-
- SOMERLEAZE, WELLS:
- _December 16, 1880._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
- PAGE
-
-Definition of Historical Geography 1
-
-Its relation to kindred studies 1-2
-
-Distinction between geographical and political names 3-5
-
-
-§ 1. _Geographical Aspect of Europe._
-
-Boundaries of Europe and Asia 5-6
-
-General geography of the two continents—the great peninsulas 6-7
-
-
-§ 2. _Effects of Geography on History._
-
-Beginnings of history in the southern peninsulas—characteristics
- of Greece and Italy 7-8
-
-Advance and extent of the Roman dominion; the Mediterranean lands,
- Gaul, and Britain 8-9
-
-Effects of the geographical position of Germany, France, Spain,
- Scandinavia, Britain 9-10
-
-Effect of geographical position on the colonizing powers 10
-
-Joint working of geographical position and national character 11
-
-
-§ 3. _Geographical Distribution of Races._
-
-Europe an Aryan continent—non-Aryan remnants and latter settlements 12
-
-Fins and Basques 13
-
-Order of Aryan settlements; Greeks and Italians 13
-
-Celts, Teutons, Slaves, Lithuanians 14-15
-
-Displacement and assimilation among the Aryan races 16
-
-Intrusion of non-Aryans; Saracens 16
-
-Turanian intrusions; Bulgarians; Magyars; Ottomans; differences in
- their history 17
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-GREECE AND THE GREEK COLONIES.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Eastern or Greek Peninsula._
-
-Geographical and historical characteristics of the Eastern, Greek,
- or Byzantine peninsula 18-19
-
-Its chief divisions; Thrace and Illyria; their relations to Greece 19-20
-
-Greece Proper and its peninsulas 20-21
-
-Peloponnêsos 21
-
-
-§ 2. _Insular and Asiatic Greece._
-
-Extent of _Continuous Hellas_ 21
-
-The Islands 22
-
-Asiatic Greece 22-23
-
-
-§ 3. _Ethnology of the Eastern Peninsula._
-
-The Greeks and the kindred races 23
-
-Illyrians, Albanians, or Skipetar 24
-
-Inhabitants of Epeiros, Macedonia, Sicily, and Italy 24
-
-Pelasgians 24-25
-
-The Greek Nation 25
-
-
-§ 4. _Earliest Geography of Greece and the Neighbouring Lands._
-
-Homeric Greece: its extent and tribal divisions 25-27
-
-Use of the name _Epeiros_ 26
-
-The cities: their groupings unlike those of later times; supremacy
- of Mykênê 27
-
-Extent of Greek colonization in Homeric times 28
-
-The Asiatic catalogue 28
-
-Probable kindred of all the neighbouring nations 28
-
-Phœnician and Greek settlements in the islands 28
-
-
-§ 5. _Change from Homeric to Historic Greece._
-
-Changes in Peloponnêsos; Dorian and Aitolian settlements 29
-
-Later divisions of Peloponnêsos 29-30
-
-Change in Northern Greece; Thessaly 30
-
-Akarnania and the Corinthian colonies 31
-
-Foundation and destruction of cities 31
-
-
-§ 6. _The Greek Colonies._
-
-The Ægæan and Asiatic colonies 32-33
-
-Early greatness of the Asiatic cities; Milêtos 32
-
-Their submission to Lydians and Persians 32-33
-
-The Thracian colonies; abiding greatness of Thessalonikê
- and Byzantion 33
-
-More distant colonies; Sicily, Italy, Dalmatia 33-34
-
-Parts of the Mediterranean not colonized by the Greeks;
- Phœnician settlements; struggles in Sicily and Cyprus 34-35
-
-Greek colonies in Africa, Gaul, and Spain 35
-
-Colonies on the Euxine; abiding greatness of Cherson and Trebizond 36
-
-Beginning of the artificial Greek nation 36
-
-
-§ 7. _Growth of Macedonia and Epeiros._
-
-Growth of Macedonia; Philip; Alexander and the Successors;
- effects of their conquests 37
-
-Epeiros under Pyrrhos; Athamania 37
-
-The Macedonian kingdoms; Egypt; Syria 38
-
-Independent states in Asia; Pergamos 38
-
-Asiatic states; advance of Greek culture 39
-
-Free cities; Hêrakleia 39
-
-Sinôpê; Bosporos 39
-
-
-§ 8. _Later Geography of Independent Greece._
-
-The Confederations; Achaia, Aitolia; smaller confederations 40
-
-Macedonian possessions 40
-
-First Roman possessions east of the Hadriatic 40
-
-Progress of Roman conquest in Macedonia and Greece 41
-
-Special character of Greek history 42
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-FORMATION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
-
-Meanings of the name Italy; its extent under the Roman commonwealth 43
-
-Characteristics of the Italian peninsula; the great islands 44
-
-
-§ 1. _The Inhabitants of Italy and Sicily._
-
-Ligurians and Etruscans 45
-
-The Italian nations; Latins and Oscans 45-46
-
-Other nations; Iapygians; Gauls; Veneti; use of the name _Venetia_ 46-47
-
-Greek colonies in Italy; Kymê and Ankôn 47
-
-The southern colonies; their history 47-48
-
-Inhabitants of Sicily; Sikanians and Sikels 48
-
-Phœnician and Greek settlements; rivalry of Aryan and
- Semitic powers 48-49
-
-
-§ 2. _Growth of the Roman Power in Italy._
-
-Gradual conquest of Italy; different positions of the Italian
- states 49
-
-Origin of Rome; its Latin element dominant 49-50
-
-Early Latin dominion of Rome 50
-
-Conquest of Veii; more distant wars 50
-
-Incorporation of the Italian states 50-51
-
-
-§ 3. _The Western Provinces._
-
-Nature of the Roman provinces 51
-
-Eastern and Western provinces 52
-
-First Roman possessions in Sicily; conquest of Syracuse 53
-
-State of Sicily; its Greek civilization 53
-
-Sardinia and Corsica 53-54
-
-Cisalpine Gaul 54-55
-
-Liguria; Venetia; Istria; foundation of Aquileia 55
-
-Spain; its inhabitants; Iberians; Celts; Greek and Phœnician
- colonies 55-56
-
-Conquest and Romanization of Spain 56-57
-
-Transalpine Gaul; the Province 57
-
-Conquests of Cæsar; threefold division of Gaul 57-58
-
-Boundaries of Gaul purely geographical; survival of nomenclature 57-58
-
-Roman Africa; restoration of Carthage 58-60
-
-
-§ 4. _The Eastern Provinces._
-
-Contrast between the Eastern and Western provinces; Greek
- civilization in the East 60
-
-Distinctions among the Eastern provinces; boundary of Tauros 60-61
-
-The Illyrian provinces; kingdom of Skodra; conquest of Dalmatia
- and Istria 62-63
-
-The outlying Greek lands: Crete, Cyprus, Kyrênê 63
-
-The Asiatic provinces; province of Asia; Mithridatic War;
- independence of Lykia 64
-
-Syria; Palestine 65
-
-Rome and Parthia 65
-
-Conquest of Egypt; the Roman Peace 66
-
-
-§ 5. _Conquests under the Empire._
-
-Conquests from Augustus to Nero; incorporation of vassal kingdoms 66-67
-
-Attempted conquest of Germany; frontiers of Rhine and Danube;
- conquests on the Danube 67-68
-
-Attempt on Arabia 68
-
-Annexation of Thrace and Byzantion 68
-
-Conquest of Britain; the wall 69
-
-Conquests of Trajan; his Asiatic conquests surrendered by Hadrian 70
-
-Arabia Petræa 70
-
-Dacia; change of the name 70-71
-
-Roman, Greek, and Oriental parts of the Empire 71
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE DISMEMBERMENT OF THE EMPIRE.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Later Geography of the Empire._
-
-Changes under the Empire; loss of old divisions 73
-
-New divisions of Italy under Augustus 74
-
-Division of the Empire under Diocletian 74-75
-
-The four Prætorian Prefectures 75
-
-Prefecture of the East; its character 75-76
-
-Its dioceses; the East; Egypt, Asia, Pontos 76
-
-Diocese of Thrace; provinces of Scythia and Europa 76-77
-
-Great cities of the Eastern prefecture 77
-
-Prefecture of Illyricum; position of Greece 77-78
-
-Dioceses of Macedonia and Dacia; province of Achaia 78
-
-Prefecture of Italy; its extent 78
-
-Dioceses of Italy, Illyricum, and Africa; greatness of Carthage 79
-
-Prefecture of Gaul 79
-
-Diocese of Spain; its African territory 79
-
-Dioceses of Gaul and Britain; province of Valentia 79-80
-
-
-§ 2. _The Division of the Empire._
-
-Change in the position of Rome 80
-
-Division of the Empire, A.D. 395 81
-
-Rivalry with Parthia and Persia inherited by the Eastern Empire 81-82
-
-Teutonic invasions; no Teutonic settlements in the East 82-83
-
-
-§ 3. _The Teutonic Settlements within the Empire._
-
-The Wandering of the Nations 83
-
-New nomenclature of the Teutonic nations 83-84
-
-Warfare on the Rhine and Danube; Roman outposts beyond the rivers 84
-
-Teutonic confederations; Marcomanni; Quadi 84-85
-
-Franks, Alemans, Saxons; Germans within the Empire 85-86
-
-Beginning of national kingdoms 86
-
-Loss of the Western provinces of Rome 86
-
-Settlements within the Empire by land and by sea 87
-
-Franks, Burgundians, Goths, Vandals 87-88
-
-Early history of the Goths 88-89
-
-The West-Gothic kingdom in Gaul and Spain 89-90
-
-Alans, Suevi, Vandals; the Vandals in Africa 89-90
-
-The Franks; use of the name _Francia_ 91
-
-Alemans, Thuringians; Low-Dutch tribes 91
-
-The Frankish dominions; Roman Germany Teutonized afresh;
- peculiar position of the Franks 91-93
-
-Celtic remnant in Armorica or Britanny 93
-
-The Burgundians; various uses of the name _Burgundy_;
- separate history of Provence 93-94
-
-Inroads of the Huns; battle of Châlons; origin of Venice 94
-
-Nominal reunion of the Empire in 476 94
-
-Reigns of Odoacer and Theodoric 94-95
-
-
-§ 4. _Settlement of the English in Britain._
-
-Withdrawal of the Roman troops from Britain 95
-
-Special character of the English Conquest of Britain 96
-
-The Low-Dutch settlers, Angles, Saxons, Jutes; origin of the
- name _English_ 97
-
-The Welsh and Scots 98
-
-
-§ 5. _The Eastern Empire._
-
-Comparison of the two Empires; no Teutonic settlements in the
- Eastern 98
-
-The Tetraxite Goths 98
-
-Rivalry with Parthia continued under the revived Persian kingdom 98-99
-
-Position of Armenia 99
-
-Momentary conquests of Trajan 99
-
-Conquests of Marcus, Severus, and Diocletian; cessions of Jovian 100
-
-Division of Armenia; Hundred Years’ Peace 100
-
-Summary 101-102
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE FINAL DIVISION OF THE EMPIRE.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Reunion of the Empire._
-
-Continued existence of the Empire; position of the Teutonic kings 103
-
-Extent of the Empire at the accession of Justinian 104
-
-Conquests of Justinian; their effects 104-106
-
-Provence ceded to the Franks 105
-
-
-§ 2. _Settlement of the Lombards in Italy._
-
-Early history of the Lombards; Gepidæ, Avars 106-107
-
-Possibility of Teutonic powers on the Danube 107
-
-Lombard conquest of Italy; its partial nature; territory kept
- by the Empire 107-108
-
-
-§ 3. _Rise of the Saracens._
-
-Loss of the Spanish province by the Empire 108
-
-Wars of Chosroes and Heraclius 109
-
-Extension of Roman power on the Euxine 109-110
-
-Relation of the Arabs to Rome and Persia 110
-
-Union of the Arabs under Mahomet; renewed Aryan and Semitic strife 110
-
-Loss of the Eastern and African provinces of Rome 111
-
-Saracen conquest of Persia 111
-
-Conquest of Spain; Saracen province in Gaul 111-112
-
-Effects of the Saracen conquests; distinction between the
- Latin, Greek, and Eastern provinces 112
-
-Greatest extent of Saracen provinces 112
-
-Loss of Septimania 113
-
-
-§ 4. _Settlements of the Slavonic Nations._
-
-Movements of the Slaves; Avars, Magyars, &c. 113-114
-
-Geographical separation of the Slaves 114
-
-Analogy between Teutons and Slaves 114
-
-Slavonic settlements under Heraclius; the Dalmatian cities;
- displacement of the Illyrians 115
-
-Slavonic settlements in Greece 115-116
-
-Settlement of the Bulgarians 116
-
-Curtailment of the Empire; moral influence of Constantinople 116-117
-
-
-§ 5. _The Transfer of the Western Empire to the Franks._
-
-Conquests of the Franks in Germany and Gaul 117-119
-
-Their position in Germany, Northern Gaul, and Southern Gaul 119-120
-
-Division of the Frankish dominion; Austria and Neustria 120-121
-
-Use of the name _Francia_; Teutonic and Latin _Francia_;
- modern forms of the name 121
-
-The Karlings; their conquests; German character of their power 121-122
-
-The great powers of the eighth century: Romans, Franks, Saracens 122
-
-Character of the Caliphate; its divisions 122
-
-Relations between the Franks and the Empire 123
-
-Lombard conquest of the Exarchate 123
-
-Conquest of the Lombards by Charles the Great; he holds
- Lombardy as a separate kingdom 123
-
-His Roman title of Patrician 123-124
-
-Effects of his Imperial coronation; final division of the Empire 124
-
-The two Empires become severally German and Greek; their
- separation and rivalry 124-125
-
-The two Empires and the two Caliphates 125-126
-
-Extent of the Carolingian Empire 126
-
-Conquest of Saxony; dealings with Scandinavia; frontier of
- the Eider 126-127
-
-Relations with the Slaves; overthrow of the Avars 127
-
-The Spanish March 128
-
-Divisions of the Empire; kingdoms of Aquitaine and Italy 128
-
-Use of the names _Francia_, _Gallia_, _Germania_ 129
-
-
-§ 6. _Northern Europe._
-
-Lands beyond the Empire: Scandinavia and Britain 129
-
-Stages of English Conquest in Britain; Teutonic and Celtic
- states 129-130
-
-Supremacy of Wessex 130
-
-Denmark; Norway; Sweden 130-131
-
-Different directions of the Scandinavian settlements 131
-
-Summary 131-133
-
-Religious changes 132
-
-Note on the Slavonic settlements 133
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE BEGINNING OF THE MODERN EUROPEAN STATES.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Division of the Frankish Empire._
-
-Break-up of the Frankish power; origin of the states of
- modern Europe 134
-
-Kingdoms of Italy and Aquitaine 134
-
-Division of 817 135
-
-Union of Neustria and Aquitaine; first glimpses of modern France 135
-
-Division of Verdun; Eastern and Western _Francia_; _Lotharingia_;
- the Western Kingdom or Karolingia 137
-
-Middle Kingdom or _Burgundy_ 137
-
-Union under Charles the Fat; division on his deposition 137
-
-No formal titles used; various names for the German Kingdom 138
-
-Connexion between the German Kingdom and the Roman Empire 139
-
-Extent of the German Kingdom; its duchies and _marks_ 139-140
-
-Lotharingia 140-141
-
-Extent of the Western Kingdom 141
-
-Its great fiefs; Aquitaine; France; Normandy cut off from France 142
-
-Origin of the French kingdom and nation; union of the duchy of
- France with the Western kingdom 143
-
-New use of the word _France_; title of _Rex Francorum_ 143-144
-
-Paris the kernel of France 144
-
-Various uses of the name _Burgundy_ 144
-
-The French Duchy; the Middle Kingdom; Transjurane and
- Cisjurane Burgundy 144-145
-
-Great cities of the Burgundian kingdom 145
-
-Separation of Burgundy from the Frankish kingdom; its union
- with Germany 145-146
-
-Its later history; mainly swallowed up by France, but partly
- represented by Switzerland 146
-
-Kingdom of Italy; its extent; separate principalities 146-147
-
-Italy represents the Lombard kingdom; Milan its capital 147
-
-Abeyance of the Western Empire; its restoration by Otto the
- Great; the three Imperial kingdoms 147-148
-
-Rivalry between France and the Empire 148
-
-
-§ 2. _The Eastern Empire._
-
-Rivalry of the Eastern and Western Empires and Churches;
- Greek character of the Eastern Empire; fluctuations in
- its extent 149
-
-The _Themes_; Asiatic Themes 149-151
-
-The European Themes; Hellas; Lombardy; Sicily 151-152
-
-Older Greek names supplanted by new ones 151
-
-Character of the European and Asiatic dominion of the Empire;
- its supremacy by sea 152
-
-Losses and gains; Crete; Sicily; Italy; Dalmatia; Greece; Syria;
- Bulgaria; Cherson 152-153
-
-Greatness of the Empire under Basil the Second 153
-
-
-§ 3. _Origin of the Spanish Kingdoms._
-
-Special position of Spain; the Saracen conquest 153-154
-
-Growth of the Christian states 154-155
-
-Castile; Aragon; Portugal 155
-
-Break-up of the Western Caliphate 156
-
-
-§ 4. _Origin of the Slavonic States._
-
-Slavonic and Turanian invasions of the Eastern Empire;
- Bulgarians; Magyars; Great Moravia 156-157
-
-Special character of the Hungarian kingdom; effects of its
- religious connexion with the West 157
-
-The Northern and Southern Slaves split asunder by the Magyars 158
-
-The South-eastern Slaves 158
-
-The North-western Slaves; Bohemia; Poland 159
-
-Special position of Russia 159
-
-
-§ 5. _Northern Europe._
-
-Scandinavian settlements 159-160
-
-Growth of the kingdom of England 160
-
-The Danish invasions; division between Ælfred and Guthrum;
- Bernicia; Cumberland 161
-
-Second West-Saxon advance; Wessex grows into England;
- submission of Scotland and Strathclyde; Cumberland and Lothian 162
-
-Use of the Imperial titles by the English kings; Northern Empire
- of Cnut; England finally united by the Norman Conquest 162-163
-
-Summary 163-165
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE ECCLESIASTICAL GEOGRAPHY OF WESTERN EUROPE.
-
-Permanence of ecclesiastical divisions; they preserve earlier
- divisions; case of Lyons and Rheims 166-167
-
-Patriarchates, Provinces, Dioceses 167
-
-Bishoprics within and without the Empire 167-168
-
-
-§ 1. _The Great Patriarchates._
-
-The Patriarchates suggested by the Prefectures 168
-
-Rome, Constantinople, Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem 168-169
-
-Later Patriarchates 169-170
-
-
-§ 2. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Italy._
-
-Great numbers and smaller importance of the Italian bishoprics 170
-
-Rivals of Rome; Milan, Aquileia, Ravenna 171
-
-The immediate Roman province; other metropolitan sees 171-172
-
-
-§ 3. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Gaul and Germany._
-
-Gaulish and German dioceses 172
-
-Provinces of Southern Gaul; position of Lyons 172-173
-
-New metropolitan sees; Toulouse, Alby, Avignon, Paris;
- comparison of civil and ecclesiastical divisions 174
-
-Provinces of Northern Gaul and Germany; history of Mainz 178-179
-
-The archiepiscopal electors; other German provinces; Salzburg,
- Bremen, Magdeburg 176-177
-
-Modern arrangements in France, Germany, and the Netherlands 177
-
-
-§ 4. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Spain._
-
-Peculiarities of Spanish ecclesiastical geography; effects of
- the Saracen conquest 178
-
-Gothic and later dioceses; neglect of the Pyrenæan barrier 178-179
-
-
-§ 5. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of the British Islands._
-
-Analogy between Britain and Spain 179
-
-Tribal nature of the Celtic episcopate 179-180
-
-Scheme of Gregory the Great; the two English provinces;
- relation of Scotland to York 180-181
-
-Foundation of the English sees; territorial bishoprics 181
-
-Canterbury and its suffragan; effects of the Norman Conquest 181-182
-
-Province of York; Scotland and Ireland 182-183
-
-
-§ 6. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Northern and Eastern Europe._
-
-The Scandinavian provinces; Lund, Upsala, Trondhjem 184
-
-Poland and neighbouring lands; Gnezna, Riga, Leopol 184-185
-
-Provinces of Hungary and Dalmatia 186
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE IMPERIAL KINGDOMS.
-
-The German Kingdom; its relation to the Western Empire; falling
- off of Italy and Burgundy 188-190
-
-Loss of territory by the German kingdom; its extension to the
- north-east 190-191
-
-Geographical contrast of the earlier and the later Empire 191
-
-
-§ 1. _The Kingdom of Germany._
-
-Changes of boundaries and nomenclature in Germany; Saxony;
- Bavaria; Austria; Burgundy; Prussia 191-192
-
-Extent of the Kingdom; fluctuations of its western boundary;
- Lorraine; Elsass; the left bank of the Rhine 192-194
-
-Fluctuations on the Burgundian frontier; union of Burgundy
- with the Empire 194
-
-Frontier of Germany and Italy; union of the crowns 195
-
-Northern and eastern advance of the Empire; the _marks_ 195
-
-Hungarian frontier; marks of Austria, Carinthia, and Carniola 196
-
-Danish frontier; Danish mark; boundary of the Eider 196
-
-The Slavonic frontier 197
-
-The Saxon mark; Slavonic princes of Mecklenburg, Lübeck;
- the Hansa 198-199
-
-Marks of Brandenburg, Lausitz, and Meissen 199
-
-Bohemia and Moravia 199
-
-Polish frontier; Pomerania, Silesia 200
-
-Germanization of the Slavonic lands 200-201
-
-Internal geography; growth of the principalities 201
-
-Growth of the marchlands; Brandenburg or Prussia, and Austria;
- analogies elsewhere 202
-
-Decline of the duchies; end of the _Gauverfassung_ 202
-
-Growth of the House of Austria; separation of Switzerland and
- the Netherlands 203
-
-The Circles 203
-
-Powers holding lands within and without the Empire; Austria;
- Sweden; Brandenburg and Prussia; Hannover and Great Britain 203-204
-
-Dissolution of the kingdom; the Confederation 204
-
-Greatness of Prussia and Austria 204
-
-The new Empire 204
-
-Germany under the Saxon and Frankish kings; vanishing of Francia;
- analogy of Wessex 205-206
-
-Changes in the twelfth century; beginning of Brandenburg and
- Austria; the duchies and the circles 206-207
-
-Duchy of Saxony; its divisions and growth 207
-
-Break-up of the duchy; Westfalia; the new Saxony 207
-
-Duchy of Brunswick; electorate and kingdom of Hannover 208
-
-The new Saxony; Lauenburg; the Saxon Electorate 208-209
-
-The North Mark of Saxony or Mark of Brandenburg 209
-
-House of Hohenzollern; union of Brandenburg and Prussia 210
-
-Advances in Pomerania, Westfalia, &c. 210
-
-German character of the Prussian state; its contrast with
- Austria; use of the name _Prussia_ 210-211
-
-Conquest of Silesia; Polish acquisitions of Prussia; East
- Friesland 211-212
-
-Saxon Possessions of Denmark and Sweden 212-213
-
-Free cities of Saxony; the Hansa; the cities and the bishoprics 213-214
-
-Duchy of _Francia_; held by the bishops of Würzburg; the
- Franconian circle 214
-
-The Rhenish circles; Hessen; Bamberg; Nürnberg; the
- ecclesiastical states on the Rhine 214-215
-
-Palatinate of the Rhine; Upper Palatinate 215
-
-Bavaria; its relations towards the Palatinate and towards Austria 215
-
-Archbishopric of Salzburg 215
-
-Lotharingia; falling off from the Empire; the later Lorraine
- and Elsass 216
-
-Swabia; ecclesiastical powers 216
-
-Swabian lands of the Confederates 216
-
-Baden and Württemberg 216
-
-Circle of Austria; house of Habsburg 217
-
-Extent of its German lands; Tyrol; Elsass; loss of Swabian lands 217
-
-Bohemia and its dependencies 217
-
-Trent and Brixen 217
-
-Circle of Burgundy; not purely German; its origin 218
-
-
-§ 2. _The Confederation and Empire of Germany._
-
-Germany changes from a kingdom to a confederation 218
-
-The _Bund_; the new Confederation and Empire; the Empire
- still federal 219
-
-Wars of the French Revolution; loss of the left bank of the Rhine 220
-
-Suppression of free cities and ecclesiastical states; new
- electorates 220
-
-Peace of Pressburg; new kingdoms; cessions made by Austria 221
-
-Title of ‘Emperor of Austria;’ Confederation of the Rhine; end of
- the Western Empire 221
-
-German territories of Denmark and Sweden 221-222
-
-Losses of Prussia and Austria; French annexations 222
-
-Kingdoms of Saxony and Westfalia; Grand duchy of Frankfurt 222
-
-Germany wiped out of the map 222
-
-Losses of Prussia; Danzig; duchy of Warsaw 222-223
-
-The German Confederation; princes holding lands within and
- without the Confederation; kingdom of Hanover 223
-
-Increase of Prussian territory; dismemberment of Saxony 224
-
-Lands recovered by Austria; German possessions of Denmark and
- the Netherlands; Sweden withdraws from Germany 224-225
-
-Comparison of Prussia and Austria; Hannover 225
-
-Kingdoms of Bavaria, Saxony, Württemberg; other German states;
- the free cities; Lüttich passes to Belgium 226-227
-
-Revival of German national life 227
-
-Affairs of Luxemburg 228-229
-
-War of Sleswick and Holstein; the duchies ceded to Austria
- and Prussia 228
-
-War of 1866; North German Confederation; exclusion of Austria;
- great advance of Prussia 228-229
-
-War with France; the new German Empire; recovery of
- Elsass-Lothringen 229-230
-
-Comparison of the old kingdom and the new Empire; name
- of _Prussia_ 230-231
-
-
-§ 3. _The Kingdom of Italy._
-
-Small geographical importance of the kingdom; changes on the
- Alpine frontier 231-232
-
-Case of Trieste 233
-
-Apulia, Sicily, Venice, no part of the kingdom; their relation
- to the Eastern Empire 233-234
-
-Special history of the house of Savoy 234
-
-Extent of the kingdom; Neustria and Austria; Æmilia, Tuscany;
- Romagna 234-235
-
-Lombardy proper; the marches 235
-
-Comparison of Germany and Italy; the commonwealths, the
- tyrants, the Popes; four stages of Italian history 235-236
-
-Northern Italy; the Marquesses of Montferrat; the Lombard
- cities; the Veronese march 236-238
-
-Central Italy; Romagna and the march of Ancona; the Tuscan
- commonwealths; Pisa and Genoa; Rome and the Popes 238-239
-
-The tyrannies; Spanish dominion: practical abeyance of the
- Empire in Italy; Imperial and Papal fiefs 239-240
-
-Palaiologoi at Montferrat; house of Visconti at Milan; the duchy
- of Milan; its dismemberment; duchy of Parma and Piacenza 240-242
-
-Land power of Venice 242-243
-
-Other principalities; duchy of Mantua, of Ferrara and Modena;
- difference in their tenure 243-244
-
-Romagna; Bologna; Urbino; advance of the Popes 244
-
-The Tuscan cities; Lucca; rivalry of Pisa and Genoa; Siena;
- Florence 245
-
-Duchy of Florence; grand duchy of Tuscany 246
-
-
-§ 4. _The Later Geography of Italy._
-
-The kingdom practically forgotten; position of Charles the Fifth 246
-
-Italy a geographical expression; changes in the Italian states 246-247
-
-Dominion of the two branches of the house of Austria 247
-
-Italy mapped into larger states; exceptions at Monaco and
- San Marino 247
-
-Venice; Milan Spanish and Austrian; its dismemberment in favour
- of Savoy; end of Montferrat and Mantua 248-249
-
-Parma and Piacenza; separation of Modena and Ferrara; Genoa
- and Lucca; Grand Duchy of Tuscany; advance of the Popes 249
-
-The Norman kingdom of Sicily; Benevento 250
-
-The Two Sicilies; their various unions and divisions; their
- relations to the houses of Austria, Savoy and Bourbon 250-251
-
-Use of the name _Sardinia_ 251
-
-Wars of the French Revolution; the new republics; Treaty of
- Campo Formio; Piedmont joined to France 251-253
-
-Restoration of the Pope and the King of the Two Sicilies 253
-
-The French kingdoms; Etruria; Italy 253
-
-Various annexations; Rome becomes French; Murat King of Naples 253-254
-
-Italy under French dominion; revival of the Italian name 254-255
-
-Settlement of 1814-1815; the princes restored, but not the
- commonwealths 255
-
-Austrian kingdom of Lombardy and Venice; Genoa annexed by
- Piedmont 255-256
-
-The smaller states; the Papal states; Kingdom of the Two
- Sicilies 256
-
-Union of Italy comes from Piedmont; earlier movements; war of
- 1859; Kingdom of Italy: Savoy and Nizza ceded to France 257-258
-
-Recovery of Venetia and Rome; parts of the kingdom not recovered 258
-
-Freedom of San Marino 258
-
-
-§ 5. _The Kingdom of Burgundy._
-
-Union of Burgundy with Germany; dying out of the kingdom;
- chiefly swallowed up by France, but represented by
- Switzerland 258-259
-
-Boundaries of the kingdom; fluctuation; Romance tongue prevails
- in it 259
-
-History of the Burgundian Palatinate; Besançon; Montbeliard 261
-
-The Lesser Burgundy; partly German 261
-
-The Dukes of Zähringen; the ecclesiastical states; the free cities;
- the free lands; growth of the Old League of High Germany 262
-
-Growth of Savoy; Burgundian possessions of its counts 263
-
-States between the Palatinate and the Mediterranean; Bresse
- and Bugey; principalities and free cities 263
-
-County of Provence; its connexion with France 263-264
-
-Progress of French annexation: 1310-1791: Lyons; the Dauphiny:
- Vienne; Valence; Provence; Avignon and Venaissin 264-265
-
-Nizza 265
-
-History of Orange 265-266
-
-States which have split off from the Imperial kingdoms:
- Switzerland; Savoy; the duchy of Burgundy by Belgium
- and the Netherlands 266-267
-
-The Austrian power; its position as a marchland; its union
- with Hungary; its relation to Eastern Europe 267-268
-
-
-§ 6. _The Swiss Confederation._
-
-German origin of the Confederation; popular errors; sketch
- of Swiss history 268-270
-
-The Three Lands; the cities: Luzern, Zürich, Bern; the Eight
- Ancient Cantons 270
-
-Allies and subjects; dominion of Zürich and Bern; conquests
- from Austria 270-271
-
-Italian conquests; first conquests from Savoy; League of Wallis 271-272
-
-The Thirteen Cantons 272
-
-League of Graubünden; further Italian and Savoyard conquests 272-273
-
-History of Geneva; territory restored to Savoy; division of
- Gruyères 273-274
-
-The Allied States; Neufchâtel; Constanz 274
-
-The Confederation independent of the Empire; its position as
- a middle state 274-275
-
-Wars of the French Revolution; Helvetic Republic; freedom of
- the subject lands; annexations to France 275-276
-
-Act of Mediation; the nineteen cantons 276
-
-The present Swiss Confederation 276
-
-History of Neufchâtel 276
-
-
-§ 7. _The State of Savoy._
-
-Position and growth of Savoy; three divisions of the Savoyard
- lands; popular confusions 277-278
-
-The Savoyard power originally Burgundian; Maurienne; Aosta 278
-
-First Italian possessions 279
-
-Burgundian advance; lands north of the lake 280-281
-
-Relations to Geneva, France, and Bern 281-282
-
-Acquisition of Nizza 282
-
-Italian advance of Savoy; principally of Achaia, of Piedmont;
- Saluzzo 283-284
-
-Savoy a middle state 284
-
-French influence and occupation; decline of Savoy 285
-
-Loss of lands north of the lake; further losses to Bern and
- her allies; recovery of the lands south of the lake;
- the Savoyard power becomes mainly Italian 286
-
-Savoy falls back in Burgundy and advances in Italy; history
- of Saluzzo; finally acquired in exchange for Bresse, &c. 287
-
-Duchy of Savoy annexed to France; restored; annexed again 288
-
-French annexation of Nizza; Aosta the one Burgundian remnant 288
-
-Savoyard advance in Italy 289
-
-
-§ 8. _The Duchy of Burgundy and the Low Countries._
-
-Position of the Valois dukes as a middle power; result of
- their twofold vassalage 290
-
-Schemes of a Burgundian kingdom; their final effects; Belgium
- and the Netherlands 290-291
-
-History of the duchy of Burgundy; its union with Flanders,
- Artois, and the county of Burgundy; relations to France
- and the Empire 292-293
-
-The Netherlands; the counts of Flanders; their Imperial fiefs 293
-
-Holland and Friesland 293
-
-Brabant; Hainault; union of Holland and Hainault 294
-
-Common points in all these states; the great cities; Romance
- and Teutonic dialects 294-295
-
-South-western states; Liége; Luxemburg; Limburg; duchy
- of Geldern 295
-
-Middle position of these states; French influence; union
- under the Burgundian dukes 296
-
-Advance under Philip the Good; Namur, Brabant, and Limburg,
- Holland and Hainault 296-297
-
-The towns on the Somme; Flanders and Artois released
- from homage 297-298
-
-Philip’s last acquisition of Luxemburg; advance under Charles
- the Bold and Charles the Fifth; union of the Netherlands 298
-
-The Netherlands pass to Spain; war of independence; its
- imperfect results 299
-
-The Seven United Provinces; their independence of the Empire;
- their colonies; lack of a name; use of the word _Dutch_ 299-300
-
-The Spanish Netherlands; English possession of Dunkirk;
- advance of France; the Spanish Netherlands pass to Austria 301
-
-Annexation by France; kingdom of Holland; all the Burgundian
- possessions French 302
-
-Kingdom of the Netherlands; Liége incorporated; relation
- of Luxemburg to Germany 303
-
-Division of the Netherlands and Belgium; separation of
- Luxemburg from Germany 303
-
-General history and result of the Burgundian power 303-304
-
-
-§ 9. _The Dominions of Austria._
-
-Origin of the name _Austria_; anomalous position of the
- Austrian power; the so-called ‘Empire’ of Austria 305-307
-
-The _Eastern Mark_; becomes a duchy; division of Carinthia;
- union of Austria and Styria 307-308
-
-County of Görz 309
-
-Austria, &c., annexed by Bohemia; great power of Ottokar 309
-
-House of Habsburg; their Swabian and Alsatian lands; their loss 309-311
-
-King Rudolf; break-up of the power of Ottokar; Albert duke
- of Austria and Styria 310
-
-Relations between Austria and the Empire; division of the
- Austrian dominions 311-312
-
-Acquisition of Carinthia and Tyrol; commendation of Trieste;
- loss of Thurgau 312-313
-
-Austrian kings and emperors; possessions beyond the Empire 313-315
-
-Union with Bohemia and Hungary 314-317
-
-Consequences of the union with Hungary; slow recovery of
- the kingdom 317
-
-Acquisition of Görz; advance towards Italy; Austrian
- dominion and influence in Italy 318
-
-Connexion of Austria and Burgundy; the Austrian Netherlands 318-319
-
-Loss of Elsass; of Silesia; acquisition of Poland; Dalmatia 320
-
-Position and dominions of Maria Theresa 320-321
-
-New use of the name _Austria_; the Austrian ‘Empire’ in 1811 321-322
-
-Misuse of the Illyrian name 322
-
-Austria in 1814-1815; recovery of Dalmatia; annexation of
- Ragusa; of Cracow 322-323
-
-Separation from Hungary; reconquest; the ‘Austro-Hungarian
- Monarchy;’ Bosnia, Herzegovina, Spizza 323-324
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE KINGDOM OF FRANCE.
-
-Origin and growth of France; comparison with Austria 325
-
-How far Karolingia split off from the Empire 326
-
-France a nation as well as a power 326-327
-
-Use of the name of _France_; its dukes acquire the western
- kingdom; extent of their dominion 327-328
-
-Two forms of annexation; first, of fiefs of the crown;
- secondly, of lands beyond the kingdom 328
-
-Distinctions among the fiefs; the great vassals; Normandy;
- Britanny 328
-
-The Twelve Peers; different position of the bishops in Germany
- and Karolingia 328-329
-
-
-§ 1. _Incorporation of the Vassal States._
-
-The duchy of France in 987; the King cut off from the sea 329-330
-
-The neighbouring states; position of the Parisian kings 330
-
-The kings less powerful than the dukes; advantages of their
- kingship; first advances of the kings 331
-
-The House of Anjou; gradual union of Normandy, Anjou, Maine,
- Aquitaine, and Gascony 331-333
-
-Acquisition of continental Normandy, Anjou, &c. 333-334
-
-The English kings keep Aquitaine and insular Normandy 334
-
-Sudden greatness of France 334
-
-Fiefs of Aragon in Southern Gaul; counts of Toulouse and
- Barcelona 334-335
-
-Effects of the Albigensian war; French annexations;
- Roussillon and Barcelona freed from homage 335
-
-Languedoc 335
-
-Other annexations of Saint Lewis 335-336
-
-Annexation of Champagne; temporary possession of Navarre 336-337
-
-The Hundred Years’ War; relations between France and Aquitaine;
- momentary possession of Aquitaine by Philip the Fair 337
-
-Peace of Bretigny; Aquitaine and other lands freed from homage 337-338
-
-Peace of Troyes; momentary union of the French and English crowns 338
-
-Final annexation of Aquitaine; beginning of the modern French
- kingdom 338-339
-
-Growths of the Dukes of Burgundy; the towns on the Somme;
- momentary annexation of Artois and the County of Burgundy 339-340
-
-Annexation of the duchy of Burgundy; Flanders and Artois
- released from homage; analogy with Aquitaine 340-343
-
-
-§ 2. _Foreign Annexations of France._
-
-Relations between France and England; Boulogne; Dunkirk 341-342
-
-Relations between France and Spain; Roussillon; Navarre;
- Andorra 342-343
-
-Advance at the cost of the Imperial kingdoms, first Burgundy,
- then Germany 343
-
-Effect of the Burgundian conquests of France; relations with
- Savoy and Switzerland 344
-
-History of the _Langue d’oc_ 345
-
-French dominion in Italy; slight extent of real annexation 345-346
-
-French annexations from Germany; the Three Bishoprics;
-effect of isolated conquests 346
-
-French acquisitions in Elsass; France reaches and passes the
- Rhine; increased isolation 347-348
-
-Temporary annexation of Bar; annexation of Roussillon;
- advance in the Netherlands 348-349
-
-Annexation of Franche Comté and Besançon; seizure of
- Strassburg; annexation of Orange 349-350
-
-Annexation of Lorraine; thorough incorporation of French
- conquests; effect of geographical continuity 350-351
-
-Purchase of Corsica; its effects; birth of Buonaparte 351-352
-
-
-§ 3. _The Colonial Dominion of France._
-
-French colonies in North America; Acadia; Canada; Louisiana 352
-
-Colonial rivalry of France and England; English conquest
- of Canada 353
-
-French West India Islands 353
-
-The French power in India; Bourbon and Mauritius 353-354
-
-
-§ 4. _Acquisitions of France during the Revolutionary Wars._
-
-Distinction between the Republican and ‘Imperial’ Conquests 355-356
-
-First class of annexations; Avignon, Mülhausen, Montbeliard;
- Geneva; bishopric of Basel 355
-
-Second zone; traditions of Gaul and the Rhine; Netherlands;
- Savoy, &c.; feelings of Buonaparte towards Switzerland 355-356
-
-Character of Buonaparte’s conquests; dependent and incorporated
- lands; division of Europe between France and Russia 356-357
-
-The French power in 1811 357-358
-
-Arrangements of 1814-1815 358-359
-
-Later changes; annexation of Savoy, Nizza, and Mentone;
- loss of Elsass and Lorraine 359
-
-Losses among the colonies; independence of Hayti; sale of
- Louisiana 359-360
-
-Conquest of Algeria; character of African conquests 360
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE EASTERN EMPIRE.
-
-Comparison of the Eastern and Western Empires; the Western
- falls to pieces from within; the Eastern is broken to
- pieces from without 362-363
-
-Tendencies to separation in the Eastern Empire 363
-
-Closer connexion of the East with the elder Empire; retention
- of the Roman name; _Romania_ 363-364
-
-Importance of the distinction of races in the East 364
-
-The original races; Albanians, Greeks, Vlachs 364
-
-Slavonic settlers 364
-
-Turanian invasions from the North; Bulgarians, Magyars, &c. 365
-
-The Saracens 365
-
-The Seljuk and Ottoman Turks; comparison of Bulgarians,
- Magyars, and Ottomans 365
-
-The Eastern Empire became nearly conterminous with the Greek
- nation; reappearance of the other original races 366
-
-The Latin Conquest, and the revived Byzantine Empire 366-367
-
-States which arose out of the Empire or on its borders;
- Sicily; Venice; Bulgaria; Hungary; Asiatic powers 367-368
-
-Distinction between conquest and settlement 368
-
-
-§ 1. _Changes in the Frontier of the Empire._
-
-Power of revival in the Empire 369
-
-Western possessions of the Empire; losses in the islands;
- advance in the mainland 369
-
-Loss of Sardinia; gradual loss and temporary partial recovery
- of Sicily 369-370
-
-Fluctuations of the Imperial power in Italy; the Normans 370-371
-
-Loss and recovery of Crete and Cyprus; separation of Cyprus 371-372
-
-Summary of the history of the great islands 372-373
-
-Relations to the Slavonic powers; three Slavonic groups 373
-
-Bulgarian migrations; White Bulgaria; the first Bulgarian
- kingdom south of the Danube 373-374
-
-Use of the Bulgarian name 374
-
-The slaves of Macedonia, &c. 375
-
-Relations between the Empire and the Bulgarian kingdom 375
-
-Recovery of Macedonia and Greece; use of the name _Hellênes_ 375-376
-
-Servia, Croatia, and Dalmatia 376
-
-Greatest extent of the first Bulgarian kingdom under Simeon 376-377
-
-First conquest of Bulgaria 377
-
-Second Bulgarian kingdom under Samuel; second conquest 377-378
-
-Venice and Cherson 378
-
-Asiatic conquests; annexation of Armenia 378-379
-
-New enemies; Magyars; Turks 379
-
-Revolt of Servia; loss of Belgrade 379
-
-Advance of the Seljuk Turks; Sultans of _Roum_; loss of Antioch 379-380
-
-Normans advance; loss of Corfu and Durazzo 380
-
-Revival under John and Manuel, Komnênos; recovery of lands in
- Asia and Europe 381
-
-Splitting off of distant possessions; loss of Dalmatia; Latin
- Kingdom of Cyprus 381
-
-Third Bulgarian kingdom; the Empire more thoroughly Greek 382
-
-Latin conquest of Constantinople; Act of Partition 383
-
-Latin Empire of Romania 383-384
-
-Latin kingdom of Thessalonikê 384-385
-
-Despotat of Epeiros; Greek Empire of Thessalonikê; their
- separation 385
-
-Empire of Trebizond; loss of its western dominion 386
-
-The old Empire continued in the Empire of Nikaia; its advance
- in Europe and Asia; recovery of Constantinople 386-387
-
-Loss in Asia and advance in Europe; recovery of Peloponnêsos 387-388
-
-Advance in Macedonia and Epeiros 388
-
-Losses in Asia; Knights of Saint John; advance of the Turks 389
-
-Losses towards Servia and Bulgaria; conquests of Stephen Dushan 389-390
-
-Fragmentary dominion of the Empire 390
-
-Advance of the Turks in Europe; loss of Hadrianople; loss
- of Philadelphia 390
-
-Recovery of territory after the fall of Bajazet 390-391
-
-Turkish conquest of Constantinople; of Peloponnêsos 391
-
-States which grew out of the Empire; Slavonic, Hungarian,
- and Rouman; Greek; Latin; Turkish 391-393
-
-
-§ 2. _The Kingdom of Sicily._
-
-The Norman Power in Italy and Sicily; its relations to the
- Eastern and Western Empires 393
-
-Advance of the Normans in Italy; Aversa and Capua; duchy of
- Apulia; Robert Wiscard in Epeiros 394-395
-
-Norman conquest of Sicily 395
-
-Roger King of Sicily; his conquests in Italy, Corfu, and Africa 395-396
-
-Eastern dominion of the two Sicilian crowns; kingdom of
- Margarito 396-397
-
-Acre; Malta 398
-
-
-§ 3. _The Crusading States._
-
-Comparison between Sicily and the crusading states 398
-
-Jerusalem; Cyprus; Armenia 399
-
-Extent of the Kingdom of Jerusalem; other Latin states in Syria;
- loss and recovery of Jerusalem, final loss; loss of Acre 399-400
-
-Kingdom of Cyprus; its relations to Jerusalem and Armenia 401
-
-Frank principalities in Greece; possessions of the maritime
- commonwealths 401-402
-
-
-§ 4. _The Eastern Dominion of Venice and Genoa._
-
-The historic position of Venice springs from her relation to
- the Eastern Empire 402-403
-
-Connexion of her Greek and Dalmatian rule 402
-
-Comparison between Venice and Sicily 402
-
-Her share in the Act of Partition compared with her real
- dominion; her main position Hadriatic 403-405
-
-Venetian possessions not assigned by the partition; Crete;
- Cyprus; Thessalonikê 404
-
-Taking of Zara in the fourth crusade 405
-
-Relations of the Dalmatian cities to Servia, Croatia, Venice,
- Hungary, and the Empire 405-407
-
-Pagania 406
-
-Magyar Kingdom of Croatia; struggles between Venice and Hungary 407
-
-Independence of Ragusa; Polizza 407
-
-History of Corfu 408
-
-Venetian posts in Peloponnêsos: history of Euboia; loss
- of the Ægæan islands 409
-
-Advance of Venice and Dalmatia, Peloponnêsos, and the
- Western islands 410
-
-Venice the champion against the Turk; losses of Venice;
- fluctuations in the Western Islands 410-412
-
-Conquest and loss of Peloponnêsos 412
-
-Frontier of Ragusa 412
-
-Venetian fiefs; history of the duchy of Naxos 413
-
-Possessions of Genoa; Galata; her dominions in the Euxine 413-414
-
-Genoese fiefs; Lesbos; Chios; the Maona 414
-
-Revolutions of Rhodes; knights of Saint John; their removal
- to Malta; revolutions of Malta 414-415
-
-
-§ 5. _The Principalities of the Greek Mainland._
-
-Greek and Latin states; use of the name _Môraia_ 415-416
-
-Lordship and duchy of Athens; the Catalans; the later
- dukes; Ottoman conquest; momentary Venetian occupations 416-417
-
-Salôna and Bodonitza 417
-
-Principality of Achaia; recovery of Peloponnesian lands by
- the Empire 417-418
-
-Angevin overlordship in Achaia; dismemberment of the
- principality 418
-
-Patras under the Pope 418
-
-Conquests of Constantine Palaiologos 418
-
-Turkish conquest of Peloponnêsos; independence of Maina 419
-
-Revolutions of Epeiros; dismemberment of the despotat;
- recovery of Epeiros by the Empire 419
-
-Servian conquests; beginning of the Albanian power; kings
- of the house of Thopia 419-420
-
-Servian dynasty in southern Epeiros; kingdom of Thessaly;
- Turkish conquest 420
-
-The Buondelmonti in Northern Epeiros; history of the house
- of Tocco; _Karlili_; effects of their rule 420-421
-
-Turkish conquest of Albania; revolt of Scanderbeg; Turkish
- reconquest 421
-
-Empire of Trebizond; its relations to Constantinople 422
-
-Turkish conquest of Trebizond; of Perateia or Gothia 422-423
-
-
-§ 6. _The Slavonic States._
-
-Effects of the Latin conquest on the Slavonic states 423
-
-Comparison of Servia and Bulgaria; extent of Servia; its
- relation to the Empire; conquest by Manuel Komnênos;
- Servia independent 423-424
-
-Relations towards Hungary; shiftings of Rama or Bosnia 424-425
-
-Southern advance of Servia; Empire of Stephen Dushan 425
-
-Break-up of the Servian power; the later Servian kingdom;
- conquests and deliverances of Servia 426
-
-Kingdom of Bosnia; loss of Jayce; duchy of Saint Saba or
- Herzegovina; Turkish conquest of Bosnia; of Herzegovina 426-427
-
-The Balsa at Skodra; loss of Skodra; beginning of Tzernagora
- or Montenegro 428
-
-Loss of Zabljak; establishment of Tzetinje 428
-
-The Vladikas; the lay princes 429
-
-Montenegrin conquests and losses 428-429
-
-Greatest extent of the third Bulgarian kingdom; its decline;
- shiftings of the frontier towards the Empire; Philippopolis 429-430
-
-Break-up of the kingdom; principality of Dobrutcha;
- Turkish conquest 430-431
-
-
-§ 7. _The Kingdom of Hungary._
-
-Character and position of the Hungarian kingdom 431-432
-
-Great Moravia overthrown by the Magyars; their relations to
- the two Empires 432-433
-
-The two Chrobatias separated by the Magyars; their geographical
- position 433-434
-
-Kingdom of Hungary; its relations to Croatia and Slavonia 434
-
-Transsilvania or Siebenbürgen; origin of the name; German
- and other colonies 435
-
-Origin of the Roumans; their northern migration 435-436
-
-Rouman element in the third Bulgarian kingdom; occupation
- of the lands beyond the Danube; Great and Little Wallachia;
- Transsilvania; Moldavia 436-437
-
-Conquests of Lewis the Great; Dalmatia; occupation of Halicz
- and Vladimir; pledging of Zips 437
-
-Turkish invasion; disputes for Dalmatia 438
-
-Reign of Matthias Corvinus; extension of Hungary east and west 438
-
-Loss of Belgrade; the Austrian kings; Turkish conquest of
- Hungary; fragment kept by the Austrian kings; their tribute
- to the Turk; the Rouman lands 438-439
-
-Recovery of Hungary from the Turk; peace of Carlowitz;
- of Passarowitz; losses at the peace of Belgrade 439-440
-
-Galicia and Lodomeria; Bukovina; Dalmatia 440-441
-
-Annexation of Spizza; administration of Bosnia and Herzegovina;
- renewed vassalage to the Turk 440-441
-
-
-§ 8. _The Ottoman Power._
-
-The Ottoman Turks; special character of their invasion;
- contrast with other Turanian invasions; comparison with
- the Saracens in Spain 442-443
-
-Comparison of the Ottoman dominions with the Eastern Empire 443
-
-Effects of the Mongolian invasion; origin of the Ottomans;
- their position in Europe and Asia; break-up and reunion
- of their dominion; its permanence 443-444
-
-Advance of the Ottomans in Asia; in Europe; dominion of
- Bajazet 444-445
-
-Victory of Timour; reunion of the Ottoman power under
- Mahomet the First 445-446
-
-Mahomet the Second; taking of Constantinople; extent of
- his dominion; taking of Otranto 446
-
-Conquest of Syria and Egypt 447
-
-Reign of Suleiman; his conquests; Hungary; Rhodes; Naxos;
- his African overlordship 447
-
-Conquest of Cyprus; decline of the Ottoman power 447-448
-
-Greatest extent of the Ottoman power; Crete and Podolia 448
-
-Ottoman loss of Hungary; loss and recovery of Peloponnêsos;
- Bosnia and Herzegovina; union of inland and maritime Illyria 448
-
-English vassalage in Cyprus 449
-
-Relations between Russia and the Turk; Azof; Treaty of
- Kainardji; Crim; Jedisan; Bessarabia; shiftings of
- the Moldavian frontier 449-450
-
-
-§ 9. _The Liberated States._
-
-Lands liberated from the Turk; comparison of Hungary
- with Greece, Servia, &c. 450
-
-The Servian people the first to revolt 450
-
-The Ionian Islands the first liberated state; the Septinsular
- Republic; overlordship of the Turk 451
-
-The Venetian outposts given to the Turk; surrender of Parga;
- last Ottoman encroachment 451
-
-The Ionian Islands under British protection 451
-
-The Greek War of Independence; extent of the Greek nation;
- extent of the liberated lands 451-452
-
-Kingdom of Greece; addition of the Ionian Islands; promised
- addition in Thessaly and Epeiros 452
-
-First deliverance and reconquest of Servia 453
-
-Second deliverance; Servia a tributary principality 452-453
-
-Withdrawal of Turkish garrisons 453
-
-Independence and enlargement of Servia 453
-
-Fourfold division of the Servian nation 453
-
-The Rouman principalities; union of Wallachia and Moldavia 453
-
-Independence and new frontier of Roumania 453-454
-
-Deliverance of part of Bulgaria; the Bulgaria of San Stefano 454
-
-Treaty of Berlin; division of Bulgaria into free, half-free,
- and enslaved 454-455
-
-Principality of Bulgaria; Eastern Roumelia 454
-
-General survey 455-460
-
-Note on M. Sathas 460-461
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE BALTIC LANDS.
-
-Lands beyond the two Empires; the British islands; Scandinavia;
- Spain 462-463
-
-_Quasi_-imperial position of certain powers 462-463
-
-Comparison of Scandinavia and Spain; of Aragon and Sweden 463-464
-
-Eastern and Western aspect of Scandinavia 464
-
-General view of the Baltic lands; the Northern Slavonic lands,
- their relations to Germany and Hungary 465
-
-Characteristics of Poland and Russia 465
-
-The primitive nations, Aryan and non-Aryan 455-466
-
-Central position of the North-Slavonic lands; barbarian
- neighbours of Russia and Scandinavia; Russian conquest
- and colonization by land 467
-
-Relation of the Baltic lands to the two Empires; Norway
- always independent; relations of Sweden and Denmark
- to the Western Empire 467
-
-The Western Empire and the West-Slavonic lands; relations
- of Poland to the Western Empire 467
-
-Relations of Russia to the Eastern Church and Empire;
- Imperial style of Russia 468
-
-
-§ 1. _The Scandinavian Lands after the Separation of the Empires._
-
-The Baltic still mainly held by the earlier races; formation
- of the Scandinavian kingdom 468-499
-
-Formation of the Danish kingdom; its extent; frontier of
- the Eider; the Danish march 469
-
-Use of the name _Northmen_; formation of the kingdom of
- Norway 469-470
-
-The Swedes and Gauts; the Swedish kingdom 470
-
-Its fluctuations towards Norway and Denmark; its growth
- towards the north 470
-
-Western conquests and settlements of the Danes and Northmen 471
-
-Settlements in Britain and Gaul 471
-
-Settlements in Orkney, Man, Iceland, Ireland, &c. 471
-
-Expeditions to the East; Danish occupation of Samland; Jomsburg 471
-
-Swedish conquest of Curland; Scandinavians in Russia 472
-
-
-§ 2. _The Lands East and South of the Baltic at the Separation
-of the Empires._
-
-Slaves between Elbe and Dnieper; their lack of sea-board 472-473
-
-Kingdom of Samo; Great Moravia 473
-
-Four Slavonic groups 473-474
-
-Polabic group; Sorabi, Leuticii, Obotrites; their relations to
- the Empire 474-475
-
-Early conquest of the Sorabi; marks of Meissen and Lusatia;
- long resistance of the Leuticians; takings of Branibor;
- mark of Brandenburg 475-476
-
-Mark of the Billungs; kingdom of Sclavinia; house of Mecklenburg;
- relations to Denmark 476
-
-Bohemia and Moravia; their relations to Poland, Hungary,
- and Germany 477
-
-The Polish kingdom; its relations to Germany; rivalry of
- Poland and Russia 478
-
-Lechs or Poles; their various tribes 478
-
-Beginning of the Polish state; its conversion and relations
- to the Empire 479
-
-Conquests of Boleslaf; union of the Northern Chrobatia with
- Poland 479
-
-The Polish state survives, though divided 479-480
-
-Relations of Russia to the Eastern Church and Empire; Russia
- created by the Scandinavian settlement; origin of the name 480
-
-First centre at Novgorod; Russian advance; union of the
- Eastern Slaves 481
-
-Second centre at Kief; the princes become Slavonic; attacks
- on Constantinople and Cherson 481-482
-
-Conquests on the Caspian; isolation of Russia; Russian lands
- west of Dnieper 482
-
-Russian principalities; supremacy of Kief 482
-
-Supremacy of the northern Vladimir; commonwealths of Novgorod
- and Pskof; various principalities; kingdom of Halicz or Galicia 483
-
-The Cuman power; Mongol invasion; Russia tributary to
- the Mongols; Russia represented by Novgorod 483-484
-
-The earlier races; Finns in Livland and Esthland 484
-
-The Lettic nations; Lithuania; Prussia 484
-
-Survey in the twelfth century 485
-
-
-§ 3. _German Dominion on the Baltic._
-
-Time of Teutonic conquest on the Baltic; comparison of German
- and Scandinavian influence; German influence the stronger 485-486
-
-Beginning of Swedish conquest in Finland; German conquest
- in Livland; its effect on Lithuania and Russia; the
- Military orders 487
-
-Polish gains and losses 487
-
-Character of the _Hansa_ 487
-
-Temporary Swedish possession of Scania; union of Calmar;
- division and reunion; abiding union of Denmark and Norway 487-488
-
-Union of Iceland with Norway; loss of the Scandinavian
- settlements in the British isles 488
-
-Swedish advance in Finland 488
-
-Temporary greatness of Denmark, settlement of Esthland;
- conquest of Sclavinia; Danish advance in Germany;
- Holstein, &c.; long retention of Rügen 488-490
-
-Duchy of South-Jutland or Sleswick; its relations to Denmark
- and Holstein; royal and ducal lines; conquest
- of Ditmarschen 490-491
-
-Effect of the Danish advance on the Slavonic lands; western
- losses of Poland; Pomerania; Silesia 491-492
-
-Kingdom of Bohemia; dominion of Ottocar; the Luxemburg kings 492-493
-
-Annexation of Silesia and Lusatia; territory lost to Matthias
- Corvinus 493
-
-Union with Austria; later losses 493
-
-German corporations; the Hansa; its nature; not strictly
- a territorial power 494-495
-
-The Military Orders; Sword-brothers and Teutonic knights;
- their connexion with the Empire; effects of their rule 495
-
-The Sword-brothers in Livland and Esthland; extent of
- their dominion 495-496
-
-The Teutonic order in Prussia; union with the Sword-brothers;
- acquisition of Culm, Pomerelia, Samogitia, Gotland;
- the New Mark 496
-
-Losses of the order; cession of Pomerelia and part of Prussia
- to Poland; the remainder a Polish fief 496-497
-
-Advance of Christianity; Lithuania the last heathen power;
- its great advance 497-498
-
-Consolidation of Poland; conquests of Casimir the Great;
- shiftings of Red Russia 498
-
-Union of Poland and Lithuania; recovery of the Polish
- duchies; Lithuanian advance; closer union 498-499
-
-Revival of Russia; power of Moscow; name of _Muscovy_ 499-500
-
-Break-up of the Mongol power; the Khanats of Crim, Kazan,
- Siberia, Astrakhan 501
-
-Deliverance of Russia; Crim dependent on the Turk 501
-
-Advance of Moscow; annexation of Novgorod, &c.; Russia
- united and independent 501
-
-Survey at the end of the fifteenth century 502
-
-
-§ 4. _The Growth of Russia and Sweden._
-
-Growth of Russia; creation of Prussia; temporary greatness
- of Sweden 503
-
-Separation of the Prussian and Livonian knights; duchy of
- Prussia; union of Prussia and Brandenburg; Prussia
- independent of Poland 503-504
-
-Fall of the Livonian knights; partition of their dominions;
- duchy of Curland; shares of Denmark, Sweden, Poland,
- and Russia 504
-
-Greatest Baltic extent of Poland and Lithuania; union of Lublin 505
-
-Advance of Russia; its order; the Euxine reached last 505-506
-
-Recovery of Russian lands from Lithuania; Polish conquest
- of Russia; second Russian advance; Peace of Andraszovo;
- recovery of Kief 506
-
-Russian superiority over the Cossacks; Podolia ceded to the
- Turk 506-507
-
-Comparison of Swedish and Russian advance 507
-
-Advance under and after Gustavus Adolphus; conquests from
- Russia and Poland; Ingermanland; Livland 507-508
-
-Conquests from Denmark and Norway; Dago and Oesel;
- Scania, &c.; restoration of Trondhjem 508-509
-
-Fiefs of Sweden within the Empire; Pomerania; Bremen and Verden 509
-
-Fluctuations in the duchies; Danish possession of Oldenburg 509
-
-Sweden after the peace of Oliva 510
-
-Eastern advance of Russia; Kasan and Astrakhan; Siberia 511
-
-
-§ 5. _The Decline of Sweden and Poland._
-
-Decline of Sweden; extinction of Poland; kingdom of Prussia;
- empire of Russia 511-512
-
-Russia on the Baltic; conquest of Livland, &c.; foundation
- of Saint Petersburg; advance in Finland 512
-
-German losses of Sweden: Bremen, Verden, part of Pomerania 513
-
-Union of the Gottorp lands and Denmark 513
-
-First partition of Poland; recovery of lost lands by Russia;
- geographical union of Prussia and Brandenburg; Polish
- and Russian lands acquired by Austria 513-514
-
-Second partition: Russian and Prussian shares 514
-
-Third partition: extinction of Poland and Lithuania 514-515
-
-No strictly Polish territory acquired by Russia; the old
- Poland passes to Prussia, Chrobatia to Austria 515
-
-Russian advance on the Euxine, Azof; Crim; Jedisan 515-516
-
-Temporary Russian advance on the Caspian; superiority
- over Georgia 516
-
-Survey at the end of the eighteenth century 517
-
-
-§ 6. _The Modern Geography of the Baltic Lands._
-
-Effects of the fall of the Empire; incorporation of the German
- lands of Sweden and Denmark 518
-
-Russian conquest of Finland 518
-
-Union of Sweden and Norway; loss of Swedish Pomerania 518-519
-
-Denmark enters the German Confederation for Holstein and
- Lauenburg; loss of these duchies and of Sleswick 519
-
-Polish losses of Prussia; commonwealth of Danzig; Duchy
- of Warsaw 519-520
-
-Polish territory recovered by Prussia; Russian kingdom of
- Poland; commonwealth of Cracow; its annexation by Austria 520
-
-Fluctuation on the Moldavian border 521
-
-Russian advance in the Caucasus and on the Caspian 521
-
-Advance in Turkestan and Eastern Asia; extent and character
- of the Russian dominion 522-523
-
-Russian America 523
-
-Final survey of the Baltic lands 523-524
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE SPANISH PENINSULA AND ITS COLONIES.
-
-Analogy between Spain and Scandinavia; slight relation of
- Spain with the Empire; break between its earlier and
- later history 525
-
-Comparison of Spain and the Eastern Empire; the Spanish nation
- formed by the Saracen wars; analogy between Spain and
- Russia 525-526
-
-Extent of West-Gothic and Saracen dominions; two centres
- of deliverance, native and Frankish 526-527
-
-History of Aragon, Castile, and Portugal; use of the phrase
- ‘Spain and Portugal’ 527-528
-
-Navarre 528
-
-
-§ 1. _The Foundation of the Spanish Kingdoms._
-
-Beginning of the kingdom of Leon 529
-
-The Ommiad emirate; the Spanish March; its divisions 529
-
-Navarre under Sancho the Great 529-530
-
-Break-up of the kingdom of Navarre, and of the Ommiad
- caliphate; small Mussulman powers 530
-
-Invasion of the Almoravides; use of the name _Moors_ 530
-
-New kingdoms: Castile, Aragon, and Sobrarbe; union of
- Aragon and Sobrarbe 530
-
-Shiftings of Castile, Leon, and Gallicia; final union; Castilian
- Empire 531
-
-Decline of Navarre; growth of Aragon; union of Aragon and
- Barcelona; end of French superiority 531
-
-County and kingdom of Portugal 532
-
-Advance of Castile; taking of Toledo; checked by the Almoravides 532
-
-Advance of Aragon; taking of Zaragoza 532
-
-Advance of Portugal; taking of Lisbon 533
-
-Second advance of Castile; invasion of the Almohades;
- their decline 533
-
-Advance of Aragon and Portugal 533
-
-Final advance of Castile; kingdom of Granada; Gibraltar 534
-
-Geographical position of the Spanish kingdoms 534-535
-
-Title of ‘King of Spain;’ the lesser kingdoms 535-536
-
-
-§ 2. _Growth and Partition of the Great Spanish Monarchy._
-
-Little geographical change in the peninsula; territories
- beyond the peninsula; the great Spanish Monarchy 536
-
-Conquest of Granada; end of Mussulman rule 536-537
-
-Union of Castile and Aragon; loss, recovery, and final loss of
- Roussillon; annexation and separation of Portugal 537-538
-
-Gibraltar and Minorca 537
-
-Advance of Aragon beyond the peninsula; union with the
- Sicilies and Sardinia 538
-
-Extension of Castile dominion; the Burgundian inheritance;
- duchy of Milan 539
-
-Extent of the Spanish Monarchy; loss of the United Netherlands;
- lands lost to France 539
-
-Partition of the Spanish Monarchy; later relations with the
- Sicilies; duchy of Parma 539-540
-
-
-§ 3. _The Colonial Dominion of Spain and Portugal._
-
-Character of the outlying dominion of Portugal 540
-
-African conquests of Portugal; kingdom of Algarve beyond
- the Sea; Ceuta, Tangier 541
-
-Advance in Africa and the islands; Cape of Good Hope;
- dominion in India and Arabia 541-542
-
-Settlement and history of Brazil; the one American monarchy 542
-
-Division of the Indies between Spain and Portugal; African
- and insular dominion of Spain 542-543
-
-American dominions of Spain; revolutions of the Spanish
- colonies; two Empires of Mexico 543-544
-
-The Spanish West Indies 544
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE BRITISH ISLANDS AND COLONIES.
-
-Isolation and independence of Britain; late Roman conquest
- and early loss; Britain another world and Empire 545
-
-Shiftings of the Celtic and Teutonic kingdoms; little geographical
- change in later times 546
-
-English settlements beyond sea; new English nations 547
-
-
-§ 1. _The Kingdom of Scotland._
-
-Greatness of Scotland due to its English elements; two English
- kingdoms in Britain 548
-
-Use of the Scottish name 549
-
-Analogy with Switzerland 549
-
-The three elements in the later Scotland; English, British,
- Irish; Lothian, Strathclyde, Scotland 549
-
-The Picts; their union with the Scots; Scottish Strathclyde;
- Galloway 550
-
-Scandinavian settlements; Caithness and Sutherland 550
-
-English supremacy; taking of Edinburgh; grants of Cumberland
- and Lothian 550-551
-
-Difference of tenure gradually forgotten 551
-
-Effects of the grant of Lothian; shiftings of Cumberland,
- Carlisle, and Northumberland 551-552
-
-Boundary of England and Scotland; relations between the kingdoms 552
-
-Struggle with the Northmen; recovery of Caithness, Galloway,
- and the Sudereys 553
-
-History of Man; of Orkney 553
-
-
-§ 2. _The Kingdom of England._
-
-Changes of boundary toward Wales; conquests of Harold 553
-
-Norman conquest of North Wales 554
-
-Princes of North Wales; English conquest 554
-
-The principality of Wales; full incorporation with England 554-555
-
-The English shires; two classes of shires; ancient
- principalities; shires mapped out in the tenth century 555
-
-The new shires; Cumberland, Westmoreland, Lancashire, Rutland 555-556
-
-
-§ 3. _Ireland._
-
-Ireland the first Scotland; its provinces 556
-
-Settlements of the Ostmen; increasing connexion with England;
- the English conquest; fluctuations of the Pale 556-557
-
-Lordship and kingdom of Ireland; its relations to England
- and Great Britain 557
-
-
-§ 4. _Outlying European Possessions of England._
-
-The Norman Islands; Aquitaine, Calais, &c. 558
-
-Outposts and islands 558
-
-Greek possessions; the Ionian Islands; Cyprus 558-559
-
-
-§ 5. _The American Colonies of England._
-
-The United States of America 559
-
-First English settlements; Virginia; the New England States;
- Maryland; Carolina 559-561
-
-Settlements of the United Provinces and Sweden; New
- Netherlands; New Sweden; New York 561
-
-The Jerseys; Pennsylvania; Delaware; Georgia 561-562
-
-The thirteen Colonies; their independence 562
-
-Nova Scotia; Canada; Louisiana; Florida 562-563
-
-A new English nation formed; lack of a name; use of the
- name _America_ 563-564
-
-Second English nation in North America; the Canadian
- confederation 564
-
-The West India Islands, &c. 565
-
-
-§ 6. _Other Colonies and Possessions of England._
-
-The Australian colonies 565-566
-
-The South-African colonies 566
-
-Europe extended by colonization; contrast with barbaric
- dominion; Empire of India 567
-
-Summary 568-569
-
-
-INDEX 571
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.
-
-
-[Transcriber’s note: These additions and corrections have not been made
-in this electronic version of the text. Page numbers and line numbers
-reflect the pagination of the original text and may not reflect the
-structure of this version.]
-
-P. 19, l. 10. Latterly the name _Balkan Peninsula_ has come into more
-general use.
-
-P. 38, side-note. For ‘Cities of independent state’ read ‘Growth of
-independent states.’
-
-P. 41, l. 10 from bottom. This is true in a rough practical way.
-But when I wrote this, I hardly took in the fact that not a few
-Greek cities, though practically subject to the Empire, were not
-finally incorporated with it till ages later, perhaps never formally
-incorporated at all.
-
-P. 55, l. 7. For ‘south-east’ read ‘south-west.’
-
-P. 55, l. 8. For ‘north-west’ read ‘north-east.’
-
-P. 71. When I wrote this, I had not taken in the true history of the
-Rouman people. See below, p. 435.
-
-P. 88, l. 14. Since this was written, I wrote the article ‘Goths,’ in
-the Encyclopædia Britannica, where I have gone rather more fully into
-their history from later and minuter study.
-
-P. 90, l. 4 from the bottom. I believe the existence of a _Gothia_
-by that name in Spain is a little doubtful. As to the _Gothia_ in
-Gaul, otherwise _Septimania_, and the other _Gothia_ in the Tauric
-Chersonêsos, there is no doubt.
-
-P. 105, l. 14 from bottom. I believe however that the coins of some of
-the Provençal cities point to a retention of allegiance to the Empire
-much later. Still there is no doubt as to the formal cession.
-
-P. 115, l. 5 from bottom. I now see no reason to believe in any
-Albanian migrations into Greece till long afterwards. But I still have
-no doubt that the Albanians strictly represent the old Illyrians.
-
-P. 119. Dele side-note, ‘The cession of Gaulish possessions.’
-
-P. 126, l. 6. For ‘_the_ great Mahometan powers’ read ‘_the two_ great
-Mahometan powers.’
-
-P. 138, l. 9. Dele ‘much as.’
-
-P. 154. The growth of the Christian states in Spain will be found more
-fully and accurately given in the specially Spanish chapter, Chapter
-XII.
-
-P. 156, l. 4. It will be at once seen that this was written before
-the events of 1877-8. The later changes in these lands will be found
-described in Chapter X.
-
-P. 167, l. 10. For ‘division’ read ‘divisions.’
-
-P. 172, side-note. For ‘province’ read ‘provinces.’
-
-P. 180, side-note. For ‘schemes’ read ‘scheme.’
-
-P. 189, l. 12. For ‘were’ read ‘some were.’
-
-P. 216, side-note. For ‘ecclesiastical towns’ read ‘ecclesiastical
-powers.’
-
-P. 221, side-note. For ‘kingdom’ read ‘kingdoms.’
-
-P. 258, l. 14. I was here speaking purely geographically, before much,
-if anything, had been heard of the cry of _Italia irredenta_. How far I
-go with that cry, how far not, I have explained in Historical Essays,
-Third Series, p. 206.
-
-P. 261, l. 1. For ‘Montbeilliard,’ read ‘Montbeliard.’
-
-P. 263, side-note. For ‘Burgundian possession of its county’ read
-‘Burgundian possessions of its counts.’
-
-P. 267, l. 1. For ‘maps’ read ‘map.’
-
-P. 288, l. 11 from bottom. For ‘High and Low Savoy’ read ‘Savoy and
-High Savoy.’
-
-P. 300, side-note. For ‘1662’ read ‘1663.’
-
-P. 306, l. 8. At present it would seem that this mysterious name takes
-in all those kingdoms, counties, lordships, &c., which are held by
-the Archduke of Austria, and which do not form part of the kingdom of
-Hungary and its _partes annexæ_. For these I have elsewhere, according
-to an old analogy, suggested the more intelligible name of _Nungary_.
-
-P. 319, l. 3. That is Philip ‘the Handsome,’ son of Maximilian and
-father of Charles the Fifth.
-
-P. 334, l. 9. Aquitaine, the inheritance of Eleanor, did not come under
-the forfeiture of the fiefs actually held by John.
-
-P. 340, l. 4 from bottom. Roussillon is another case of a land freed
-from homage and afterwards annexed as a foreign conquest.
-
-P. 369, l. 17. For ‘farther’ read ‘further.’
-
-P. 389, side-note. For ‘conquest’ read ‘conquests of.’
-
-P. 408, side-note. For ‘final’ read ‘first.’
-
-P. 413, side-note. For ‘possession of Venetian cities’ read
-‘possessions of Venetian families.’
-
-P. 429, l. 15. Since this was printed, Dulcigno has been restored to
-Montenegro, in exchange for some inland Albanian territory given back
-to the Turk. The formation of the Albanian League is not unlikely to
-affect the geography of Herzegovina; but no change has yet (January
-1881) taken place which can be shown on the map.
-
-P. 441, l. 8. How unpleasant this truth is felt to be in certain
-quarters, is shown by a small incident of last year. I sent a set of
-manuscript maps of Dalmatia to Mr. Arthur Evans for his suggestions.
-Those maps vanished in the Imperial, Royal, and Apostolic post-office,
-and never reached his address at Ragusa. If therefore the revolutions
-of Dalmatian geography are less accurately marked in this book than
-they should be, the fault is not mine. In Imperial, Royal, and
-Apostolic quarters it is doubtless inconvenient to allow any memory
-of days when free Ragusa had not bowed to any self-styled Emperor,
-either from Corsica or from Lorraine, or of still later days when free
-Tzernagora reached to her own sea at Cattaro. Those who have made it
-their business to filch the substance may naturally enough think it
-their business to filch the picture also.
-
-P. 450, l. 5 from bottom. It is quite accurate to say that the Turk
-has never ruled at Tzetinje. It is perfectly true that the Turk has
-more than once harried Montenegro and Tzetinje itself; the Turk
-has professed to consider the land as included in a pashalik; but
-Montenegro has never been a regularly and avowedly tributary state, as
-Servia and Roumania were, as free Bulgaria is still.
-
-P. 452, l. 7 from bottom. The promises of Europe on this head still
-remain unfulfilled (January 1881). It is hardly needful to notice the
-diplomatic quibble that the European order for the liberation of these
-lands was not contained in the document strictly called the Treaty of
-Berlin, but in another paper signed at the same time and place. The
-order has been renewed during the present year at the Second Berlin
-Conference.
-
-P. 492, side-note. For ‘and’ read ‘under.’
-
-P. 529, l. 9 from bottom. For ‘western’ read ‘eastern.’
-
-P. 554, side-note. For ‘Northerners,’ read ‘Northmen.’
-
-
-
-
-HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-♦Definition of Historical Geography.♦
-
-The work which we have now before us is to trace out the extent of
-territory which the different states and nations of Europe and the
-neighbouring lands have held at different times in the world’s history,
-to mark the different boundaries which the same country has had, and
-the different meanings in which the same name has been used. It is of
-great importance carefully to make these distinctions, because great
-mistakes as to the facts of history are often caused through men
-thinking and speaking as if the names of different countries, say for
-instance England, France, Burgundy, Austria, have always meant exactly
-the same extent of territory. Historical geography, in this sense,
-differs from physical geography which regards the natural features of
-the earth’s surface. It differs also from studies like ethnology and
-comparative philology, which have to do directly with the differences
-between one nation and another, with their movements from one part
-of the world to another, and with the relations to be found among
-the languages spoken by them. But, though it is distinct from these
-studies, it makes much use of them. For the physical geography of a
-country always has a great effect upon its political history, and
-the dispersions and movements of different nations are exactly those
-parts of history which have most to do with fixing the names and the
-boundaries of different countries at different times. _England_, for
-instance, is, in strictness, the land of the English wherever they
-may settle, whether in their old home on the European continent,
-or in the isle of Britain, or in New England beyond the Ocean. But
-the extent of territory which was in this way to become England was
-largely determined by the physical circumstances of the countries in
-which the English settled. And the history of the English nation has
-been influenced, above all things, by the fact that the great English
-settlement which has made the English name famous was made in an
-island. But, when England had become the name of a distinct political
-dominion, its meaning was liable to change as that dominion advanced
-or went back. Thus the borders of England and Scotland have greatly
-changed at different times, and forgetfulness of this has led to many
-misunderstandings in reading the history of the two countries. And so
-with all other cases of the kind; the physical nature of the country,
-and the settlements of the different nations which have occupied it,
-have always been the determining causes of its political divisions.
-But it is with the political divisions that historical geography has
-to deal in the first place. With the nature of the land, and with
-the people who occupy it, it has to deal only so far as they have
-influenced the political divisions. Our present business in short is,
-first to draw the map of the countries with which we are concerned as
-it appeared after each of the different changes which they have gone
-through, and then to point out the historical causes which have led to
-the changes on the map. In this way we shall always see what was the
-meaning of any geographical name at any particular time, and we shall
-thus avoid mistakes, some of which have often led to really important
-practical consequences.
-
-♦Distinction of Geographical and Political Names.♦
-
-From this it follows that, in looking at the geography of Europe
-for our present purpose, we must look first at the land itself, and
-then at the nations which occupy it. And, in so doing, it may be
-well first of all to distinguish between two kinds of names which we
-shall have to use. Some names of countries are strictly geographical;
-they really mean a certain part of the earth’s surface marked out by
-boundaries which cannot well be changed. Others simply mean the extent
-of country which is occupied at any time by a particular nation, and
-whose boundaries may easily be changed. Thus _Britain_ is a strictly
-geographical name, meaning an island whose shape and boundaries
-must always be nearly the same. _England_, _Scotland_, _Wales_, are
-names of parts of that island, called after different nations which
-have settled in it, and the boundaries of all of which have differed
-greatly at different times. _Spain_ again is the geographical name
-of a peninsula which is almost as well marked out by nature as the
-island of Britain. _Castile_, _Aragon_, _Portugal_, are political
-names of parts of the peninsula of Spain. They are the names of states
-whose boundaries have greatly varied, and which have sometimes formed
-separate governments and sometimes have been joined together.[1]
-_Gaul_ again is the geographical name of a country which is not so
-clearly marked out all round by nature as the island of Britain and
-the peninsula of Spain, but which is well marked on three sides, to
-the north, south, and west. Within the limits of Gaul, names like
-_France_, _Flanders_, _Britanny_, _Burgundy_, and _Aquitaine_, are
-political names of parts of the country, whose limits have varied as
-much at different times as those of the different parts of Britain and
-Spain. This is the difference between strictly geographical names which
-do not alter and political names which do alter. No doubt _Gaul_ and
-_Britain_ were in the beginning political names, names given to the
-land from those who occupied it, just as much as the names _France_ and
-_England_. But the settlements from which those lands took the names of
-Gaul and Britain took place long before the beginning of trustworthy
-history, while the settlements from which parts of those lands took the
-names of France and England happened in times long after trustworthy
-history began, and for which we are therefore ready with dates and
-names. Thus Gaul and Britain are the oldest received names of those
-lands; they are the names which those lands bore when we first hear
-of them. It is therefore convenient to keep them in use as strictly
-geographical names, as always meaning that part of the earth’s surface
-which they meant when we first hear of them. In this book therefore,
-_Gaul_, _Britain_, _Spain_, and other names of the same kind, will
-always be used to mean a certain space on the map, whoever may be its
-inhabitants, or whatever may be its government, at any particular time.
-But names like _France_, _England_, _Castile_, will be used to mean
-the territory to which they were politically applied at the time of
-which we may be speaking, a territory which has been greater and less
-at different times. Thus, the cities of Carlisle and Edinburgh have
-always been in _Britain_ since they were built. They have sometimes
-been in _England_ and sometimes not. The cities of Marseilles, Geneva,
-Strassburg, and Arras have always been in _Gaul_ ever since they
-were built. They have sometimes been in _France_ and sometimes not,
-according to political changes.
-
-
-§ 1. _Geographical Aspect of Europe._
-
-Our present business is with the Historical Geography of Europe, and
-with that of other parts of the world only so far as they concern
-the geography of Europe. But we shall have to speak of all the three
-divisions of the Old World, Europe, Asia, and Africa, in those parts
-of the three which come nearest to one another, and in which the real
-history of the world begins. ♦The Mediterranean Lands.♦ These are those
-parts of all three which lie round the Mediterranean sea, the lands
-which gradually came to form the Empire of Rome. In these lands the
-boundaries between the three great divisions are very easily marked.
-Modern maps do not all place the boundary between Europe and Asia at
-the same point; some make the river Don the boundary and some the
-Volga. But this question is of little importance for history. In the
-earliest historical times, when we have to do only with the countries
-round the Mediterranean sea, there can be no doubt how much is Europe
-and how much is Asia and Africa. Europe is the land to the north of the
-Mediterranean sea and of the great gulfs which run out of it. If an
-exact boundary is needed in the barbarous lands north of the Euxine,
-the Tanais or Don is clearly the boundary which should be taken. In
-all these lands the Mediterranean and its gulfs divide Europe from
-Asia. But the northern parts of the two continents really form one
-geographical whole, the boundary between them being one merely of
-convenience. A vast central mass of land, stretching right across the
-inland parts of the two continents, sends forth a system of peninsulas
-and islands, to the north and south. And it is in the peninsular lands
-of Europe that European history begins.
-
-Alike in Europe and in Asia, the southern or peninsular part of the
-continent is cut off from the central mass by a mountain chain, which
-in Europe is nearly unbroken. ♦The peninsulas of Europe and Asia.♦ Thus
-the southern part of Europe consists of the three great peninsulas of
-_Spain_, _Italy_, and what we may, in a wide sense, call _Greece_.
-These answer in some sort to the three great Oceanic peninsulas of
-Asia, those of _Arabia_, _India_, and _India_ beyond the _Ganges_. But
-the part of Asia which has historically had most to do with Europe
-is its Mediterranean peninsula, the land known as _Asia Minor_. In
-the northern part of each continent we find another system of great
-gulfs or inland seas; but those in Asia have been hindered by the cold
-from ever being of any importance, while in Europe the Baltic sea and
-the gulfs which run out of it may be looked on as forming a kind of
-secondary Mediterranean. We may thus say that Europe consists of two
-insular and peninsular regions, north and south, with a great unbroken
-mass of land between them. But there are some parts of Europe which
-seem as it were connecting links between the three main divisions of
-the continent. Thus we said that the three great peninsulas are cut
-off from the central mass by a nearly unbroken mountain chain. But the
-connexion of the central peninsula, that of Italy, with the eastern
-one or Greece, is far closer than its connexion with the western
-one, or Spain. Italy and Spain are much further apart than Italy and
-Greece, and between the Alps and the Pyrenees the mountain chain is
-nearly lost. We might almost say that a piece of central Europe breaks
-through at this point and comes down to the Mediterranean. This is the
-south-eastern part of Gaul; and Gaul may in this way be looked on as a
-land which joins together the central and the southern parts of Europe.
-But this is not all; in the north-western corner of Europe lies that
-great group of islands, two large ones and many small, of which our own
-Britain is the greatest. The British islands are closely connected in
-their geography and history with Gaul on one side, and with the islands
-and peninsulas of the North on the other. In this way we may say that
-all the three divisions of Europe are brought closely together on the
-western side of the continent, and that the lands of Gaul and Britain
-are the connecting links which bind them together.
-
-
-§ 2. _Effect of Geography on History._
-
-♦Beginning of history in the European peninsulas.♦
-
-Now this geographical aspect of the chief lands of Europe has had its
-direct effect on their history. We might almost take for granted that
-the history of Europe should begin in the two more eastern among the
-three great southern peninsulas. Of these two, Italy and Greece,
-each has its own character. Greece, though it is the part of Europe
-which lies nearest to Asia, is in a certain sense the most European
-of European lands. The characteristic of Europe is to be more full of
-peninsulas and islands and inland seas than the rest of the Old World.
-♦Characteristics of Greece;♦ And Greece, the peninsula itself and the
-neighbouring lands, are fuller of islands and promontories and inland
-seas than any other part of Europe. On the other hand, Italy is the
-central land of all southern Europe, and indeed of all the land round
-the Mediterranean. It was therefore only natural that Greece should be
-the part of Europe in which all that is most distinctively European
-first grew up and influenced other lands. ♦of Italy.♦ And so, if any
-one land or city among the Mediterranean lands was to rule over all the
-rest, it is in Italy, as the central land, that we should naturally
-look for the place of dominion. The destinies of the two peninsulas and
-their relations to the rest of the world were thus impressed on them by
-their geographical position.
-
-If we turn to recorded history, we find that it is only a working out
-of the consequences of these physical facts. Greece was the first part
-of Europe to become civilized and to play a part in history; but it was
-Italy, and in Italy it was its most central city, Rome, which came to
-have the dominion over the civilized world of early times—that is, over
-the lands around the Mediterranean. These two peninsulas have, each
-in its own way, ruled and influenced the rest of Europe as no other
-parts have done. All the other parts have been, in one way or another,
-their subjects or disciples. ♦Advance of the Roman dominion.♦ The
-effect of the geographical position of these countries is also marked
-in the stages by which Rome advanced to the general dominion of the
-Mediterranean lands. She first subdued Italy; then she had to strive
-for the mastery with her great rival Carthage, a city which held nearly
-the same central position on the southern coast of the Mediterranean
-which she herself did on the northern. Then she subdued, step by
-step, the peninsulas on each side of her and the other coast lands of
-the Mediterranean—European, Asiatic, and African. Into the central
-division of Europe she did not press far, never having any firm or
-lasting dominion beyond the Rhine and the Danube. Into Northern Europe,
-properly so called, her power never reached at all. But she subdued the
-lands which we have seen act as a kind of connecting link between the
-different parts of Europe, namely Gaul and the greater part of Britain.
-Thus the Roman Empire, at its greatest extent, consisted of the lands
-round the Mediterranean, together with Gaul and Britain. For the
-possession of the Mediterranean land would have been imperfect without
-the possession of Gaul, and the possession of Gaul naturally led to the
-possession of Britain.
-
-♦Effect of the geographical position of♦
-
-In this way the early history of Greece and Italy, and the formation of
-the Roman Empire, were affected by the geographical character of the
-countries themselves. The same was the case with the other European
-lands when they came to share in that importance which once belonged
-to Greece and Italy only. ♦Germany,♦ Thus Germany, as being the most
-central part of Europe, came at one time to fill something like the
-same position which Italy had once held. It came to be the country
-which had to do with all parts of Europe, east, west, north, and south,
-and even to be a ruler over some of them. ♦France,♦ So, as France
-became the chief state of Gaul, it took upon it something like the old
-position of Gaul as a means of communication between the different
-parts of Western Europe. ♦Spain and Scandinavia.♦ Meanwhile, as the
-Scandinavian and Spanish peninsulas are both cut off in such a marked
-way from the mainland of Europe, each of them has often formed a kind
-of world of its own, having much less to do with other countries than
-Germany, France, and Italy had. The same was for a long time the case
-with our own island. Britain was looked on as lying outside the world.
-
-Thus the geographical position of the European lands influenced their
-history while their history was still purely European. And when Europe
-began to send forth colonies to other continents, the working of
-geographical causes came out no less strongly. Thus the position of
-Spain on the Ocean led Castile and Portugal to be foremost among the
-colonizing nations of Europe. For the same reason, our own country was
-one of the chief in following their example, and so was France also for
-a long time. ♦The colonizing powers.♦ Holland too, when it rose into
-importance, became a great colonizing power, and so did Denmark and
-Sweden to some extent. But an Italian colony beyond the Ocean was never
-heard of, nor has there ever been a German colony in the same sense
-in which there have been Spanish and English colonies. Meanwhile, the
-north-eastern part of Europe, which in early times was not known at
-all, has always lagged behind the rest, and has become of importance
-only in later times. This is mainly because its geographical position
-has almost wholly cut it off both from the Mediterranean and from the
-Ocean.
-
-Thus we see how, in all these ways, both in earlier and in later
-times, the history of every country has been influenced by its
-geography. ♦Influence of national character.♦ No doubt the history
-of each country has also been largely influenced by the disposition
-of the people who have settled in it, by what is called the national
-character. But then the geographical position itself has often had
-something to do with forming the national character, and in all cases
-it has had an influence upon it, by giving it a better or a worse field
-for working and showing itself. Thus it has been well said that neither
-the Greeks in any other country nor any other people in Greece could
-have been what the Greeks in Greece really were. The nature of the
-country and the nature of the people helped one another, and caused
-Greece to become all that it was in the early times of Europe. It is
-always useful to mark the points both of likeness and unlikeness of
-the different nations whose history we study. And of this likeness and
-unlikeness we shall always find that the geographical character, though
-only one cause out of several, is always one of the chief causes.
-
-
-§ 3. _Geographical Distribution of Races._
-
-Our present business then is with geography as influenced by history,
-and with history as influenced by geography. With ethnology, with the
-relations of nations and races to one another, we have to deal only so
-far as they form one of the agents in history. And it will be well to
-avoid, as far as may be, all obscure or controverted points of this
-kind. But the great results of comparative philology may now be taken
-for granted, and a general view of the geographical disposition of the
-great European races is needful as an introduction to the changes which
-historical causes have wrought in the geography of the several parts of
-Europe.
-
-In European ethnology one main feature is that the population of
-Europe is, and from the very beginnings of history has been, more
-nearly homogeneous, at least more palpably homogeneous, than that of
-any other great division of the world. ♦Europe an Aryan continent.♦
-Whether we look at Europe now, or whether we look at it at the earliest
-times of which we have any glimmerings, it is pre-eminently an Aryan
-continent. Everything non-Aryan is at once marked as exceptional. We
-cannot say this of Asia, where, among several great ethnical elements,
-none is so clearly predominant as the Aryan element is in Europe.
-♦Non-Aryan remnants.♦ There are in Europe non-Aryan elements, both
-earlier and later than the Aryan settlement; but they have, as a rule,
-been assimilated to the prevailing Aryan mass. The earlier non-Aryan
-element consists of the remnants which still remain of the races which
-the Aryan settlers found in Europe, and which they either exterminated
-or assimilated to themselves. The later elements consist of non-Aryan
-races which have made their way into Europe within historical times,
-in whose case the work of assimilation has been much less complete. It
-follows almost naturally from the position of Europe that the primæval
-non-Aryan element has survived in the west and in the north, while
-the later or intrusive non-Aryan element has made its way into the
-east and the south. In the mountains of the western peninsula, in the
-border lands of Spain and Gaul, the non-Aryan tongue of the _Basque_
-still survives. In the extreme north of Europe the non-Aryan tongue of
-the _Fins_ and _Laps_ still survives. The possible relations of these
-tongues either to one another or to other non-Aryan tongues beyond
-the bounds of Europe is a question of purely philological concern,
-and does not touch historical geography. But historical geography is
-touched by the probability, rising almost to moral certainty, that the
-isolated populations by whom these primitive tongues are still spoken
-are mere remnants of the primitive races which formed the population
-of Europe at the time when the Aryans first made their way into that
-continent. Everything tends to show that the _Basques_ are but the
-remnant of a great people whom we may set down with certainty as the
-præ-Aryan inhabitants of Spain and a large part of Gaul, and whose
-range we may, with great probability, extend over Sicily, over part
-at least of Italy, and perhaps as far north as our own island. Their
-possible connexion with the early inhabitants of northern Africa hardly
-concerns us. The probability that they were themselves preceded by
-an earlier and far lower race concerns us not at all. The earliest
-historical inhabitants of south-western Europe are those of whom the
-Basques are the surviving remnant, those who, under the names of
-_Iberians_ and _Ligurians_, fill a not unimportant place in European
-history.
-
-♦Order of the Aryan settlement.♦
-
-When we come to the Aryan settlements, we cannot positively determine
-which among the Aryan races of Europe were the earliest settlers in
-point of time. ♦Greeks and Italians.♦ The great race which, in its
-many sub-divisions, contains the _Greeks_, the _Italians_, and the
-nations more immediately akin to them, are the first among the European
-Aryans to show themselves in the light of history; but it does not
-necessarily follow that they were actually the first in point of
-settlement. ♦Celts.♦ It may be that, while they were pressing through
-the Mediterranean peninsulas and islands, the _Celts_ were pressing
-their way through the solid central land of Europe. The Celts were
-clearly the vanguard of the Aryan migration within their own range, the
-first swarm which made its way to the shores of the Ocean. Partially in
-Spain, more completely in Gaul and the British Islands, they displaced
-or assimilated the earlier inhabitants, who, under their pressure and
-that of later conquerors, have been gradually shut up in the small
-mountainous region which they still keep. Of the Celtic migration we
-have no historical accounts, but all probability would lead us to think
-that the Celts whom in historic times we find on the Danube and south
-of the Alps were not emigrants who had followed a backward course from
-the great settlement in Transalpine Gaul, but rather detachments which
-had been left behind on the westward journey. Without attempting to
-settle questions as to the traces of Celtic occupancy to be found in
-other lands, it is enough for our purpose that, at the beginnings of
-their history, we find the Celts the chief inhabitants of a region
-stretching from the Rubico to the furthest known points of Britain.
-Gaul, Cisalpine and Transalpine, is their great central land, though
-even here they are not exclusive possessors; they share the land with
-a non-Aryan remnant to the south-west, and with the next wave of Aryan
-new-comers to the north-east.
-
-The settlements of these two great Aryan races come before authentic
-history. After them came the _Teutonic_ races, who pressed on the Celts
-from the east; and in their wake, to judge from their place on the map,
-must have come the vast family of the _Slavonic_ nations. ♦Teutons and
-Slaves.♦ But the migrations of the Teutons and Slaves come, for the
-most part, within the range of recorded history. Our first glimpse of
-the Teutons shows them in their central German land, already occupying
-both sides of the Rhine, though seemingly not very old settlers on its
-left bank. The long wanderings of the various Teutonic and Slavonic
-tribes over all parts of central Europe, their settlements in the
-southern and western lands, are all matters of history. So is the great
-Teutonic settlement in the British islands, which partly exterminated,
-partly assimilated, their Celtic inhabitants, so as to leave them as
-mere a remnant, though a greater remnant, as they themselves had made
-the Basques. And, as the process which made the north-western islands
-of Europe Teutonic is a matter of history, so also are the later
-stages of the process which made the northern peninsulas Teutonic.
-But it is only the later stages which are historical; we know that in
-the strictly Scandinavian peninsula the Teutonic invaders displaced
-non-Aryan Fins; we have only to guess that in the Cimbric Chersonêsos
-they displaced Aryan Celts. ♦Lithuanians.♦ But beyond the Teutons
-and Slaves lies yet another Aryan settlement, one which, in a purely
-philological view, is the most interesting of all, the small and
-fast vanishing group which still survives in _Lithuania_ and the
-neighbouring lands. Of these there is historically really nothing to be
-said. On the eastern shores of the Baltic we find people whose tongue
-comes nearer than any other European tongue to the common Aryan model;
-but we can only guess alike at the date when they came thither and at
-the road by which they came.
-
-These races then, Aryan and non-Aryan, make up the immemorial
-population of Europe. The remnants of the older non-Aryan races,
-and the successive waves of Aryan settlement, are all immemorial
-facts which we must accept as the groundwork of our history and
-our geography. ♦Movements among the Aryan races.♦ They must be
-distinguished from other movements which are strictly matters of
-written history, both movements among the Aryan nations themselves
-and later intrusions of non-Aryan nations. Thus the Greek colonies
-and the conquests of the Hellenized Macedonians Hellenized large
-districts of Europe, Asia, and Africa, partly by displacement, partly
-by assimilation. The conquests of Rome, and the Teutonic settlements
-within the Roman Empire, brought about but little in the way of
-displacement, but a great deal in the way of assimilation. The
-process indeed was opposite in the two cases. The Roman conqueror
-assimilated the conquered to himself; the Teutonic conqueror was
-himself assimilated by those whom he conquered. Britain and the
-Rhenish and Danubian lands stand out as marked exceptions. The
-Slavonic settlements in the East wrought far more of displacement than
-the Teutonic settlements in the West. Vast regions, once Illyrian
-or Thracian—that is, most likely, more or less nearly akin to the
-Greeks—are now wholly Slavonic. ♦Later intrusion of Non-Aryan races.♦
-Lastly come the incursions on European lands made by non-Aryan
-settlers in historic times. Their results have been widely different
-in different cases. ♦Semitic.♦ The Semitic _Saracens_ settled in Spain
-and Sicily, bringing with them and after them their African converts,
-men possibly of originally kindred race with the first inhabitants
-both of the peninsula and of the island. These non-Aryan settlers
-have vanished. The displacement of large bodies of them is a fact of
-comparatively recent history, but it can hardly fail that some degree
-of assimilation must also have taken place. Then come the settlements,
-chiefly in eastern Europe, of those whom for our purpose it is enough
-to group together as the Turanian nations. The _Huns_ of Attila have
-left only a name. The more lasting settlement of the _Avars_ has
-vanished, how far by displacement, how far by assimilation, it might be
-hard to say. _Chozars_, _Patzinaks_, a crowd of other barbarian races,
-have left no sign of their presence. ♦Turanian.♦ The _Bulgarians_,
-originally Turanian conquerors, have been assimilated by their Slavonic
-subjects. The Finnish _Magyars_ have received a political and religious
-assimilation; their kingdom became a member of the commonwealth of
-Christian Europe, though they still keep their old Turanian language.
-The latest intruders of all, the _Ottoman Turks_, still remain as
-they were when they first came, aliens on Aryan and Christian ground.
-But here again is a case of assimilation the other way; the Ottoman
-Turks are an artificial nation which has been kept up by the constant
-incorporation of European renegades who have thrown aside the speech,
-the creed, and the civilization of Europe.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] In modern use we speak of _Spain_ as only one part, though much the
-larger part, of the peninsula, and of _Portugal_ as another part. But
-this simply comes from the accident that, for some centuries past, all
-the other Spanish kingdoms have been joined under one government, while
-Portugal has remained separate. In speaking of any time till near the
-end of the fifteenth century of our æra, the word _Spain_ must always
-be used in the geographical sense, as the name of the whole peninsula.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-GREECE AND THE GREEK COLONIES.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Eastern or Greek Peninsula._
-
-♦Characteristics of the Eastern peninsula.♦
-
-The Historical Geography of Europe, if looked at in chronological
-order, must begin with the most eastern of the three peninsulas of
-Southern Europe. Here the history of Europe, and the truest history of
-the world, began. It was in the insular and peninsular lands between
-the Ionian and Ægæan seas that the first steps towards European
-civilization were taken; it is there that we see the first beginnings
-of art, science, and political life. But Greece or _Hellas_, in the
-strict sense of the name, forms only a part of the lands which must be
-looked on as the great Eastern peninsula. It is however its leading
-and characteristic portion. As the whole peninsular land gradually
-tapers southwards from the great mass of central Europe, it becomes at
-each stage more and more peninsular, and it also becomes at each stage
-more and more Greek. Greece indeed and the neighbouring lands form,
-as was long ago remarked by Strabo,[2] a series of peninsulas within
-peninsulas. It is not easy to find a name for the whole region, as it
-stretches far beyond any limits which can be given to Greece in any age
-of the world or according to any use of the name. But the whole land
-seems to have been occupied by nations more or less akin to the Greeks.
-The history of those nations chiefly consists of their relations to the
-Greeks, and all of them were brought more or less within the range of
-Greek influences. We may therefore not improperly call the whole land,
-as opposed to Italy and Spain, the _Greek_ peninsula. It has also been
-called the _Byzantine peninsula_, as nearly answering to the European
-part of the Eastern division of the Roman Empire, when its seat of
-government was at Byzantion, Constantinople, or New Rome.
-
-♦Its chief divisions.♦
-
-Taking the great range of mountains which divides southern from central
-Europe as the northern boundary of the eastern or Greek peninsula, it
-may be said to take in the lands which are cut off from the central
-mass by the _Dalmatian Alps_ and the range of _Haimos_ or _Balkan_.
-It is washed to the east, west, or south, by various parts of the
-Mediterranean and its great gulf the Euxine. But the northern part of
-this region, all that lies north of the Ægæan Sea, taking in therefore
-the whole of the Euxine coast, still keeps much of the character of the
-great central mass of Europe, and forms a land intermediate between
-that and the more strictly peninsular lands to the south. Still the
-boundary is a real one, for all the lands south of this range have
-come more or less within Greek influences, and have played their part
-in Grecian history. But when we get beyond the mountains, into the
-valley of the Danube, we find ourselves in lands which, excepting
-a few colonies on the coast, have hardly at all come under Greek
-influences till quite modern times. This region between Haimos and the
-more strictly Greek lands takes in _Thrace_, _Paionia_, and _Illyria_.
-Of these, Thrace and Illyria, having a sea coast, received many Greek
-colonies, especially on the northern coast of the Ægæan and on the
-_Propontis_ or Sea of Marmora. The Thracian part of this region, as
-bordering on these more distinctly Grecian seas, became more truly
-a part of the Grecian world than the other lands to the west of it.
-♦Thrace and Illyria.♦ Yet geographically Thrace is more widely cut off
-from Greece than Illyria is. For there is no such great break on the
-western shore of the great peninsula as that which, on the eastern
-side, marks the point where we must draw the line between Greece and
-its immediate neighbours and the lands to the north of them. This is at
-the point where a peninsula within a peninsula breaks off to the south,
-comprising _Greece_, _Macedonia_, and _Epeiros_. There is here no very
-special break on the Illyrian coast, but the Ægæan coast of Thrace is
-fenced in as it were at its two ends, to the east by the long narrow
-peninsula known specially as the _Chersonêsos_, and to the west by the
-group of peninsulas called _Chalkidikê_. These have nothing answering
-to them on the Illyrian side beyond the mere bend in the coast above
-Epidamnos. This last point however marks the extent of the earlier
-Greek colonization in those regions, and which has become a still more
-important boundary in later times.
-
-Beyond Chalkidikê to the west, the specially Greek peninsula projects
-to the south, being itself again composed of peninsulas within
-peninsulas. ♦Greece proper and its peninsulas.♦ The _Ambrakian Gulf_ on
-the west and the _Pagasaian_ on the east again fence off a peninsula
-to the south, by which the more purely Greek lands are fenced off
-from _Macedonia_, _Epeiros_, and _Thessaly_. Within this peninsula
-again another may be marked off by a line drawn from _Thermopylai_
-to the _Corinthian_ gulf near Delphoi. This again shuts out to the
-east _Akarnania_, _Aitolia_, and some other of the more backward
-divisions of the Greek name. ♦Peloponnêsos.♦ Thus _Phôkis_, _Boiôtia_,
-and _Attica_ form a great promontory, from which Attica projects as
-a further promontory to the south-east, while the great peninsula of
-_Peloponnêsos_—itself made up on its eastern and southern sides of
-smaller peninsulas—is joined on by the narrow isthmus of Corinth.
-In this way, from Haimos to _Tainaros_, the land is ever becoming
-more and more broken up by greater or smaller inlets of the sea. And
-in proportion as the land becomes more strictly peninsular, it also
-becomes more strictly Greek, till in Peloponnêsos we reach the natural
-citadel of the Greek nation.
-
-
-§ 2. _Insular and Asiatic Greece._
-
-♦Continuous Hellas.♦
-
-Greece Proper then, what the ancient geographers called _Continuous
-Hellas_ as distinguished from the Greek colonies planted on barbarian
-shores, is, so far as it is part of the mainland, made up of a system
-of peninsulas stretching south from the general mass of eastern Europe.
-But the neighbouring islands equally form a part of continuous Greece;
-and the other coasts of the Ægæan, Asiatic as well as Thracian, were
-so thickly strewed with Greek colonies as to form, if not part of
-continuous Greece, yet part of the immediate Greek world. The western
-coast, as it is less peninsular, is also less insular, and the islands
-on the western side of Greece did not reach the same importance as
-those on the eastern side. Still they too, the Ionian islands of
-modern geography, form in every sense a part of Greece. ♦The Islands.♦
-To the north of _Korkyra_ or _Corfu_ there are only detached Greek
-colonies, whether on the mainland or in the islands; but all the
-islands of the Ægæan are, during historical times, as much part of
-Greece as the mainland; and one island on each side, _Leukas_ on the
-west and the greater island of _Euboia_ on the east, might almost be
-counted as parts of the mainland, as peninsulas rather than islands.
-To the south the long narrow island of _Crete_ forms a sort of barrier
-between Greek and barbarian seas. It is the most southern of the purely
-Greek lands. _Sicily_ to the east and _Cyprus_ to the west received
-many Greek colonies, but they never became purely Greek in the same way
-as Crete and the islands to the north of it.
-
-♦Asiatic Greece.♦
-
-But, besides the European peninsulas and the islands, part of Asia
-must be looked on as forming part of the immediate Greek world, though
-not strictly of continuous Greece. The peninsula known as _Asia Minor_
-cannot be separated from Europe either in its geography or in its
-history. With its central mass we have little or nothing to do; but
-its coasts form a part of the Greek world, and its Ægæan coast was
-only less thoroughly Greek than Greece itself and the Greek islands.
-It would seem that the whole western coast of Asia Minor was inhabited
-by nations which, like the European neighbours of Greece, were more
-or less nearly akin to the Greeks. And the Ægæan coast of Asia is
-almost as full of inlets of the sea, of peninsulas and promontories and
-islands near to the shore, as European Greece itself. All these shores
-therefore received Greek colonies. The islands and the most tempting
-spots on the mainland were occupied by Greek settlers, and became
-the sites of Greek cities. But Greek influence never spread very far
-inland, and even the coast itself did not become so purely Greek as the
-islands. When we pass from the Ægæan coast of Asia to the other two
-sides of the peninsula, to its northern coast washed by the Euxine and
-its southern coast washed by the Mediterranean, we have passed out of
-the immediate Greek world. Greek colonies are found on favourable spots
-here and there; but the land, even the coast as a whole, is barbarian.
-
-
-§ 3. _Ethnology of the Eastern Peninsula._
-
-♦The Greeks and the kindred races.♦
-
-The immediate Greek world then as opposed to the outlying Greek
-colonies, consists of the shores of the Ægæan sea and of the peninsulas
-lying between it and the Ionian sea. Of this region a great part was
-exclusively inhabited by the Greek nation, while Greek influences were
-more or less dominant throughout the whole. But it would further seem
-that the whole, or nearly the whole, of these lands were inhabited by
-races more or less akin to the Greeks. They seem to have been races
-which had a good deal in common with the Greeks, and of whom the Greeks
-were simply the foremost and most fortunate, their higher developement
-being doubtless greatly favoured by the geographical nature of the
-country which they occupied. But a distinction must be drawn between
-the nearer and the more remote neighbours of Greece. It is hardly
-necessary for our present purpose to determine whether the Greeks had
-or had not any connexion with Thracians, European or Asiatic, with
-Phrygians and Lydians, and other neighbouring nations. ♦Nations more
-remote, but probably kindred.♦ All these were in Greek eyes simply
-Barbarians, but modern scholarship has seen in them signs of a kindred
-with the Greek nation nearer than the share of both in the common
-Aryan stock. We need not settle here whether all the inhabitants of
-the geographical district which we have marked out were, or were not,
-kinsmen in this sense; but with some among them the question assumes
-a deeper interest and a nearer approach to certainty. ♦Illyrians.♦
-The great Illyrian race, of whom the Albanians or _Skipetars_ are the
-modern representatives, a race which has been so largely displaced by
-Slaves at one end and assimilated by Greeks at the other, can hardly
-fail to have had a nearer kindred with the Greeks than that which they
-both share with Celts and Teutons. When we come to the lands which are
-yet more closely connected with Greece, both in geographical position
-and in their history, the case becomes clearer still. ♦Epeiros,
-Macedonia, Sicily and Italy.♦ We can hardly doubt of the close
-connexion between the Greeks and the nations which bordered on Greece
-immediately to the north in Epeiros and Macedonia, as well as with some
-at least of those which they found occupying the opposite coasts of the
-Ægæan, as well as in Sicily and Italy. The Greeks and Italians, with
-the nations immediately connected with them, clearly belong to one,
-and that a well marked, division of the Aryan family. Their kindred
-is shown alike by the evidence of language and by the remarkable ease
-with which in all ages they received Greek civilization. Into more
-minute inquiries as to these matters it is hardly our province to go
-here. ♦Pelasgians.♦ It is perhaps enough to say that the _Pelasgian_
-name, which has given rise to so much speculation, seems to have been
-used by the Greeks themselves in a very vague way, much as the word
-_Saxon_ is among ourselves. It is therefore dangerous to form any
-theories about the matter. Sometimes the Pelasgians seem to be spoken
-of simply as _Old-Hellênes_, sometimes as a people distinct from the
-Hellênes. ♦The Greek nation.♦ Whether the Hellênes, on their entering
-into Greece, found the land held by earlier inhabitants, whether Aryan
-or non-Aryan, is a curious and interesting speculation, but one which
-does not concern us. It is enough for our purpose that, as far back as
-history or even legend can carry us, we find the land in the occupation
-of a branch of the Aryan family, consisting, like all other nations, of
-various kindred tribes. It is a nation which is as well defined as any
-other nation, and yet it shades off, as it were, into the other nations
-of the kindred stock. Clearly marked as Greek and Barbarian are from
-the beginning, there still are frontier tribes in Epeiros and Macedonia
-which must be looked on as forming an intermediate stage between the
-two classes, and which are accordingly placed by different Greek
-writers sometimes in one class and sometimes in the other.
-
-
-§ 4. _The Earliest Geography of Greece and the Neighbouring Lands._
-
-♦The Homeric map of Greece.♦
-
-Our first picture of Greek geography comes from the Homeric catalogue.
-Whatever may be the historic value of the Homeric poems in general,
-it is clear that the catalogue in the second book of the Iliad
-must represent a real state of things. It gives us a map of Greece
-so different from the map of Greece at any later time that it is
-inconceivable that it can have been invented at any later time. We have
-in fact a map of Greece at a time earlier than any time to which we
-can assign certain names and dates. Within the range of Greece itself
-the various Greek races often changed their settlements, displacing
-or conquering earlier Greek settlers; and the different states which
-they formed often changed their boundaries by bringing other states
-into subjection or depriving them of parts of their territory. The
-Homeric catalogue gives us a wholly different arrangement of the
-various branches of the nation from any that we find in the Greece of
-historic times. The _Dorian_ and _Ionian_ names, which were afterwards
-so famous, are hardly known; the name of _Hellênes_ itself belongs only
-to a small district. ♦Tribal divisions of Homeric Greece.♦ The names
-for the whole people are _Achaians_, _Argeians_ (_Argos_ seeming to
-mean all Peloponnêsos), and _Danaoi_, the last a name which goes quite
-out of use in historic times. The boundary of Greece to the west is
-narrower than it was in later times. The land called _Akarnania_ has
-not yet got that name, if indeed it was Greek at all. It is spoken of
-vaguely as _Epeiros_ or the mainland,[3] and it appears as part of the
-possessions of the king of the neighbouring islands, _Kephallênia_
-and _Ithakê_. The islands to the north, _Leukas_ and _Korkyra_, were
-not yet Greek. The _Thesprotians_ in Epeiros are spoken of as a
-neighbouring and friendly people, but they form no part of the Greek
-nation. The _Aitolians_ appear as a Greek people, and so do most
-of the other divisions of the Greek nation, only their position and
-relative importance is often different from what it was afterwards.
-Thus, to mention a few examples out of many, the _Lokrians_, who, in
-historic times, appear both on the sea of Euboia and on the Corinthian
-gulf, appear in the catalogue in their northern seats only.
-
-When we turn from tribes to cities, the difference is still greater.
-♦Groupings of cities.♦ The cities which held the first place in
-historic times are not always those which are greatest in the earlier
-time, and their grouping in federations or principalities is wholly
-unlike anything in later history. Thus in the historic _Boiotia_ we
-find _Orchomenos_ as the second city of a confederation of which
-_Thebes_ is the first. In the catalogue Orchomenos and the neighbouring
-city _Aspledôn_ form a separate division, distinct from Boiôtia. Euboia
-forms a whole; and, what is specially to be noticed, _Attica_, as a
-land, is not mentioned, but only the single city of _Athens_, with
-_Salamis_ as a kind of dependency. Peloponnêsos again is divided in a
-manner quite different from anything in later times. The ruling city is
-_Mykênê_, whose king holds also a general superiority over all Hellas,
-while his immediate dominion takes in _Corinth_, _Kleônai_, _Sikyôn_,
-and the whole south coast of the Corinthian Gulf, the _Achaia_ of later
-times. The rest of the cities of the Argolic peninsula are grouped
-round _Argos_. Northern Greece again is divided into groups of cities
-which answer to nothing in later times. And its relative importance
-in the Greek world is clearly far greater than it was in the historic
-period.
-
-The catalogue also helps us to our earliest picture of the northern
-and eastern coasts of the Ægæan and of the Ægæan islands. ♦Extent
-of Greek colonization.♦ We see the extent which Greek colonization
-had already made. It had as yet taken in only the southern islands
-of the Ægæan. _Crete_ was already Greek; so were _Rhodes_, _Kôs_,
-and the neighbouring islands; but these last are distinctly marked
-as new settlements. The coast of Asia and the northern islands are
-still untouched, except through the events of the Trojan war itself,
-in which the Greek conquest of _Lesbos_ is distinctly marked. ♦The
-Asiatic Catalogue.♦ In Asia, besides _Trojans_ and _Dardanians_, we
-find _Pelasgians_ as a distinct people, as also _Paphlagonians_,
-_Mysians_, _Phrygians_, _Maionians_, _Karians_, and _Lykians_. We find
-in short the nations which fringe the whole Ægæan coast of Asia and the
-south-western coast of the Euxine. In Europe again we have Thracians
-and Paionians, names familiar in historic times, and whose bearers
-seemingly occupied nearly the same lands which they do in later times.
-The presence of Thracians in Asia is implied rather than asserted. The
-_Macedonian_ name is not found. The northern islands of the Ægæan are
-mentioned only incidentally. Everything leaves us to believe that the
-whole region, European and Asiatic, to which we are now concerned,
-was, at this earliest time of which we have any glimpses, occupied by
-various races more or less closely allied to each other. ♦Phœnician and
-Greek settlements in the islands.♦ The islands were largely Karian, but
-the _Phœnicians_, a Semitic people from the eastern coast, seem to have
-planted colonies in several of the Mediterranean islands. But Karians
-and Phœnicians had now begun to give way to Greek settlements. The same
-rivalry in short between Greeks and Phœnicians must have gone on in the
-earliest times in the islands of the Ægæan which went on in historical
-times in the greater islands of Cyprus and Sicily.
-
-
-§ 5. _Change from Homeric to Historic Greece._
-
-The state of things which is set before us in the catalogue was
-altogether broken up by later changes, but changes which still come
-before the beginnings of contemporary history, and which we understand
-chiefly by comparing the geography of the catalogue with the geography
-of later times. ♦Changes in Peloponnêsos.♦ According to received
-tradition, a number of _Dorian_ colonies from Northern Greece were
-gradually planted in the chief cities of Peloponnêsos, and drove out
-or reduced to subjection their older _Achaian_ inhabitants. Mykênê
-from this time loses its importance; Argos, Sparta, Corinth, and
-Sikyôn become Dorian cities; and Sparta gradually wins the dominion
-over all the towns, whether Dorian or Achaian, within her immediate
-dominion of Lakonia. To the west of Lakonia arises the Dorian state of
-_Messênê_, which is the name only of a district, as there was as yet
-no city so called. As part of the same movement, an Aitolian colony
-is said to have occupied _Êlis_ on the west coast of Peloponnêsos.
-Elis again was at this time the name of a district only; the cities
-both of Messênê and Êlis are of much later date. First Argos, and then
-Sparta, rises to a supremacy over their fellow-Dorians and over the
-whole of Peloponnêsos. Historical Peloponnêsos thus consists (i) of the
-cities, chiefly Dorian, of the Argolic _Aktê_ or peninsula, together
-with _Corinth_ on the Isthmus and _Megara_, a Dorian outpost beyond
-the Isthmus; (ii) of _Lakonikê_, the district immediately subject to
-Sparta, with a boundary towards Argos which changed as Sparta advanced
-and Argos went back; (iii) of _Messênê_, which was conquered by Sparta
-before the age of contemporary history, and was again separated in
-the fourth century B.C.; (iv) of _Elis_, with the border-districts
-between it and Messênê; (v) of the _Achaian_ cities on the coast of
-the Corinthian Gulf; (vi) of the inland country of _Arkadia_. The
-relations among these districts and the several cities within them
-often fluctuated, but the general aspect of the map of Peloponnêsos did
-not greatly change from the beginning of the fifth century to the later
-days of the third.
-
-♦Changes in Northern Greece.♦
-
-According to the received traditions, migrations of the same kind took
-place in Northern Greece also between the time of the catalogue and
-the beginning of contemporary history. Thus Thessaly, whose different
-divisions form a most important part of the catalogue, is said to have
-suffered an invasion at the hands of the half Hellenic _Thesprotians_.
-They are said to have become the ruling people in Thessaly itself, and
-to have held a supremacy over the neighbouring lands, including the
-peninsula of Magnêsia and the Phthiôtic Achaia. It is certain that in
-the historical period Thessaly lags in the back ground, and that the
-true Hellenic spirit is much less developed there than in other parts
-of Greece. There is less reason to accept the legend of a migration
-out of Thessaly into Boiôtia; but in historic times Orchomenos no
-longer appears as a separate state, but is the second city of the
-Boiotian confederacy, yielding the first place to Thebes with great
-unwillingness. The Lokrians also now appear on the Corinthian gulf as
-well as on the sea of Euboia. And the land to the west of Aitôlia,
-so vaguely spoken of in the catalogue, has become the seat of a
-Greek people under the name of _Akarnania_. The Corinthian colonies
-along this coast, the city of _Ambrakia_, the island or peninsula of
-_Leukas_, the foundation of which is placed in the eighth century B.C.,
-come almost within the time of trustworthy history. They are not Greek
-in the catalogue; they are Greek when we first hear of them in history.
-Ambrakia forms the last outpost of continuous Hellas towards the
-north-west; beyond that are only outlying settlements on the Illyrian
-coasts and islands.
-
-These changes in the geography of continental Greece, both within and
-without Peloponnêsos, make the main differences between the Greece of
-the Homeric catalogue and the Greece of the Persian and Peloponnesian
-wars. ♦Changes in later times.♦ During the sixth, fifth, and fourth
-centuries before Christ there were constant changes in political
-relations of the Greek states to one another; but there were not many
-changes which greatly affected the geography. Cities were constantly
-brought in subjection to one another, and were again relieved from
-the yoke. ♦B.C. 370-369.♦ In the course of the fourth century two
-new Peloponnesian cities, _Messênê_ and _Megalopolis_, were founded.
-In Boiotia again, _Plataia_ and _Orchomenos_ were destroyed by the
-Thebans, and Thebes itself was destroyed by Alexander, but these were
-afterwards rebuilt. ♦B.C. 468.♦ In Peloponnêsos Mykênê was destroyed
-by the Argeians, and never rebuilt. But most of these changes do not
-affect geography, as they did not involve any change in the seats of
-the great divisions of the Greek name. The only exception is that of
-the foundation of _Messênê_, which was accompanied by the separation
-of the old Messenian territory from Sparta, and the consequent
-establishment of a new or restored division of the Greek nation.
-
-
-§ 6. _The Greek Colonies._
-
-♦The Ægæan colonies.♦
-
-It must have been in the time between the days represented by the
-catalogue and the beginnings of contemporary history, that most of the
-islands of the Ægæan became Greek, and that the Greek colonies were
-planted on the Ægæan coast of Asia. We have seen that the southern
-islands were already Greek at the time of the catalogue, while some of
-the northern ones, _Thasos_, _Lêmnos_, and others, did not become Greek
-till times to which we can give approximate dates, from the eighth to
-the fifth centuries. ♦Colonies in Asia.♦ During this period, at some
-time before the eighth century, the whole Ægæan coast of Asia had
-become fringed with Greek cities, _Dorian_ to the south, _Aiolian_ to
-the north, _Ionian_ between the two. The story of the Trojan war itself
-in the land is most likely a legendary account of the beginning of
-these settlements, which may make us think that the Greek colonization
-of this coast began in the north, in the lands bordering on the
-Hellespont. At all events, by the eighth century these settlements had
-made the Asiatic coast and the islands adjoining it a part, and a most
-important part, not only of the Greek world, but we may almost say of
-Greece itself. ♦Their early greatness.♦ The Ionian cities, above all,
-_Smyrna_, _Ephesos_, _Milêtos_, and the islands of _Chios_ and _Samos_,
-were among the greatest of Greek cities, more flourishing certainly
-than any in European Greece. Milêtos, above all, was famous for the
-number of colonies which it sent forth in its own turn. But, if their
-day of greatness came before that of the European Greeks, they were
-also the first to come under the power of the Barbarians. ♦Lydian and
-Persian conquests.♦ In the course of the fifth century the Greek cities
-on the continent of Asia came under the power, first of the _Lydian_
-kings and then of their _Persian_ conquerors, who subdued several of
-the islands also. It was this subjection of the Asiatic Greeks to the
-Barbarians which led to the Persian war, with which the most brilliant
-time in the history of European Greece begins. We thus know the Asiatic
-cities only in the days of their decline. ♦Colonies in Thrace.♦ The
-coasts of Thrace and Macedonia were also sprinkled with Greek cities,
-but they did not lie so thick together as those on the Asiatic coast,
-except only in the three-fingered peninsula of _Chalkidikê_, which
-became a thoroughly Greek land. Some of these colonies in Thrace, as
-_Olynthos_ and _Potidaia_, play an important part in Greek history,
-and two among them fill a place in the history of the world. _Thermê_,
-under its later name of _Thessalonikê_, has kept on its importance
-under all changes down to our own time. And _Byzantion_, on the
-Thracian Bosporos, rose higher still, becoming, under the form of
-_Constantinople_, the transplanted seat of the Empire of Rome.
-
-The settlements which have been thus far spoken of may be all counted
-as coming within the immediate Greek world. They were planted in lands
-so near to the mother-country, and they lay so near to one another,
-that the whole country round the Ægæan may be looked on as more or less
-thoroughly Greek. Some parts were wholly Greek, and everywhere Greek
-influences were predominant. ♦More distant colonies.♦ But, during this
-same period of distant enterprise, between the time of the Homeric
-catalogue and the time of the Persian War, many Greek settlements were
-made in countries much further off from continuous Greece. All of
-course came within the range of the Mediterranean world; no Greek ever
-passed through the Straits of Hêraklês to found settlements on the
-Ocean. But a large part of the coast both of the Mediterranean itself
-and of the Euxine was gradually dotted with Greek colonies. These
-outposts of Greece, unless they were actually conquered by barbarians,
-almost always remained Greek; they kept their Greek language and
-manners, and they often spread them to some extent among their
-barbarian neighbours. But it was not often that any large tract of
-country in these more distant lands became so thoroughly Greek as the
-Ægæan coast of Asia became. We may say however that such was the case
-with the coast of Sicily and Southern Italy, where many Greek colonies
-were planted, which will be spoken of more fully in another chapter.
-All Sicily indeed did in the end really become a Greek country, though
-not till after its conquest by the Romans. But in Northern and Central
-Italy, the Latins, Etruscans, and other Italian nations were too strong
-for any Greek colonies to be made in those parts. ♦Colonies in the
-Hadriatic.♦ On the other side of the Hadriatic, Greek colonies had
-spread before the Peloponnesian war as far north as _Epidamnos_. The
-more northern colonies on the coast and among the islands of Dalmatia,
-the Illyrian _Epidauros_, _Pharos_, _Black Korkyra_, and others, were
-among the latest efforts of Greek colonization in the strict sense.
-
-In other parts of the Mediterranean coasts the Greek settlements
-lay further apart from each other. But we may say that they were
-spread here and there over the whole coast, except where there was
-some special hindrance to keep the Greeks from settling. ♦Phœnician
-colonies.♦ Thus, in a great part of the Mediterranean the Phœnicians
-had got the start of the Greeks, both in their own country on the coast
-of Syria, and in the colonies sent forth by their great cities of Tyre
-and Sidon. The Phœnician colonists occupied a large part of the western
-half of the southern coast of the Mediterranean, where lay the great
-Phœnician cities of _Carthage_, _Utica_, and others. They had also
-settlements in Southern Spain, and one at least outside the straits
-on the Ocean. This is _Gades_ or _Cadiz_, which has kept its name
-and its unbroken position as a great city from an earlier time than
-any other city in Europe. The Greeks therefore could not colonize in
-these parts. In the great islands of Sicily and Cyprus there were both
-Phœnician and Greek colonies, and there was a long struggle between the
-settlers of the two nations. In Egypt again, though there were some
-Greek settlers, yet there were no Greek colonies in the strict sense.
-That is, there were no independent Greek commonwealths. Thus the only
-part of the southern coast of the Mediterranean which was open to Greek
-colonization was the land between Egypt and the dominions of Carthage.
-♦Greek colonies in Africa, Gaul, and Spain.♦ In that land accordingly
-several Greek cities were planted, of which the chief was the famous
-_Kyrênê_. On the southern coast of Gaul arose the great Ionian city of
-_Massalia_ or _Marseilles_, which also, like the Phœnician Gades, has
-kept its name and its prosperity down to our own time. Massalia became
-the centre of a group of Greek cities on the south coast of Gaul and
-the east coast of Spain, which were the means of spreading a certain
-amount of Greek civilization in those parts.
-
-♦Colonies on the Euxine.♦
-
-Besides these settlements in the Mediterranean itself, there were
-also a good many Greek colonies on the western, northern, and
-southern coasts of the Euxine, of which those best worth remembering
-are the city of _Chersonêsos_ in the peninsula called the _Tauric
-Chersonêsos_, now Crimea, and _Trapezous_ on the southern coast.
-These two deserve notice as being two most abiding seats of Greek
-influence. Chersonêsos, under the name of _Cherson_, remained an
-independent Greek commonwealth longer than any other, and Trapezous or
-_Trebizond_ became the seat of Greek-speaking Emperors, who outlived
-those of Constantinople. Speaking generally then, we may say that, in
-the most famous times of European Greece, in the time of the Persian
-and Peloponnesian wars, the whole coast of the Ægæan was part of the
-immediate Greek world, while in Sicily and Cyprus Greek colonies were
-contending with the Phœnicians, and in Italy with the native Italians.
-Massalia was the centre of a group of Greek states in the north-west,
-and Kyrênê in the south, while the greater part of the coast of the
-Euxine was also dotted with Greek cities here and there. In most of
-these colonies the Greeks mixed to some extent with the natives, and
-the natives to some extent learned the Greek language and manners.
-♦Beginning of the artificial Greek nation.♦ We thus get the beginning
-of what we call an artificial Greek nation, a nation Greek in speech
-and manners, but not purely Greek in blood, which has gone on ever
-since.
-
-
-§ 7. _Growth of Macedonia and Epeiros._
-
-♦Growth of Macedonia.♦
-
-But while the spread of the Greek language and civilization, and
-therewith the growth of the artificial Greek nation, was brought about
-in a great degree by the planting of independent Greek colonies, it was
-brought about still more fully by events which went far to destroy the
-political independence of Greece itself. This came of the growth of
-the kindred nations to the north of Greece, in Macedonia and Epeiros.
-The Macedonians were for a long time hemmed in by the barbarians to
-the north and west of them and by the Greek cities on the coast, and
-they were also weakened by divisions among themselves. ♦Reign of
-Philip, B.C. 360-336.♦ But when the whole nation was united under its
-great King Philip, Macedonia soon became the chief power in Greece
-and the neighbouring lands. Philip greatly increased his dominions at
-the expense of both Greeks and barbarians, especially by adding the
-peninsulas of Chalkidikê to his kingdom. But in Greece itself, though
-he took to himself the chief power, he did not actually annex any of
-the Greek states to Macedonia, so that his victories there do not
-affect the map. ♦Conquests of Alexander, 336-323.♦ His yet more famous
-son Alexander, and the Macedonian kings after him, in like manner held
-garrisons in particular Greek cities, and brought some parts of Greece,
-as Thessaly and Euboia, under a degree of Macedonian influence which
-hardly differed from dominion; but they did not formally annex them.
-The conquests of Alexander in Asia brought most of the Greek cities
-and islands under Macedonian dominion, but some, as Crete, Rhodes,
-Byzantion, and _Hêrakleia_ on the Euxine, kept their independence.
-♦Epeiros under Pyrrhos, B.C. 295-272.♦ Meanwhile Epeiros became united
-under the Greek kings of _Molossis_, and under Pyrrhos, who made
-Ambrakia his capital, it became a powerful state. And a little kingdom
-called _Athamania_, thrust in between Epeiros, Macedonia, and Thessaly,
-now begins to be heard of.
-
-♦The Macedonian kingdoms in Asia.♦
-
-The conquests of Alexander in Asia concern us only so far as they
-called into being a class of states in Western Asia, all of which
-received a greater or less share of Hellenic culture, and some of
-which may claim a place in the actual Greek world. By the division
-of the empire of Alexander after the battle of Ipsos, _Egypt_ became
-the kingdom of Ptolemy, with whose descendants it remained down to
-the Roman conquest. ♦B.C. 301.♦ The civilization of the Egyptian
-court was Greek, and Alexandria became one of the greatest of Greek
-cities. ♦Egypt under the Ptolemies.♦ Moreover the earlier kings of the
-Ptolemaic dynasty held various islands in the Ægæan, and points on the
-coast of Asia and even of Thrace, which made them almost entitled to
-rank as a power in Greece itself. ♦The Seleukid dynasty.♦ The great
-Asiatic power of Alexander passed to _Seleukos_ and his descendants.
-The early kings of his house ruled from the Ægæan to the Hyphasis,
-though this great dominion was at all times fringed and broken in upon
-by the dominions of native princes, by independent Greek cities, and
-by the dominions of other Macedonian kings. ♦Circa B.C. 256.♦ But in
-the third century their dominion was altogether cut short in the East
-by the revolt of the Parthians in northern Persia, by whom the eastern
-provinces of the Seleukid kingdom were lopped away. ♦B.C. 191-181.♦ And
-when Antiochos the Great provoked a war with Rome, his dominion was cut
-short to the West also. The Seleukid power now shrank up into a local
-kingdom of _Syria_, with Tauros for its north-western frontier.
-
-♦Cities of independent state in Asia Minor. B.C. 283.♦
-
-By the cutting short of the Seleukid kingdom, room was given for the
-growth of the independent states which had already sprung up in Asia
-Minor. ♦Pergamos.♦ The kingdom of _Pergamos_ had already begun, and
-the dominions of its kings were largely increased by the Romans at
-the expense of Antiochos. Pergamos might count as a Hellenic state,
-alongside of Macedonia and Epeiros. But the other kingdoms of Asia
-Minor, _Bithynia_, _Kappadokia_, _Paphlagonia_, and _Pontos_, the
-kingdom of the famous Mithridates, must be counted as Asiatic. ♦Spread
-of Hellenic culture.♦ The Hellenic influence indeed spread itself
-far to the East. Even the Parthian kings affected a certain amount
-of Greek culture, and in all the more western kingdoms there was a
-greater or less Greek element, and in several of them the kings fixed
-their capitals in Greek cities. Still in all of them the Asiatic
-element prevailed in a way in which it did not prevail at Pergamos.
-Meanwhile other states, either originally Greek or largely Hellenized,
-still remained East of the Ægæan. Thus, at the south-western corner of
-Asia Minor, _Lykia_, though seemingly less thoroughly Hellenized than
-some of its neighbours, became a federal state after the Greek model.
-♦Seleukeia.♦ Far to the East, _Seleukeia_ on the Tigris, whether under
-Syrian or Parthian overlordship, kept its character as a Greek colony,
-and its position as what may be called a free imperial city. Further
-to the West other more purely Greek states survived. ♦Hêrakleia. |
-B.C. 188.♦ The Pontic _Hêrakleia_ long remained an independent Greek
-city, sometimes a commonwealth, sometimes under tyrants; and _Sinôpê_
-remained a Greek city till it became the capital of the kings of
-Pontos. On the north of the Euxine, _Bosporos_ still remained a Greek
-kingdom.
-
-
-§ 8. _The later Geography of Independent Greece._
-
-♦Later political divisions of Greece.♦
-
-The political divisions of independent Greece, in the days when it
-gradually came under the power of Rome, differ almost as much from
-those to which we are used during the Persian and Peloponnesian
-wars, as these last differ from the earlier divisions in the Homeric
-catalogue. The chief feature of these times was the power which
-was held, as we have before seen, by the Macedonian kings, and the
-alliances made by the different Greek states in order to escape or to
-throw off their yoke. The result was that the greater part of Greece
-was gradually mapped out among large confederations, much larger at
-least than Greece had ever seen before. ♦The Achaian League, B.C. 280.♦
-The most famous of these, the League of _Achaia_, began among the old
-Achaian cities on the south of the Corinthian Gulf. ♦B.C. 191.♦ It
-gradually spread, till it took in the whole of Peloponnêsos, together
-with Megara and one or two outlying cities. Thus Corinth, Argos, Elis,
-and even Sparta, instead of being distinct states as of old, with a
-greater or less dominion over other cities, were now simply members of
-one federal body. ♦The Aitolian League.♦ In Northern Greece the League
-of _Aitolia_ now became very powerful, and extended itself far beyond
-its old borders. Akarnania, Phôkis, Lokris, and Boiôtia formed Federal
-states of less power, and so did _Epeiros_, where the kings had been
-got rid of, and which was now reckoned as a thoroughly Greek state.
-The Macedonian kings held different points at different times: Corinth
-itself for a good while, and Thessaly and Euboia for longer periods,
-might be almost counted as parts of their kingdom.
-
-♦Roman interference in Greece.♦
-
-This was the state of things in Greece at the time when the Romans
-began to meddle in Greek and Macedonian affairs, and gradually to
-bring all these countries, like the rest of the Mediterranean world,
-under their power. But it should be remarked that this was done,
-as the conquests of the Romans always were done, very gradually.
-♦B.C. 229.♦ First the island of Korkyra and the cities of Epidamnos
-and Apollônia on the Illyrian coast became Roman allies, which was
-always a step to becoming Roman subjects. ♦B.C. 205.♦ The Romans
-first appeared in Greece itself, as allies of the Aitolians, but by
-the Peace of Epeiros Rome obtained no dominion in Greece, and merely
-some increase of her Illyrian territory. ♦B.C. 200-197. | Progress of
-Roman conquests. | B.C. 196.♦ The second Macedonian War made Macedonia
-dependent on Rome, and all those parts of Greece which had been under
-the Macedonian power were declared free at its close. ♦B.C. 189.♦ As
-the Aitolians had joined Antiochos of Syria against Rome, they were
-made a Roman dependency. From that time Rome was always meddling in
-the affairs of the Greek states, and they may be counted as really,
-though not formally, dependent on Rome. ♦B.C. 169. | B.C. 149.♦ After
-the third Macedonian war, Macedonia was cut up into four separate
-commonwealths; and at last, after the fourth, it became a Roman
-province. ♦B.C. 146. | Remaining free states incorporated by
-Vespasian.♦ About the same time the Leagues of Epeiros and Boiôtia
-were dissolved; the Achaian League also became formally dependent on
-Rome, and was dissolved for a time also. It is not certain when Achaia
-became formally a Roman province; but, from this time, all Greece was
-practically subject to Rome. Athens remained nominally independent, as
-did Rhodes, Byzantion, and several other islands and outlying cities,
-some of which were not formally incorporated with the Roman dominion
-till the time of the Emperor Vespasian.
-
-As we go on with the geography of other countries which came under
-the Roman dominion, we shall learn more of the way in which Rome thus
-enlarged her territories bit by bit. But it seemed right to begin with
-the geography of Greece, and this could not be carried down to the
-time when Greece became a Roman dominion without saying something of
-the Roman conquest. From B.C. 146 we must look upon Greece and the
-neighbouring lands as being, some of them formally and all of them
-practically, part of the Roman dominion. And we shall not have to speak
-of them again as separate states or countries till many ages later,
-when the Roman dominion began to fall in pieces. Having thus traced the
-geography of the most eastern of the three great European peninsulas
-down to the time when it became part of the dominion which took in all
-the lands around the Mediterranean, we will now go on to speak of the
-middle peninsula, which became the centre of that dominion, namely
-that of Italy. ♦Special character of Greek history.♦ Greece and the
-neighbouring lands are the only parts of Europe which can be said to
-have a history quite independent of Rome, and beginning earlier than
-the Roman history. Of the other countries therefore which became part
-of the Roman Empire it will be best to speak in their relation to
-Italy, and, as nearly as possible, in the order in which they came
-under the Roman power.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] See the first chapter of his eighth book (vol. ii. p. 139 of
-the Tauchnitz edition). He makes four peninsulas within peninsulas,
-beginning from the south with Peloponnêsos, and he enlarges on the
-general character of the country as made up of gulfs and promontories.
-
-[3] Ἤπειρος is simply the mainland, and came only gradually to mean a
-particular country. We may compare the use of ‘terra firma’ in South
-America. In the catalogue (_Iliad_, ii. 620-635), after the island
-subjects of Odysseus have been reckoned up, we read: οἵ τ᾽ Ἤπειρον
-ἔχον, ἠδ᾽ ἀντιπέραι᾽ ἐνέμοντο. This must mean the land afterwards
-called Akarnania. It was remarked at a later time that the Akarnanians
-were the only people of Greece who did not appear in the catalogue.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-FORMATION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
-
-
-The second of the three great peninsulas of southern Europe, that which
-lies between the other two, is that of Italy. ♦Different meanings of
-the name Italy.♦ The name of Italy has been used in several meanings
-at different times, but it has always meant either the whole or a part
-of the land which we now call Italy. The name gradually spread itself
-from the extreme south to the north.[4] At the time when our survey
-begins, the name did not go beyond the long narrow peninsula itself;
-and indeed it hardly took in the whole of that. ♦Its meaning under
-the Roman commonwealth.♦ During the time of the Roman commonwealth
-Italy did not reach beyond the little rivers _Macra_ on one side, near
-_Luna_, and _Rubico_ on the other side, near _Ariminum_. The land to
-the north, as far as the Alps, was not counted for Italy till after
-the time of Cæsar. But the Alps are the natural boundary which fence
-off the peninsular land from the great mass of central Europe; so
-that, looking at the matter as a piece of geography, we may count the
-whole land within the Alps as Italy. It will be at once seen that the
-Italian peninsula, though so long and narrow, is by no means cut up
-into promontories and smaller peninsulas as the Greek peninsula is. Nor
-is it surrounded by so many islands. It is only quite in the south,
-where the long narrow peninsula splits off into two smaller ones, that
-the coast has at all the character of the Greek coast, and there only
-in a much slighter degree. ♦The Italian islands.♦ Close by this end of
-Italy lies the great island of _Sicily_, whose history has always been
-closely connected with that of Italy. Further off lie the two other
-great islands of _Corsica_ and _Sardinia_, which in old times were not
-reckoned to belong to Italy at all. Besides these there are several
-smaller islands, _Elba_ and others, along the Italian coast; but they
-lie a good way from each other, and do not form any marked feature in
-the geography. There is nothing at all like even the group of islands
-off western Greece, much less like the endless multitude, great and
-small, in the Ægæan. Through the whole length of the peninsula, like
-a backbone, runs the long chain of the _Apennines_. These branch off
-from the Alps in north-western Italy near the sea, and run through the
-whole length of the country to the very toe of the boot, as the Italian
-peninsula has been called from its shape. From all this it follows
-that, though Italy was the land which was destined in the end to have
-the rule over all the rest, yet the people of Italy were not likely to
-begin to make themselves a name so early as the Greeks did. Least of
-all were they likely to take in the same way to a sea-faring life, and
-to plant colonies in far off lands.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Inhabitants of Italy and Sicily._
-
-♦Non-Aryans in Italy.♦
-
-We seem to have somewhat clearer signs in Italy than we have in Greece
-of the men who dwelled in the land before the Aryans who appear as
-its historical inhabitants came into it. ♦Ligurians.♦ On the coast of
-_Liguria_, the land on each side of the city of Genoa, a land which was
-not reckoned Italian in early times, we find people who seem not to
-have been Aryan. And these Ligurians seem to have been part of a race
-which was spread through Italy and Sicily before the Aryan settlements,
-and to have been akin to the non-Aryan inhabitants of Spain and
-southern Gaul, of whom the Basques on each side of the Pyrenees remain
-as a remnant. ♦Etruscans.♦ And in historical times a large part of
-Italy was held, and in earlier times a still larger part seems to
-have been held, by the _Etruscans_. These are a people about whose
-origin and language there have been many theories, but nothing can
-as yet be said to be certainly known. These Etruscans, in historical
-times, formed a confederacy of twelve cities in the land west of the
-Apennines, between the Macra and the Tiber; and it is believed that in
-earlier times they had settlements both more to the north, on the Po,
-and more to the south, in Campania. If they were a non-Aryan race, the
-part of the non-Aryans in the geography and history of Italy becomes
-greater than it has been in any part of Western Europe except Spain.
-
-♦The Italians.♦
-
-But whatever we make of the Etruscans, the rest of Italy in the older
-sense was held by various branches of an Aryan race nearly allied to
-the Greeks, whom we may call the _Italians_. Of this race there were
-two great branches. One of them, under various names, seems to have
-held all the southern part of the western coast of Italy, and to have
-spread into Sicily. Some of the tribes of this branch seem to have been
-almost as nearly akin to the Greeks as the Epeirots and other kindred
-nations on the east side of the Hadriatic. ♦Latins.♦ Of this branch
-of the Italian race, the most famous people were the _Latins_; and it
-was the greatest Latin city, the border city of the Latins against
-the Etruscans, the city of _Rome_ on the Tiber, which became, step by
-step, the mistress of Latium, of Italy, and of the Mediterranean world.
-♦Opicans.♦ The other branch, which held a much larger part of the
-peninsula, taking in the _Sabines_, _Æquians_, _Volscians_, _Samnites_,
-_Lucanians_, and other people who play a great part in the Roman
-history, may perhaps be classed together as _Opicans_ or _Oscans_, in
-distinction from the Latins, and the other tribes allied to them. These
-tribes seem to have pressed from the eastern, the Hadriatic, coast of
-Italy, down upon the nations to the south-west of them, and to have
-largely extended their borders at their expense.
-
-But part of ancient Italy, and a still larger part of Italy in the
-modern sense, was inhabited by nations other than the Italians.
-♦Iapygians.♦ In the heel of the boot were the _Iapygians_, a people of
-uncertain origin, but who seem in any case to have had a great gift of
-receiving the Greek language and manners. ♦Gauls.♦ And in the northern
-part, in the lands which were not then counted as part of Italy, were
-the _Gauls_, a Celtic people, akin to the Gauls beyond the Alps, and
-whose country was therefore called _Cisalpine Gaul_ or Gaul on this
-side of the Alps. They were found on both sides of the Po, and on the
-Hadriatic coast they seem to have stretched in early times almost as
-far south as _Ancona_. ♦Veneti.♦ In the north-east corner of Italy were
-yet another people, the _Veneti_, perhaps of Illyrian origin, whose
-name long after was taken by the city of _Venice_. But during the
-whole time with which we have to do, there was no city so called, and
-the name of _Venetia_ is always the name of a country.
-
-♦Greek colonies in Italy.♦
-
-All these nations we may look on as the original inhabitants of Italy;
-that is, all were there before anything like contemporary history
-begins.[5] But besides these original nations, there were in one part
-of Italy many Greek colonies, and also in the island of Sicily. Some
-cities of Italy claimed to be Greek colonies, without any clear proof
-that they were so. But there seems no reason to doubt that _Kymê_ or
-_Cumæ_ on the western coast of Italy, and _Ankôn_ or _Ancona_ on the
-Hadriatic, were solitary Greek colonies far away from any other Greek
-settlements. Cumæ, though so far off, is said to have been the earliest
-Greek colony in Italy. But where the Greeks mainly settled was in the
-two lesser peninsulas, the heel and the toe of the boot, into which
-the great peninsula of Italy divides at its southern end. Here, as
-was before said, there is a nearer approach to the kind of coast to
-which the Greeks were used at home. Here then arose a number of Greek
-cities, stretching from the extreme south almost up to Cumæ. As in the
-case of the Greek cities in Asia, the time of greatness of the Italian
-Greeks came earlier than that of the Greeks in Greece itself. In the
-sixth century B.C. some of these Greek colonies in Italy, as _Taras_ or
-_Tarentum_, _Krotôn_ or _Crotona_, _Sybaris_, and others, were among
-the greatest cities of the Greek name. But, as the Italian nations grew
-stronger, the Greek cities lost their power, and many of them, Cumæ
-among them, fell into the hands of Italian conquerors, and lost their
-Greek character more or less thoroughly. Others remained Greek till
-they became subject to Rome, and the Greek speech and manners did not
-quite die out of southern Italy till ages after the Christian æra.
-
-♦Inhabitants of Sicily.♦
-
-The geography and history of the great island of Sicily, which lies
-so near to the toe of the boot, cannot be kept apart from those of
-Italy. The mainland and the island were, to a great extent, inhabited
-by the same nations. The _Sikanians_ in the western part of the island
-may not unlikely have been akin to the Ligurians and Basques; but the
-_Sikels_, who gave their name to the island, and who are the people
-with whom the Greeks had most to do, were clearly of the Italian stock,
-and were nearly allied to the Latins. ♦Phœnician and Greek colonies.♦
-The Phœnicians of Carthage planted some colonies in the western and
-northern parts of the island, the chief of which was the city which the
-Greeks called _Panormos_, the modern capital _Palermo_. But the western
-and southern sides of the triangle were full of Greek cities, which are
-said to have been founded from the eighth century B.C. to the sixth.
-Several of these, especially _Syracuse_ and _Akragas_ or _Agrigentum_,
-were among the chief of Greek cities; and from them the Greek speech
-and manners gradually spread themselves over the natives, till in the
-end Sicily was reckoned as wholly a Greek land. But for some centuries
-Sicilian history is chiefly made up of struggles for the mastery
-between Carthage and the Greek cities. This was in truth a struggle
-between the Aryan and the Semitic race, and we shall see that, many
-ages after, the same battle was again fought on the same ground.
-
-
-§ 2. _Growth of the Roman power in Italy._
-
-♦Gradual conquest of Italy.♦
-
-The history of ancient Italy, as far as we know it, is the history of
-the gradual conquest of the whole land by one of its own cities; and
-the changes in its political geography are mainly the changes which
-followed the gradual bringing of the whole peninsula under the Roman
-dominion. But the form which the conquests of Rome took hindered those
-conquests from having so great an effect on the map as they otherwise
-might have had. The cities and districts of Italy, as they were one by
-one conquered by Rome, were commonly left as separate states, in the
-relation of dependent alliance, from which most of them were step by
-step promoted to the rights of Roman citizenship. ♦Different positions
-of the Italian cities.♦ An Italian city might be a dependent ally of
-Rome; it might be a Roman colony with the full franchise or a colony
-holding the inferior Latin franchise; or it might have been actually
-made part of a Roman tribe. All these were very important political
-differences; but they do not make much difference in the look of things
-on the map. The most important of the changes which can be called
-strictly geographical belong to the early days of Rome, when there were
-important national movements among the various races of Italy. ♦Origin
-of Rome.♦ Rome arose at the point of union of the
-three races, Latin, Oscan, and Etruscan, and it arose from an union
-between the _Latin_ and _Oscan_ races. ♦Rome a Latin city.♦ Two Latin
-and one _Sabine_ settlements seem to have joined together to form
-the city of Rome; but the Sabine element must have been thoroughly
-Latinized, and Rome must be counted as a Latin city, the greatest,
-though very likely the youngest, among the cities of Latium.
-
-♦Her early Latin dominion.♦
-
-Rome, planted on a march, rose, in the way in which marchlands often do
-rise, to supremacy among her fellows. Our first authentic record of the
-early commonwealth sets Rome before us as bearing rule over the whole
-of Latium. This dominion she seems to have lost soon after the driving
-out of the kings, and some of her territory right of the Tiber seems
-to have become Etruscan. Presently Rome appears, no longer as mistress
-of Latium, but as forming one member of a triple league concluded on
-equal terms with the Latins as a body, and with the Hernicans. ♦Wars
-with her neighbours.♦ This league was engaged in constant wars with its
-neighbours of the Oscan race, the _Æquians_ and _Volscians_, by whom
-many of the Latin cities were taken. ♦More distant wars. | B.C. 396.♦
-But the first great advance of Rome’s actual dominion was made on the
-right bank of the Tiber, by the taking of the Etruscan city of _Veii_.
-♦B.C. 343.♦ Fifty years later Rome began to engage in more distant
-wars; and we may say generally that the conquest of Italy was going on
-bit by bit for eighty years more. ♦B.C. 296.♦ By the end of that time,
-all Italy, in the older sense, was brought in one shape or another
-under the Roman dominion. The neighbouring districts, both Latin and of
-other races, had been admitted to citizenship. Roman and Latin colonies
-were planted in various parts of the country; elsewhere the old cities,
-Etruscan, Samnite, Greek, or any other, still remained as dependent
-allies of Rome. ♦Incorporation of the Italian states. | B.C. 89.♦
-Presently Rome went on to win dominion out of Italy; but the Italian
-states still remained in their old relation to Rome, till the Italian
-allies received the Roman franchise after the _Social_ or _Marsian_
-war. The _Samnites_ alone held out, and they may be said to have been
-altogether exterminated in the wars of Sulla. The rest of Italy was
-Roman.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Western Provinces._
-
-The great change in Roman policy, and in European geography as affected
-by it, took place when Rome began to win territory out of Italy. The
-relation of these foreign possessions to the ruling city was quite
-different from that of the Italian states. The foreign conquests of
-Rome were made into _provinces_. ♦Nature of the Roman Provinces.♦ A
-province was a district which was subject to Rome, and put under the
-rule of a Roman governor, which was not done with the dependent allies
-in Italy. But it must be borne in mind that, though we speak of a
-province as having a certain geographical extent, yet there might be
-cities within its limits whose formal relation to Rome was that of
-dependent, or even of equal, alliance. There might also be Roman and
-Latin colonies, either colonies really planted or cities which had
-been raised to the Roman or Latin franchise. All these were important
-distinctions as regarded the internal government of the different
-states; still practically all alike formed part of the Roman dominion.
-In a geographical survey it will therefore be enough to mark the extent
-of the different provinces, without attending to their political, or
-more truly municipal, distinctions, except in a few cases where they
-are of special importance.
-
-♦Eastern and Western Provinces.♦
-
-The provinces then are the foreign dominions of Rome, and they fall
-naturally into two, or rather three, divisions. There are the
-provinces of the West, in which the Romans had chiefly to contend with
-nations much less civilized than themselves, and in which therefore
-the provincials gradually adopted the language and manners of their
-conquerors. But in the provinces to the east of the Hadriatic, the
-Greek language and Greek manners had become the language and manners
-of civilized life, and their supremacy was not supplanted by those of
-Rome. And in the more distant parts, as in Syria and Egypt, the Greek
-civilization was a mere varnish; the mass of the people still kept to
-their old manners and languages as they were before the Macedonian
-conquests. In these countries therefore the Latin tongue and Roman
-civilization made but little progress. The Roman conquests went on
-on both sides of the Hadriatic at the same time, but it was to the
-west that they began. The first Roman province however forms a sort
-of intermediate class by itself, standing between the eastern and the
-western.
-
-♦Sicily.♦
-
-This first Roman province was formed in the great island of _Sicily_,
-which, by its geographical position, belongs to the western part of
-Europe, while the fact that Greek became the prevailing language in
-it rather connects it with the eastern part. ♦First Roman possessions
-in the island. B.C. 241.♦ The Roman dominion in Sicily began when the
-Carthaginian possessions in the island were given up to Rome, as the
-result of the first Punic war. But, as Hierôn of _Syracuse_ had helped
-Rome against Carthage, his kingdom remained in alliance with Rome,
-and was not dealt with as a conquered land. ♦Conquest of Syracuse.
-B.C. 212.♦ It was only when Syracuse turned against Rome in the
-second Punic war that it was, on its conquest, formally made a Roman
-possession. ♦B.C. 132.♦ Eighty years later the condition of Sicily
-under the Roman government was finally settled, and it may be taken
-as a type of the endless variety of relations in which the different
-districts and cities throughout the Roman dominions stood to the ruling
-commonwealth. ♦State of Sicily.♦ The greater part of the island became
-simply subject; the land was held to be forfeited to the Roman People,
-and the former inhabitants held it simply as tenants on payment of a
-tithe. But some cities were called free, and kept their land; others
-remained in name independent allies of the Roman People. Other cities
-were afterwards raised to the Latin franchise; in others Latin or
-Roman colonies were planted, and one Sicilian city, that of _Messana_,
-received the full citizenship of Rome. It must be borne in mind that
-these different relations, these exceptionally favoured cities and
-districts, are found, not only in Sicily, but throughout all the
-provinces. ♦Greek civilization of Sicily.♦ Sicily, by the time of the
-conquest, was looked on as a thoroughly Greek land. The Greek language
-and manners had now spread themselves everywhere among the Sikels and
-the other inhabitants of the island. And Sicily remained a thoroughly
-Greek land, till, ages afterwards, it again became, as it had been in
-the days of the Greek and Phœnician colonies, a battle-field of Aryan
-and Semitic races in the days of the Mahometan conquests.
-
-♦Sardinia and Corsica.♦
-
-The two great islands of _Sardinia_ and _Corsica_ seem almost as
-natural appendages to Italy as Sicily itself; but their history is
-very different. They have played no important part in the history of
-the world. The original stock of their inhabitants seems to have been
-akin to the non-Aryan element in Spain and Sicily. The attempts at
-Greek colonization in them were but feeble, and they passed under the
-dominion, first of Carthage and then of Rome, without any important
-change in their condition. ♦B.C. 238.♦ These two islands became a
-Roman province, which was always reckoned one of the most worthless of
-provinces, in the interval between the first and second Punic wars.
-
-♦Cisalpine Gaul.♦
-
-Thus far the Roman dominions did not reach beyond what we should
-look upon as the natural extent of the dominion of an Italian power.
-Indeed, as long as Italy did not reach to the Alps, we should say that
-it had not reached the natural extent of an Italian dominion. But
-the conquest of Cisalpine Gaul cannot be separated from the general
-conquest of Western Europe. The Roman conquest of Gaul and Spain, by
-gradually spreading the Latin language and Roman civilization over
-those countries, created two of the chief nations and languages of
-modern Europe. But the process was simply the continuation of a process
-which began within the borders of what we now call Italy. Gaul within
-the Alps was as strictly a foreign conquest as Spain or as Gaul beyond
-the Alps. Only the geographical position of Cisalpine Gaul allowed it
-to be easily and speedily incorporated with Italy in a way which the
-lands beyond the Alps could not be. The beginnings of conquest in this
-direction took place after the end of the Samnite wars. ♦Foundation
-of Sena Gallica. B.C. 282.♦ Then the colony of _Sena Gallica_, now
-_Sinigaglia_, was founded on Gaulish soil, and it was presently
-followed by the foundation of _Ariminum_ or _Rimini_. ♦Conquest of
-Cisalpine Gaul. B.C. 201-191.♦ The Roman arms were carried beyond the
-Po in the time between the first and the second Punic war; after the
-second Punic war, Cisalpine Gaul was thoroughly conquered, and was
-secured by the foundation of many Roman and Latin colonies. ♦B.C. 43.♦
-The Roman and Latin franchises were gradually extended to most parts
-of the country, and at last Cisalpine Gaul was formally incorporated
-with Italy.
-
-♦Conquest of Liguria and Venetia.♦
-
-Closely connected with the conquest of Cisalpine Gaul was the conquest
-of the other non-Italian lands within the boundaries of modern Italy.
-These were _Liguria_ to the south-east of Cisalpine Gaul and _Venetia_
-to the north-west. Both these lands held out longer than Cisalpine
-Gaul; but by the time of Augustus they were all, together with the
-peninsula of _Istria_, counted as part of Italy. ♦Foundation of
-Aquileia, B.C. 183.♦ The dominion of Rome in this region was secured at
-an early stage of the conquest by the foundation of the great colony
-of _Aquileia_. We thus see that, not only Venice, but Milan, Pavia,
-Verona, Ravenna, and Genoa, cities which played so great a part in
-the after history of Italy, arose in lands which were not originally
-Italian. But we also see that Italy, with the boundaries given to it by
-Augustus, took in a somewhat larger territory to the north-east than
-the kingdom of Italy does now.
-
-♦Spain.♦
-
-The lands within the Alps may be fairly said to have been conquered by
-Rome in self-defence, and we cannot help looking on the three great
-islands as natural parts of an Italian dominion. The conquests of the
-Romans in lands altogether beyond their own borders may be said to
-have begun in Western Europe with the conquest of _Spain_, which began
-before that of Transalpine Gaul. ♦Connexion of Spain and Gaul.♦ Spain
-and Gaul, using the names in the geographical sense, have much which
-binds them together. ♦Iberians in Spain.♦ On the borders of the two
-countries traces are still left of the old non-Aryan inhabitants who
-still speak the Basque language. These represent the old _Iberian_
-inhabitants of Spain and Gaul, who, when our history begins, stretched
-as far into Gaul as the Garonne. ♦Celts.♦ But the _Celts_, the first
-wave of the Aryan migration in Europe, had pressed into both Gaul and
-Spain; in Gaul they had, when trustworthy history begins, already
-occupied by far the greater part of the country. ♦Greek and♦ The
-Mediterranean coasts of Gaul and Spain were also connected together
-by the sprinkling of Greek colonies along those shores, of which
-_Massalia_ was the head. And, beside the primitive non-Aryan element,
-there was an intrusive non-Aryan element also. ♦Phœnician settlements.♦
-In southern Spain several Phœnician settlements had been made, the
-chief of which was _Gades_ or _Cadiz_, beyond the straits, the one
-great Phœnician city on the Ocean. And between the first and second
-Punic wars Carthage obtained a large Spanish dominion, of which _New
-Carthage_ or _Carthagena_ was the capital.
-
-It was the presence of these last settlements which first brought Spain
-under the Roman dominion. ♦First Roman province in Spain.♦ _Saguntum_
-was an ally of Rome, and its taking by Hannibal was the beginning of
-the second Punic war. ♦B.C. 218-206.♦ The campaigns of the Scipios
-during that war led to the gradual conquest of the whole country. ♦B.C.
-49.♦ The Carthaginian possessions first became a Roman province, while
-Gades became a favoured ally of Rome, and at last was admitted to the
-full Roman franchise. ♦B.C. 133.♦ Meanwhile, the gradual conquest of
-the rest of the country went on, till, after the taking of _Numantia_,
-all Spain, except the remote tribes in the north-west, had become
-a Roman possession. ♦Final conquest. B.C. 19.♦ These tribes, the
-_Cantabrians_ and their neighbours, were not fully subdued till the
-time of Augustus. ♦Romanization of Spain.♦ But long before that time
-the Latin language and Roman manners had been fast spreading through
-the country, and in Augustus’ time southern Spain was altogether
-Romanized. It was only in a small district close to the Pyrenees that
-the ancient language held out, as it has done ever since.
-
-♦Transalpine Gaul.♦
-
-The conquest of Spain, owing to the connexion of the country with
-Carthage, thus began while a large part even of Cisalpine Gaul was
-still unsubdued. And the Roman arms were not carried into Gaul beyond
-the Alps till the conquest of Spain was pretty well assured. ♦B.C.
-122.♦ The foundation of the first Roman colony at _Aquæ Sextiæ_, the
-modern _Aix_, was only eleven years later than the fall of Numantia.
-The Romans stepped in as allies of the Greek city of Massalia, and, as
-usual, from helping their allies they took to conquering on their own
-account. ♦The Transalpine Province. B.C. 125-105.♦ A Roman province,
-including the colonies of _Narbonne_ and _Toulouse_, was thus formed
-in the south-eastern part of Transalpine Gaul. The advance of Rome
-in this direction seems to have been checked by the invasion of the
-Cimbri and Teutones, but through that long delay Roman influences were
-able to establish themselves more firmly. This part of Gaul was early
-and thoroughly Romanized, and part of it still keeps, in its name of
-_Provence_, the memory of its having been the first Roman province
-beyond the Alps. The rest of Gaul was left untouched till the great
-campaigns of Cæsar.
-
-♦Conquests of Cæsar. B.C. 58-51.♦
-
-It is from Cæsar, ethnologer as well as conqueror, that we get our
-chief knowledge of the country as it was in his day. ♦Boundaries of
-Transalpine Gaul.♦ Transalpine Gaul, as a geographical division, has
-well-marked boundaries in the Mediterranean, the Alps, the Rhine,
-the Ocean, and the Pyrenees. But this geographical division has
-never answered to any divisions of blood and language. ♦Its three
-divisions, and their inhabitants, Iberian, Celtic, and German.♦ Gaul
-in Cæsar’s day, that is Gaul beyond the Roman province, formed three
-divisions—_Aquitaine_ to the south-west, _Celtic Gaul_ in the middle,
-and _Belgic Gaul_ to the north-east. Aquitaine, stretching to the
-Garonne—the name was under Augustus extended to the Loire—was Iberian,
-akin to the people on the other side of the Pyrenees: a trace of its
-old speech remains in the small Basque district north of the Pyrenees.
-Celtic Gaul, from the Loire to the Seine and Marne, was the most truly
-Celtic land, and it was in this part of Gaul that the modern French
-nation took its rise. In the third division, Belgic Gaul, the tribes
-to the east, nearer to the Rhine, were some of them purely German, and
-others had been to a great extent brought under German influences or
-mixed with German elements. There was, in fact, no unity in Gaul beyond
-that which the Romans brought with them. ♦Romanization of Gaul.♦ In
-seven years Cæsar subdued the whole land, and the work of assimilation
-began. The Roman language gradually displaced all the native languages,
-except where Basque and Breton survive in two corners; but in a large
-part of Belgic Gaul the events of later times brought the German tongue
-back again. ♦Permanence of the ancient geography.♦ There is no Roman
-province in which, among all changes, the ancient geography has had
-so much effect upon that of all later times. In southern Gaul most of
-the cities still keep their old names with very little change. But in
-northern Gaul the cities have mostly taken the names of the tribes
-of which they were the heads. Thus _Tolosa_ is still _Toulouse_; but
-_Lutetia Parisiorum_ has become _Paris_.
-
-♦Roman Africa.♦
-
-The lands which we have thus gone through, Cisalpine Gaul with Liguria
-and Venetia, Spain, and Transalpine Gaul, form a marked division in
-historical geography. They are those parts of Western Europe which Rome
-conquered during the time of her Commonwealth, and they are those parts
-which have mainly kept their Roman speech to this day. But these did
-not make up the whole of the lands where Rome planted her Latin speech,
-at least for a while. The conquest of Britain belongs to the days of
-the Empire; but Rome, during the Commonwealth, made another conquest,
-which, though not in Europe, may be counted as belonging to the
-Western or Latin-speaking half of her dominion. This is the conquest
-of that part of _Africa_ which Rome won as the result of her wars with
-Carthage. ♦Province of Africa, B.C. 146;♦ The only African possession
-won by Rome during the days of the Commonwealth was _Africa_ in the
-strictest sense, the immediate dominion of Carthage. This became a
-province when the Punic wars were ended by the destruction of Carthage.
-♦of New Africa, B.C. 49.♦ The neighbouring state of _Numidia_, after
-passing, like Carthage itself, through the intermediate state of a
-dependency, was made a province by Cæsar, being called _New Africa_,
-the former African province becoming the _Old_. ♦Restoration and
-greatness of Carthage.♦ Cæsar also restored the city of Carthage as
-a Roman colony, and it became the chief of the Latin-speaking cities
-of the Empire, second only to Rome herself. But in Africa, just as
-in Britain, the land never became thoroughly Romanized like Gaul and
-Spain. The Roman tongue and laws therefore died out in both lands at
-the first touch of an invader, the English in one case and the Saracens
-in the other. The strip of fertile land between the sea on one side
-and the mountains and the Great Desert on the other received, first
-Phœnician and then Roman civilization. But neither of them could
-really take root there in the way that the Roman civilization took root
-in Gaul and Spain.
-
-
-§ 4. _The Eastern Provinces._
-
-♦Contrast between the Eastern and Western provinces.♦
-
-The Hadriatic Sea may be roughly taken as the boundary between the
-Eastern and Western parts of the Roman dominion. In the West, the
-Romans carried with them not only their arms, but their tongue, their
-laws, and their manners. They were not only conquerors but civilizers.
-The native Iberians and Celts adopted Roman fashions, and the isolated
-Greek and Phœnician cities, like Massalia and Gades, gradually became
-Roman also. East of the Hadriatic the state of things was quite
-different. Here the language and civilization of Greece had, through
-the conquests of the Macedonian kings, become everywhere predominant.
-♦Greek civilization in the East.♦ Greek was everywhere the polite and
-literary language, and a certain varnish of Greek manners had been
-everywhere spread. In some parts indeed it was the merest varnish;
-still it was everywhere strong enough to withstand the influence
-of Latin. Sicily and Southern Italy are the only lands which have
-altogether thrown away the Greek tongue, and have taken to Latin or any
-of the languages formed out of Latin. No part of the eastern half of
-the Roman dominion ever became Roman in the same way as Gaul and Spain.
-
-The whole of the lands east of the Hadriatic may thus, as opposed to
-the Latin-speaking lands of the west, be called Greek-speaking lands.
-♦Distinctions among the Eastern provinces.♦ But there are some wide
-distinctions to be drawn among them. First, there was old Greece itself
-and the Greek colonies, and lands like _Epeiros_, which had become
-thoroughly Greek. Secondly, there were the kingdoms, like _Macedonia_
-in Europe and _Pergamos_ in Asia, which had adopted the Greek speech
-and manners, but which did not, like Epeiros, become Greek in any
-political sense. Thirdly, there were a number of native states,
-_Bithynia_ and others, whose kings also tried to imitate Greek ways,
-but naturally could not do so as thoroughly as the kings of Macedonia
-and Pergamos. ♦Lands beyond Tauros.♦ Fourthly, beyond Mount Tauros lay
-the kingdoms of _Syria_ and _Egypt_, which were ruled by Macedonian
-kings, which contained great Greek or Macedonian cities like _Antioch_
-and _Alexandria_, but where there were native languages, and an old
-native civilization, which neither Greek nor Roman influences could
-ever root out. We shall see as we go on that Tauros makes a great
-historical boundary. The lands on this side of it really came, though
-very gradually, under the dominion of the Greek speech and the Roman
-law. Beyond Mount Tauros both the Greek and the Roman element lay
-merely on the surface, and therefore those lands, like Africa, easily
-fell away when they were attacked by the Saracens.[6] We must now go
-through such of the lands east of the Hadriatic as were formed into
-Roman provinces during the time of the Roman Commonwealth.
-
-♦The Illyrian Provinces.♦
-
-But again, between the Latin and the Greek parts of the Roman dominion
-there was a border land, namely, the lands held by the great _Illyrian_
-race. The southern parts of Illyria came within the reach of Greek
-influences, and it was through the affairs of Illyria that Rome was
-first led to meddle in the affairs of Greece. ♦The kingdom of Skodra.♦
-The use of the name _Illyria_ is at all times very vague; as a more
-definite meaning as the name of a kingdom whose capital was _Skodra_,
-and which, in the second half of the third century, was a dangerous
-neighbour to the Greek cities and islands on that coast. ♦B.C. 168.♦
-This kingdom was involved in the third Macedonian war, and came to an
-end at the same time. As usual, it is not easy to distinguish how much,
-if any, of the country actually became a Roman province, and how much
-was left for a while in the intermediate state of dependent alliance.
-But, for all practical purposes, the Illyrian kingdom of Skodra formed
-from this time a part of the Roman dominion. With the fall of Skodra,
-the parts of Illyria which lay further to the north, beyond the bounds
-of the Greek world, first came into notice. ♦Dalmatian Wars.♦ The
-Greek colonies in Dalmatia had played their part in the first Illyrian
-war; but the land itself, which was to become an outlying fringe of
-Italy lying east of the Hadriatic, is now first heard of as a distinct
-country formed by a separation from the kingdom of Skodra. ♦B.C. 156. |
-B.C. 34.♦ The first Dalmatian war soon followed; but it was not till
-after several wars that Dalmatia became a province, and even after that
-time there were several revolts. ♦Roman colonies in Dalmatia.♦ Before
-long, Dalmatia was settled with several Roman colonies, as _Jadera_ or
-_Zara_, and, above all, _Salona_, which became one of the chief cities
-of the Roman dominion. The neighbouring lands of _Liburnia_, _Istria_,
-and the land of the _Iapodes_, were gradually reduced during the same
-period. ♦Istria incorporated with Italy.♦ Istria, like the neighbouring
-land of Venetia, was actually incorporated with Italy, and _Pola_,
-under the name of _Pietas Julia_, became a Roman colony.
-
-♦The outlying Greek lands.♦
-
-We have already traced the process by which old Greece and the
-neighbouring lands of Macedonia and Epeiros gradually sank, first
-practically, and then formally, into parts of the Roman dominion. It
-would be hard to say at what particular moment many of the Greek cities
-and islands sank from the relation of obedient allies into that of
-acknowledged subjects. ♦Their late formal annexation.♦ We have seen
-that some of them, as Rhodes and Byzantion, were not formally annexed
-till the reign of Vespasian. The Greek cities on the Euxine do not seem
-to have been formally annexed at all till a late period of the Eastern
-Empire. Other outlying Greek lands and cities became so mixed up with
-the history of some of the Asiatic kingdoms that they will come in
-for a mention along with them. ♦Conquest of Crete, B.C. 67,♦ _Crete_
-kept its independence to become a nest of pirates, and to be specially
-conquered. It then formed one province with the then recent conquest of
-_Kyrênê_, the one great Greek settlement in Africa, which had become an
-appanage of the Macedonian kings of Egypt. The same had been the fate
-of _Cyprus_, an island which had always been partly Greek, and which
-had been further Hellenized under its Macedonian kings. ♦of Cyprus,
-B.C. 58.♦ Cyprus too became a province. Thus, before Rome lost her own
-freedom, she had become the formal or practical mistress of all the
-earlier abodes of freedom. Men could not yet foresee that a time would
-come when _Greek_ and _Roman_ should be words having the same meaning,
-and when the place and name of Rome herself should be transferred to
-one of the Greek cities which Vespasian formally reduced from alliance
-to bondage.
-
-♦The Asiatic Provinces.♦
-
-In Roman history one war and one conquest always led to another, and,
-as the affairs of Illyria had led to Roman interference in Greece,
-so the affairs of Greece led to Roman interference in _Asia_. ♦B.C.
-191-188.♦ The first war which Rome waged with _Antiochos_ of Syria led
-to no immediate increase of the Roman territory, but all the Seleukid
-possessions on this side Tauros were divided among the allies of Rome.
-♦Province of Asia. B.C. 133-129.♦ This, as usual, was the first step
-towards the conquest of Asia, and it is quite according to the usual
-course of things that the first Roman province beyond the Ægæan, the
-province of _Asia_, was formed of the dominions of Rome’s first and
-most useful allies, the kings of Pergamos. The mission of Alexander
-and his successors, as the representatives of Western civilization
-against the East, now passed into the hands of Rome. Step by step, the
-other lands west of Tauros came under the formal or practical dominion
-of Rome. ♦Bithynia. B.C. 74.♦ _Bithynia_ was the first to be annexed,
-and this acquisition was one of the causes which led to the second war
-between Rome and the famous _Mithridates_ of _Pontos_. ♦Overthrow of
-Mithridates. B.C. 64.♦ His final overthrow brought a number of other
-lands under Roman dominion or influence. The Greek cities of _Sinôpê_
-and _Hêrakleia_ obtained a nominal freedom, and vassal kings went on
-reigning in part of Pontos itself, and in the distant Greek kingdom
-of _Bosporos_. Rome was now mistress of Asia Minor. ♦Lykia.♦ The land
-was divided among her provinces and her vassal kings, save that the
-wise federal commonwealth of _Lykia_ still kept the highest amount of
-independence which was consistent with the practical supremacy of Rome.
-
-The Mithridatic war, which made Rome mistress of Asia in the narrower
-sense, at once involved her in the affairs of the further East.
-Tigranes of _Armenia_ had been the chief ally of Mithridates; but,
-though his power was utterly humbled, no Armenian province was added
-to the Roman dominion for a long time to come. ♦Province of Syria.
-B.C. 64.♦ But the remnant of the Seleukid monarchy became the Roman
-province of _Syria_. As usual, several cities and principalities were
-allowed to remain in various relations of alliance and dependence on
-the ruling commonwealth. ♦Palestine.♦ Among these we find _Judæa_ and
-the rest of _Palestine_, sometimes under a Roman procurator, sometimes
-united under a single vassal king, sometimes parted out among various
-kings and tetrarchs, as suited the momentary caprice or policy of Rome.
-♦Comparison with British India.♦ In all these various relations between
-the native states and the ruling city we have a lively foreshadowing of
-the relations between England and the subject and dependent princes of
-India. ♦Rome the champion of the West.♦ The conquests of Rome in these
-regions made her more distinctly than ever the sole representative of
-the West against the East, and these conquests presently brought her
-into collision with the one power in the known world which could at all
-meet her on equal terms. She had stepped into the place of Alexander
-and Seleukos so far as that all those parts of Alexander’s Asiatic
-conquests which had received even a varnish of Hellenic culture had
-become parts of her dominion. ♦Her rivalry with Parthia.♦ The further
-East beyond the Euphrates was again under the command of a great
-barbarian power, that of _Parthia_, which had stepped into the place
-of Persia, as Rome had stepped into the place of Greece and Macedonia.
-Rome had now again a rival, in a sense from which she had not had a
-rival since the overthrow of Carthage and Macedonia.
-
-One only of the Macedonian kingdoms now remained to be gathered in.
-♦Conquest of Egypt. B.C. 31.♦ The annexation of _Egypt_, an annexation
-made famous by the names of Kleopatra, Antonius, the elder and the
-younger Cæsar, completed the work. Rome was now fully mistress of her
-own civilized world. Her dominion took in all the lands round the
-great inland sea. If, here and there, her formal dominion was broken
-by a city or principality whose nominal relation was that of alliance,
-the distinction concerned only the local affairs of that city or
-principality. ♦_Pax Romana._♦ Within the whole historic world of the
-three ancient continents, the Roman Peace had begun. Rome had still to
-wage wars, and even to annex provinces; but those wars and annexations
-were now done rather to round off and to strengthen the territory which
-had been already gained, than in the strictest sense to extend it.
-
-
-§ 5. _Conquests under the Empire._
-
-At the same moment when the Roman commonwealth was practically changed
-into a monarchy, the Roman dominion was thus brought, not indeed to its
-greatest extent, but to an extent of which its further extension was
-only a natural completion. ♦Conquests under Augustus and Tiberius.♦
-There seems a certain inconsistency when we find Augustus laying
-down a rule against the enlargement of the Empire, while the Empire
-was, during his reign and that of his successor, extended in every
-direction. But the conquests of this time were mainly conquests for
-the purpose of strengthening the frontier; the occasional changes of
-this and that city or district from the dependent to the provincial
-relation, or sometimes from the provincial to the dependent, are now
-hardly worth mentioning. ♦Incorporation of the dependent kingdoms.♦
-Between Augustus and Nero, or, at all events, between Augustus
-and Vespasian, all the dependent states in Asia and Africa, such
-as _Mauritania_, _Kappadokia_, _Lykia_, and others, were finally
-incorporated with the Empire to which they had long been practically
-subject. These annexations can hardly be called conquests. And it was
-merely finishing a work which had been begun two hundred years before,
-when the small corner of Spain which still kept its independence was
-brought under the Roman power. ♦Strengthening of the frontier.♦ The
-real conquests of this time consisted in the strengthening of the
-European frontier. No frontier nearer than the Rhine and the Danube
-could be looked on as safe. This lesson was easily learned; but it
-had also to be accompanied by another lesson which taught that the
-Rhine and the Danube, and no more distant points, were to be the real
-frontiers of Rome.
-
-This brings us both to the lands which were then our own and to the
-lands which became our own in after times. During the reign of Augustus
-two conquests which most nearly concern our own history were planned,
-and one of them was attempted. The annexation of the land which was to
-become England was talked of; the annexation of the land which then
-was England, along with the rest of the German lands, was seriously
-attempted. But the conquest of Britain was put off from the days of
-Augustus to the days of Claudius. ♦Attempted conquest of Germany. B.C.
-11-A.D. 9.♦ The attempt at the conquest of Germany, which was deemed to
-have been already carried out, was shivered when Arminius overthrew the
-legions of Varus. ♦A.D. 19.♦ The expeditions of Drusus and Germanicus
-into Northern Germany must have brought the Roman armies into contact
-with our own forefathers, for the first time, and, for several ages,
-for the last time. But from this time the relations between Rome
-and southern Germany begin, and constantly increase in importance.
-The two great rivers were fixed as a real frontier. ♦Conquests on
-the Danube.♦ The lands between the Alps and the Danube, _Rætia_,
-_Vindelicia_, _Noricum_, _Pannonia_, with _Mœsia_ on the lower Danube,
-were all added to the Empire during the reign of Augustus. These were
-strictly defensive annexations, annexations made in order to remove the
-dangerous frontier further from Italy. Beyond the Rhine and the Danube
-the Roman possessions were mere outposts held for the defence of the
-land between the two great streams.
-
-♦Attempt on Arabia. B.C. 24.♦
-
-Meanwhile, while the attempt of the conquest of Germany came to so
-little, an attempt at conquest at the other end of the world, in the
-_Arabian_ peninsula, came to even less. ♦Thrace.♦ It marks the policy
-of Rome and the gradual nature of her advance that, while these more
-distant conquests were made or attempted, _Thrace_ still retained her
-dependent princes, the only land of any extent within the European
-dominions of Rome which did so. But Thrace, surrounded by Roman
-provinces, was in no way dangerous; it might remain a dependency while
-more distant lands were incorporated. It was not till uniformity was
-more sought after, till, under Vespasian, the nominal freedom of so
-many cities and principalities came to an end, that Thrace became a
-province. ♦Annexation of Byzantion.♦ It was then that, among her latest
-formal acquisitions in Europe, Rome annexed the city which was, in the
-course of ages, to take her own place and name.
-
-♦Conquest of Britain.♦
-
-Thus, in the days between Augustus and Trajan, the conquests which
-Rome actually made were mainly of a defensive and strengthening
-character. To this rule there is one and only one exception of any
-importance. This is the annexation to the Roman world of the land which
-was looked on as another world, the conquest of the greater part of the
-Isle of _Britain_. But Britain, though it did not come under the same
-law as the defensive annexations of Rætia and Pannonia, was naturally
-suggested by the annexation of Gaul and by the visits of the first
-Cæsar to the island. ♦Claudius. B.C. 43.♦ No actual conquest however
-took place till the reign of Claudius. ♦Agricola. B.C. 84.♦ Forty years
-later the Roman conquests in Britain were pushed by _Agricola_ as far
-as the isthmus between the friths of Forth and Clyde, the boundary
-marked by the later rampart of _Antoninus_. But the lasting boundary of
-the Roman dominion in Britain cannot be looked on as reaching beyond
-the line of the southern wall of _Hadrian_, _Severus_, and _Stilicho_,
-between the Solway and the mouth of the Tyne. The northern part of
-Britain thus remained unconquered, and the conquest of Ireland was not
-even attempted. For us the conquest of the land which afterwards became
-our own has an interest above all the other conquests of Rome. But it
-is a purely geographical interest. The British victories of Cæsar and
-Agricola were won, not over our own forefathers, but over those Celtic
-Britons whom our forefathers more thoroughly swept away. The history of
-our own nation is still for some ages to be looked for by the banks of
-the Elbe and the Weser, not by those of the Severn and the Thames.
-
-♦The Eastern conquests of Trajan.♦
-
-Britain was the last to be won of the Western provinces of Rome, and
-the first to be lost. Still it was, for more than three hundred years,
-thoroughly incorporated with the Empire, and its loss did not happen
-till that general break-up of the Empire of which its loss was the
-first stage. But between the conquest of Britain and its loss there
-was a short time in which Rome again extended her dominion in the old
-fashion, both in Europe and Asia. ♦Conquests of Trajan. A.D. 98-117.♦
-This was during the reign of Trajan, when the Roman borders were again
-widely extended in both Europe and Asia. Under him the Danube ceased
-to be a boundary stream in one continent and the Euphrates in the
-other. ♦His Asiatic and European conquests.♦ But a marked distinction
-must be drawn between his Asiatic and his European warfare. Trajan’s
-Asiatic conquests were strictly momentary; they were at once given up
-by his successor; and they will be better dealt with when we speak in
-another chapter of the long strife between Rome and her Eastern rival,
-first Parthian and then Persian. ♦Conquest of Arabia Petræa. A.D. 106.♦
-The only lasting Asiatic conquest of Trajan’s reign was not made by
-Trajan himself, namely the small Roman province in Northern _Arabia_.
-
-The European conquests of Trajan stand on another ground. If not
-strictly defensive, like those of Augustus, they might easily seem to
-be so. ♦Dacia.♦ The _Dacians_, to the north of the lower Danube, were
-really threatening to the Roman power in those regions, and they had
-dealt Rome more than one severe blow in the days of Domitian. ♦A.D.
-106.♦ Trajan now formed the lands between the Thiess and the Danube,
-the Dniester and the Carpathian Mountains, into the Roman province of
-_Dacia_. ♦A.D. 270.♦ The last province to be won was the first to be
-given up; for Aurelian withdrew from it, and transferred its name to
-the Mœsian land immediately south of the Danube. But if Dacia was in
-this way one of the most short lived of Roman conquests, it was in
-another way one of the most lasting. ♦Later history of Dacia.♦ Cut off,
-as it has been for so many ages, from all Roman influences, forming,
-as it has done, one of the great highways of barbarian migration, a
-large part of Dacia, namely the modern Rouman principality, still keeps
-its Roman language no less than Spain and Gaul. In one way the land is
-to this day more Roman than Spain or Gaul, as its people still call
-themselves by the Roman name. Dacia, in fact, though geographically
-belonging to the Eastern half of the Empire, stood in the same position
-as the Western provinces. Greek influences had not reached so far
-north, nor was there in Dacia any old-standing native civilization,
-such as there was in Syria and Egypt. There was therefore nothing that
-was at all able to hold up against Roman influences. The land was
-speedily and thoroughly Romanized, and it remains Roman in speech and
-name sixteen hundred years after the withdrawal of the Roman power.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Summary.♦
-
-The Roman Empire was thus gradually formed by bringing, first Italy
-and then the whole of the Mediterranean lands, under the dominion of
-the one Roman city. In every part of that dominion the process of
-conquest was gradual. The lands which became Roman provinces passed
-through various stages of alliance and dependence before they were
-fully incorporated. But, in the end, all the civilized world of those
-times became Roman. Speaking roughly, three great rivers, the Rhine,
-Danube, and Euphrates, formed the European and Asiatic boundaries of
-the Empire. In Africa the Roman dominion consisted only of the strip
-of fertile land between the Mediterranean and the mountains and
-deserts. Britain and Dacia, the only two great provinces lying beyond
-this range, were the last conquered and the first given up. In Western
-Europe and in Africa Rome carried her language and her civilization
-with her, and in those lands the Roman speech still remains, except
-where it has been swept away by Teutonic and Saracen conquests. In the
-lands from the Hadriatic to Mount Tauros, which had been brought more
-or less under Greek influences, the Greek speech and civilization stood
-its ground, and in those lands Greek still survives wherever it has not
-been swept away by Slavonic and Turkish conquests. In the further east,
-in Syria and Egypt, where there was an old native civilization, neither
-Greek nor Roman influences took real root. The differences between
-these three parts of the Roman Empire, the really Roman, the Greek, and
-the Oriental, will be clearly seen as we go on.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[4] We shall come as we go on to two uses of the name in which Italy,
-oddly enough, meant only the northern part of the land commonly so
-called. But in both these cases the name had a purely political and
-technical meaning, and it never came into common use in this sense.
-
-[5] Some may think that the Cisalpine Gauls ought to be excepted, as
-the common Roman story represents them as having crossed the Alps from
-Transalpine Gaul at a time which almost comes within the range of
-contemporary history. But this is a point about which there is no real
-certainty; and it seems quite as likely that the Gaulish settlements on
-the Italian side of the Alps were as old as those on the other side.
-
-[6] In a more minute study of the history it will be found that Latin
-Africa held out against the Saracens very much longer than Syria
-and Egypt. But for our purpose the two may be classed together in
-opposition to those lands in Europe and Asia which always remained
-Roman or Greek.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE DISMEMBERMENT OF THE EMPIRE.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Later Geography of the Empire._
-
-The Roman dominion, as we have seen, grew up by the successive
-annexation of endless kingdoms, districts, and cities, each of which,
-after its annexation, still retained, whether as an allied province
-or a subject state, much of the separate being which it had while it
-was independent. The allies and subjects of Rome remained in a variety
-of different relations to the ruling city, and the old names and the
-old geographical boundaries were largely preserved. ♦Wiping out of old
-divisions under the Empire.♦ But, as the old ideas of the commonwealth
-gradually died out, and as the power of the Emperors gradually grew
-into an avowed monarchy, the political change naturally led to a
-geographical change. The Roman dominion ceased to be a collection
-of allied and subject states under a single ruling city; it changed
-into a single Empire, all whose parts, all whose inhabitants, were
-equally subject to its Imperial head. The old distinctions of Latins,
-Italians, and provincials died out when all free inhabitants of the
-Empire became alike Romans. Italy had no longer any privilege; it
-was simply part of the Empire, like any other part. The geographical
-divisions which had been, first independent, then dependent states,
-sank into purely administrative divisions, which might be mapped out
-afresh at any time when it was found convenient to do so. Italy itself,
-in the extended sense which the word Italy had then come to bear, was
-mapped out afresh into _regions_ as early as the time of Augustus. ♦New
-division of Italy under Augustus.♦ These divisions, eleven in number,
-mark an epoch in the process by which the detached elements out of
-which the Roman Empire had grown were fused together into one whole. As
-long as Italy was a collection of separate commonwealths, standing in
-various relations to the ruling city, there could not be any systematic
-division of the country for administrative purposes. Now that the whole
-of Italy stood on one level of citizenship or of subjection, the land
-might be mapped out in whatever way was most convenient. ♦The eleven
-Regions.♦ But the eleven regions of Augustus did not work any violent
-change. Old names and old boundaries largely remained. The famous names
-of _Etruria_, _Latium_, _Samnium_, _Umbria_, _Picenum_, and _Lucania_
-still lived on, though not always with their ancient boundaries. And,
-though all the land as far as the Alps was now Italy, two of the
-divisions of Italy kept their ancient names of _Gaul on this side the
-Po_ and _Gaul beyond the Po_. _Liguria_ and _Venetia_, now Italian
-lands, make up the remainder of Northern Italy.
-
-♦Divisions under Constantine.♦
-
-Italy had thus been mapped out afresh; what was done with Italy in
-the time of Augustus was done with the whole Empire in the time of
-Constantine. What Italy was in the earlier time the whole Empire was
-in the later; the old distinctions had been wiped out, and the whole
-of the Roman world stood ready to be parted out into fresh divisions.
-Under Diocletian, the Empire was divided into four parts, forming the
-realms of the four Imperial colleagues of his system, the two Augusti
-and their subordinate Cæsars. ♦Division of the Empire under Diocletian.
-A.D. 292.♦ Diocletian’s system of government involved a practical
-degradation of Rome from the headship of the Empire. Augusti and Cæsars
-now dwelled at points where their presence was more needed to ward off
-Persian and German attacks from the frontiers; Rome was forsaken for
-Nikomêdeia and Milan, for Antioch, York, and Trier. ♦Reunion under
-Constantine. A.D. 323. | Division between the sons of Theodosius. A.D.
-395.♦ The division between the four Imperial colleagues lasted under
-another form after the Empire was re-united under Constantine, and it
-formed the groundwork of the more lasting division of the Empire into
-East and West, between the sons of Theodosius. The whole Empire was
-now mapped out according to a scheme in which ancient geographical
-names were largely preserved, but in which they were for the most
-part used in new or, at least, extended meanings. ♦The Four Prætorian
-Prefectures.♦ The Empire was divided into four great divisions called
-Prætorian _Prefectures_. These were divided into _Dioceses_—a name used
-in this nomenclature without regard to the ecclesiastical sense which
-was borrowed from it—and the dioceses again into _Provinces_. The four
-great prefectures of the _East_, _Illyricum_, _Italy_, and _Gaul_,
-answer nearly to the fourfold division under Diocletian; while we may
-say that, in the final division, Illyricum and the East formed the
-Eastern Empire, and Italy and Gaul formed the Western. But it is only
-roughly that either the prefectures or their smaller divisions answer
-to any of the great national or geographical landmarks of earlier times.
-
-♦Prefecture of the East.♦
-
-The Prefecture of the _East_ is that one among the four which least
-answers to anything in earlier geography, natural or historical. Its
-boundaries do not answer to those of any earlier dominion, nor yet to
-any great division of race or language. It stretched into all the three
-continents of the old world, and took in all those parts of the Empire
-which were never fully brought under either Greek or Roman influences.
-But it also took in large tracts which we have learned to look on as
-part of the Hellenic world—not only lands which had been, to a great
-extent, Hellenized in later times, but even some of the earliest Greek
-colonies. The four dioceses into which the Prefecture was divided
-formed far more natural divisions than the Prefecture itself.
-
-♦Dioceses of the East,♦
-
-Three of these were Asiatic. The first, specially called the _East_,
-took in all the possessions of Rome beyond Mount Tauros, together with
-Isauria, Kilikia, and the island of Cyprus. Its eastern boundaries
-naturally fluctuated according as Rome or Persia prevailed on the
-Euphrates and the Tigris, fluctuations of which we shall have again to
-speak more specially. ♦Egypt,♦ The diocese of _Egypt_, besides Egypt in
-the elder sense, took in, under the name of _Libya_, the old Greek land
-of the Kyrenaic Pentapolis. ♦Asia.♦ The diocese of _Asia_, a reminder
-of the elder province of that name and of the kingdom of Pergamos out
-of which it grew, took in the Asiatic coasts of the Ægæan, together
-with Pamphylia, Lykia, and the Ægæan Islands. The diocese of _Pontos_,
-preserving the name of the kingdom of Mithridates, took in the lands on
-the Euxine, with the fluctuating Armenian possessions of Rome.
-
-♦Diocese of Thrace.♦
-
-Besides these Asiatic lands, the Eastern Prefecture contained
-one European diocese, that of _Thrace_, which took in the lands
-stretching from the Propontis to the Lower Danube. The names of two
-of its provinces are remarkable. Rome now boasts of a province of
-_Scythia_. But, among the varied uses of that name, it has now shrunk
-up to mean the land immediately south of the mouths of the Danube.
-♦Province of _Europa_.♦ The other name is _Europa_, a name which, as
-a Roman province, means the district immediately round the New Rome.
-Constantine had now fixed his capital on the site of the old Byzantion,
-the site from which the city on the Bosporos might seem to bear rule
-over two worlds. With whatever motive, the name of Europe was specially
-given to that corner of the Western continent where it comes nearest
-to the Eastern. Nor was the name ill-chosen for the district round the
-city which was so long to be the bulwark of Europe against invading
-Asia. ♦Great cities of the Eastern Prefecture.♦ And, besides the New
-Rome, this Prefecture, as containing those parts of the Empire which
-had belonged to the great Macedonian kingdoms, contained an unusual
-proportion of the great cities of the world. Besides a crowd of less
-famous places, it took in the two great Eastern seats of Grecian
-culture, the most renowned Alexandria and the most renowned Antioch,
-themselves only the chief among many others cities bearing the same
-names. All these, it should be remarked, were comparatively recent
-creations, bearing the names of individual men. That cities thus
-artificially called into being should have kept the position which
-still belonged to the great Macedonian capitals is one of the most
-speaking signs of the effect which the dominion of Alexander and his
-successors had on the history of the world.
-
-♦Prefecture of Illyricum.♦
-
-The nomenclature of the second Prefecture marks how utterly Greece, as
-a country and nation, had died out of all reckoning. The Prefecture
-of the Eastern _Illyricum_ answered roughly to European Greece and
-its immediate neighbours. It took in the lands stretching from the
-Danube to the southern point of Peloponnêsos. Greece, as part of the
-Roman Empire, was included under the name of the barbarian land through
-which Rome was first brought into contact with Greek affairs. She was
-further included under the name of the half-barbarian neighbour who
-had become Greek through the process of conquering Greece. In the
-system of Prefectures, Greece formed part of Macedonia, and Macedonia
-formed part of Illyricum. So low had Greece, as a land, fallen at
-the very moment when her tongue was making the greatest of all its
-conquests, when a Greek city was raised to the rank of another Rome.
-♦Dioceses of Macedonia and Dacia.♦ The Illyrian Prefecture contained
-the two dioceses of _Macedonia_ and _Dacia_. This last name, it will
-be remembered, had, since the days of Aurelian, withdrawn to the
-south of the Danube. The Macedonian diocese contained six provinces,
-among which, besides the familiar and venerable names of Macedonia
-and Epeiros, we find the names, still more venerable and familiar, of
-_Thessaly_ and _Crete_. And one yet greater name lives on with them.
-_Hellas_ and _Græcia_ have alike vanished from the map; but the most
-abiding name in Grecian history, the theme of Homer and the theme of
-Polybios, has not perished. ♦Province of Achaia.♦ Among all changes,
-_Achaia_ is there still.
-
-♦Prefecture of Italy.♦
-
-In the new system Italy and Rome herself were in no way privileged over
-the rest of the Empire. The _Italian_ Prefecture took in Italy itself
-and the lands which might be looked on as necessary for the defence
-and maintenance of Italy. It took in the defensive conquests of the
-early Empire on the Upper Danube, and it took in the granary of Italy,
-Africa. Its three dioceses were _Italy_, _Illyricum_, and _Africa_.
-Here Illyricum strangely gave its name both to a distinct Prefecture
-and to one diocese of the Prefecture of Italy. ♦Dioceses of Italy,♦ The
-Italian diocese contained seventeen provinces. The Gaulish name has now
-wholly vanished from the lands south of the Alps. The lands between the
-older and the newer boundaries of Italy are now divided into _Liguria_
-and _Venetia_—the former name being used in a widely extended sense—and
-the new names of _Æmilia_ and _Flaminia_, provinces named after the
-great Roman roads, as the roads themselves were named after Roman
-magistrates. But the new Italy has spread beyond the Alps, and reaches
-to the Danube. Two Rætian provinces form part of it. Three other
-provinces are formed by the three great islands, Sicily, Sardinia, and
-Corsica. ♦Illyricum,♦ The diocese of the _Western Illyricum_ took in
-_Pannonia_, _Dalmatia_, and _Noricum_. ♦Africa.♦ The third diocese,
-that of _Africa_, took in the old _Africa_, _Numidia_, and western
-_Mauritania_. ♦Greatness of Carthage.♦ The union of these lands with
-Italy may seem less strange when we remember that the colony of the
-first Cæsar, the restored Carthage, was the greatest of Latin-speaking
-cities after Rome herself.
-
-♦Prefecture of Gaul.♦
-
-The fourth Prefecture took in the Roman dominions in Western Europe,
-the great Latin-speaking provinces beyond the Alps. ♦Diocese of
-Spain; its African territory.♦ Among the seven provinces of _Spain_
-are reckoned, not only the Balearic islands, a natural appendage to
-the Spanish peninsula, but a small part of the African continent, the
-province of _Tingitana_, stretching from the now Italian Africa to the
-Ocean. This was according to the general law by which, in almost all
-periods of history, either the masters of Spain have borne rule in
-Africa or the masters of Africa have borne rule in Spain. ♦Diocese of
-Gaul;♦ The diocese of _Gaul_, with its seventeen provinces, keeps, at
-least in name, the boundaries of the old Transalpine land. It still
-numbers the two Germanies west of the Rhine among its provinces. ♦of
-Britain.♦ The five provinces of the diocese of _Britain_ took in, at
-the moment when the Empire was beginning to fall asunder, a greater
-territory than Rome had held in the island in the days of her greatest
-power. ♦Province of Valentia. A.D. 367.♦ The exploits of the elder
-Theodosius, who drove back the Pict by land and the Saxon by sea, for
-a moment added to the Empire a province beyond the wall of Antoninus,
-which, in honour of the reigning Emperors Valentinian and Valens,
-received the name of _Valentia_.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Division of the Empire._
-
-♦Change in the position of Rome.♦
-
-The mapping out of the Empire into Prefectures, and its division
-between two or more Imperial colleagues, led naturally to its more
-lasting division into what were practically two Empires. The old
-state of things had altogether passed away. Rome was no longer the
-city ruling over subject states. From the Ocean to the Euphrates all
-was alike, if not Rome, at least _Romania_; all its inhabitants were
-equally Romans. But to be a Roman now meant, no longer to be a citizen
-of a commonwealth, but to be the subject of an Emperor. The unity
-of the Empire was not broken by the division of its administration
-between several Imperial colleagues; but Rome ceased to be the only
-Imperial dwelling-place, and, from the latter years of the third
-century, it ceased to be an Imperial dwelling-place at all. As long
-as Rome held her old place, no lasting division, nothing more than an
-administrative partition among colleagues, could be thought of. There
-could be no division to mark on the map. But, when the new system
-had fully taken root at the end of the fourth century, we come to a
-division which was comparatively lasting, one which fills an important
-place in history, and which is capable of being marked on the map.
-♦Division of the Empire between the sons of Theodosius. | A.D. 395.♦
-On the death of Theodosius the Great, the Empire was divided between
-his two sons, Arcadius taking the Eastern provinces, answering nearly
-to the Prefectures of the East and of Illyricum, while Honorius took
-the Western provinces, the Prefectures of Italy and Gaul. Through the
-greater part of the fifth century, the successors of Arcadius and of
-Honorius formed two distinct lines of Emperors, of whom the Eastern
-reigned at Constantinople, the Western most commonly at Ravenna. But as
-the dominions of each prince were alike Roman, the Eastern and Western
-Emperors were still looked on in theory as Imperial colleagues charged
-with the administration of a common Roman dominion. ♦Practically two
-Empires.♦ Practically however the dominions of the two Emperors may
-be looked on as two distinct Empires, the Eastern having its seat at
-the New Rome or Constantinople, while the Western had its seat more
-commonly at Ravenna than at the Old Rome.
-
-This division of the Empire is the great political feature of the
-fifth century; but the fate of the two Empires was widely different.
-♦Enemies of Rome.♦ From the very beginning of the Empire, Rome had had
-to struggle with two chief enemies, in the East and in the West, in
-Europe and in Asia, the nature of whose warfare was widely different.
-♦Rivalry with Parthia and Persia.♦ In the East she had, first the
-Parthian and then the regenerate Persian, as strictly a rival power on
-equal terms. This rivalry went on from the moment when Rome stepped
-into the place of the Seleukids till the time when Rome was cut short,
-and Persia overthrown, by the Saracenic invasions. But, except during
-the momentary conquests of Trajan and during the equally momentary
-alternate conquests of Rome and Persia in the seventh century, the
-whole strife was a mere border warfare which did not threaten the
-serious dismemberment of either power. This and that fortress was taken
-and retaken; this and that province was ceded and ceded back again;
-but except under Trajan and again under Chosroes and Heraclius, the
-existence and dominion of neither power was ever seriously threatened.
-♦Rivalry with Persia passes on to the Eastern Empire.♦ The Eastern
-Empire naturally inherited this part of the calling of the undivided
-Empire, the long strife with Persia.
-
-At the other end of the Empire, the enemy was of quite another kind.
-♦Teutonic incursions in the Western Empire.♦ The danger there was
-through the incursions of the various Teutonic nations. There was no
-one Teutonic power which could be a rival to Rome in the same sense
-in which Persia was in the East; but a crowd of independent Teutonic
-tribes were pressing into the Empire from all quarters, and were
-striving to make settlements within its borders. The task of resisting
-these incursions fell of course to the Western Empire. ♦No Teutonic
-settlements in the Eastern Empire.♦ The Eastern Empire indeed was often
-traversed by wandering Teutonic nations; but no permanent settlements
-were made within its borders, no dismemberment of its provinces capable
-of being marked on the map was made till a much later time. But the
-Western Empire was altogether dismembered and broken in pieces by
-the settlement of the Teutonic nations within it. The geographical
-aspects of the two Empires during the fifth century are thus strikingly
-unlike one another; but each continues one side of the history of
-the undivided Empire. It will therefore be well to trace those two
-characteristic aspects of the two Empires separately. We will first
-speak of the Teutonic incursions, through which in the end the Western
-Empire was split up and the states of modern Europe were founded. We
-will then trace the geographical aspect of the long rivalry between
-Rome and Persia in the East.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Teutonic Settlements within the Empire._
-
-Our subject is historical geography, and neither ethnology nor
-political history, except so far as either national migrations or
-political changes produce a directly geographical effect. ♦The
-Wandering of the Nations.♦ The great movement called the Wandering of
-the Nations, and its results in the settlement of various Teutonic
-nations within the bounds of the Roman Empire, concern us now only so
-far as they wrought a visible change on the map. The exact relations
-of the different tribes to one another, the exact course of the
-migrations which led to the final settlement of each, belong rather
-to another branch of inquiry. But there are certain marked stages in
-the relations of the Empire to the nations beyond its borders, certain
-marked stages in the growth and mutual relations of those nations,
-which must be borne in mind in order to explain their settlements
-within the Empire. ♦Changes in the nomenclature of the Teutonic
-nations.♦ It will be at once seen that the geography and nomenclature
-of the German nations in the third century is for the most part quite
-different from their geography and nomenclature as we find it in Cæsar
-and Tacitus. New names have come to the front, names all of which
-play a part in history, many of which remain to this day; and, with
-one or two exceptions, the older names sink into the background. It
-is therefore hardly needful to go through the ethnology and geography
-of Tacitus, or to deal with any of the controverted points which are
-suggested thereby. We have to look at the German nations purely in
-their relations to Rome.
-
-♦Warfare on the Rhine and the Danube.♦
-
-We have seen that the history of Rome in her western provinces was,
-from an early stage of the Empire, a struggle with the Teutonic nations
-on the Rhine and the Danube. We have seen that all attempts at serious
-conquest beyond those boundaries came to nothing. ♦Roman possessions
-beyond those rivers.♦ The Roman possessions beyond the two great
-rivers were mere outposts for the better security of the land within
-the rivers. The district beyond them, fenced in by a wall and known
-as the _Agri Decumates_, was hardly more than such an outlying post
-on a great scale. The struggle along the border was, almost from the
-beginning, a defensive struggle on the part of Rome. We hear of Roman
-conquests from the second century to the fifth; but they are strictly
-defensive conquests, the mere recovery of lost possessions, or at most
-the establishment of fresh outposts. ♦Formation of confederacies
-among the Germans.♦ From the moment of the first appearance of Rome
-on the two rivers, the Teutonic nations were really threatening to
-Rome, and the warfare of Rome was really defensive; and from the very
-beginning too a process seems to have been at work among the German
-nations themselves which greatly strengthened their power as enemies
-of Rome. New nations or confederacies, bearing, for the most part,
-names unknown to earlier times, begin to be far more dangerous than the
-smaller and more scattered tribes of the earlier times had been. These
-movements among the German nations themselves, hastened by pressure
-of other nations to the east of them, caused the Teutonic attacks on
-the Empire to become more and more formidable, and at last to grow into
-Teutonic settlements within the Empire. But, in the course of this
-process, several stages may be noticed. ♦Marcomanni and Quadi.♦ Thus
-the _Marcomanni_ and the _Quadi_ play a part in this history from the
-very beginning. The Marcomanni appear in Cæsar, and, from their name of
-_Markmen_, we may be sure that they were a confederacy of the same kind
-as the later confederacies of the Franks and Alemanni. In the first and
-second centuries the Marcomanni are dangerous neighbours, threatening
-the Empire and often penetrating beyond its borders, and their name
-appears in history as late as the fifth century. But they play no part
-in the Teutonic settlements within the Empire. They do not affect the
-later map; they had no share in bringing about the changes out of which
-modern Europe arose. Their importance ceases just at the time when a
-second stage begins, when, in the course of the third century, we begin
-to hear of those nations or confederacies whose movements really did
-affect later history and geography.
-
-♦Beginning of modern European history.♦
-
-In the third and fourth centuries the history of modern Europe begins.
-♦The new confederacies.♦ We now begin to hear names which have been
-heard ever since, _Franks_, _Alemans_, _Saxons_, all of them great
-confederacies of German tribes. ♦Defensive warfare of Rome.♦ Defence
-against German inroads now becomes the chief business of the rulers of
-Rome. The invaders were constantly driven back; but new invaders were
-as constantly found to renew their incursions. Men of Teutonic race
-pressed into the Empire in every conceivable character. ♦Germans within
-the Empire.♦ Besides open enemies, who came with the hope either of
-plunder or settlement, crowds of Germans served in the Roman armies
-and obtained lands held by military tenure as the reward of their
-services. Their chiefs were promoted to every rank and honour, military
-and civil, short of the Imperial dignity itself. These were changes
-of the utmost importance in other points of view; still they do not
-directly affect the map of the Empire. Lands and cities were won and
-lost over and over again; but such changes were merely momentary; the
-acknowledged boundaries of the Roman dominion were not yet altered;
-it is not till the next stage that geography begins to be directly
-concerned.
-
-♦Beginning of national kingdoms.♦
-
-This last stage begins with the early years of the fifth century, and
-thus nearly coincides with the division of the Empire into East and
-West. Gothic and other Teutonic kings could now march at pleasure at
-the head of their armies through every corner of the Empire, sometimes
-bearing the titles of Roman officers, sometimes dictating the choice
-of Roman Emperors, sometimes sacking the Old Rome or threatening the
-New. It was when these armies under their kings settled down and formed
-national kingdoms within the limits of the Empire, that the change
-comes to have an effect on the map. In the course of the fifth century
-the Western provinces of Rome were rent away from her. In most cases
-the loss was cloaked by some Imperial commission, some empty title
-bestowed on the victorious invader; but the Empire was none the less
-practically dismembered. Out of these dismemberments the modern states
-of Europe gradually grew. It will now be our business to give some
-account of those nations, Teutonic and otherwise, who had an immediate
-share in this work, passing lightly by all questions, and indeed all
-nations, which cannot be said to have had such an immediate share in it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Teutonic Settlements in the West.♦
-
-The nations which in the fourth and fifth centuries made settlements
-in the Western provinces of Rome fall under two chief heads; those
-who made their settlements by land, and those who made them by sea.
-This last class is pretty well coextensive with the settlement of
-our own forefathers in Britain, which must be spoken of separately.
-♦Settlements within the Empire.♦ Among the others, the nations who play
-an important part in the fourth and fifth centuries are the _Goths_,
-the _Vandals_, the _Burgundians_, the _Suevi_, and the _Franks_. And
-their settlements again fall into two classes, those which passed away
-within a century or two, and those which have had a lasting effect on
-European history. ♦Franks, Burgundians, Suevi,♦ Thus it is plain at the
-first glance that the Franks and the Burgundians have left their names
-on the modern map. The Suevi have left their name also: but it is now
-found only in their older German land; it has vanished for ages from
-their western settlement. ♦Goths,♦ The name of the Goths has passed
-away from the kingdoms which they founded, but their presence has
-affected the history of both the Spanish and the Italian peninsulas.
-♦Vandals.♦ The Vandals alone, as a nation and kingdom, have left no
-traces whatever, though it may be that they have left their name to a
-part of one of the lands of their sojourn. ♦Their kingdoms.♦ All these
-nations founded kingdoms within the Western Empire, kingdoms which at
-first admitted a nominal superiority in the Empire, but which were
-practically independent from the beginning. ♦Various circumstances
-of their history.♦ But the history of the several kingdoms is very
-different. Some of them soon passed away altogether, while others
-became the beginnings of the great nations of modern Europe. Gaul and
-Spain fell off very gradually from the Empire. But, in the course of
-the fifth century, all the nations of which we have been speaking
-formed more or less lasting settlements within those provinces.
-Pre-eminent among them are the great settlements of the Goths and the
-Franks. Out of the settlement of the Franks arose the modern kingdoms
-of Germany and France, and out of the settlement of the Goths arose
-the various kingdoms of Spain. Those of the Burgundians, Vandals, and
-Suevi were either smaller or less lasting. All of them however must be
-mentioned in their order.
-
-♦Migrations of the West-Goths.♦
-
-First and greatest come the _Goths_. It is not needful for our purpose
-to examine all that history or legend has to tell us as to the origin
-of the Goths, or all the theories which ingenious men have formed on
-the subject. ♦Defeat of the Goths by Claudius. A.D. 269.♦ It is enough
-for our purpose that the Goths began to show themselves as dangerous
-enemies of the Empire in the second half of the third century; but
-their continuous history does not begin till the second half of the
-fourth. ♦Gothic kingdom on the Danube.♦ We then find them forming a
-great kingdom in the lands north of the Danube. ♦Goths driven onwards
-by the Huns.♦ Presently a large body of them were driven to seek
-shelter within the bounds of the Eastern Empire from the pressure of
-the invading _Huns_. These last were a Turanian people who had been
-driven from their own older settlements by movements in the further
-East which do not concern us, but who become an important element in
-the history of the fifth century. They affected the Empire, partly by
-actual invasions, partly by driving other nations before them but they
-made no lasting settlements within it. Nor did the Goths themselves
-make any lasting settlement in the Eastern Empire. ♦They cross the
-Danube. A.D. 377.♦ While one part of the Gothic nation became subject
-to the Huns, another part crossed the Danube; but they crossed it by
-Imperial licence, and if they took to arms, it was only to punish
-the treachery of the Roman officers. Presently we find Gothic chiefs
-marching at pleasure through the dominions of the Eastern Cæsar; but
-they simply march and ravage; it is not till they have got within the
-boundary of the West that they found any lasting kingdoms. In fact,
-the Goths, and the Teutonic tribes generally, had no real mission in
-the East; to them the East was a mere highway to the West. ♦Career of
-Alaric. A.D. 394-410.♦ The movements of Alaric in Greece, Illyricum,
-and Italy, his sieges and his capture of Rome, are of the highest
-historical importance, but they do not touch geography. The Goths first
-win for themselves a local habitation and a place on the map when they
-left Italy to establish themselves in the further West.
-
-♦Beginning of the West-Gothic kingdom under Athaulf. A.D. 412.♦
-
-Under Alaric’s successor, Athaulf, the first foundations were laid of
-that great West-Gothic kingdom which we are apt to look on as specially
-Spanish, but which in truth had its first beginning in Gaul, and which
-kept some Gaulish territory as long as it lasted. But the Goths passed
-into those lands, not in the character of avowed conquerors, not as
-founders of an avowed Gothic state, but as soldiers of the Empire,
-sent to win back its lost provinces. ♦Condition of Gaul and Spain.♦
-Those provinces were now occupied or torn in pieces by a crowd of
-invaders, _Suevi_, _Vandals_, and _Alans_. ♦The Alans.♦ These last
-are a puzzling race, our accounts of whom are somewhat contradictory,
-but who may perhaps be most safely set down as a non-Aryan, or, at
-any rate, a non-Teutonic people, who had been largely brought under
-Gothic influences. But early in the fifth century they possessed a
-dominion in central Spain which stretched from sea to sea. ♦The Suevi
-in Spain.♦ Their dominion passed for a few years into the hands of the
-Suevi, who had already formed a settlement in north-western Spain, and
-who still kept a dominion in that corner long after the greater part
-of the peninsula had become Gothic. ♦The Vandals in Africa. A.D. 425.♦
-The Vandals occupied Bætica; but they presently passed into Africa,
-and there founded the one Teutonic kingdom in that continent, with
-Carthage to its capital, a kingdom which took in also the great islands
-of the western Mediterranean, including Sicily itself. ♦Independence
-of the Basques.♦ Through all these changes the unconquerable people
-of the Basque and Cantabrian mountains seem never to have fully
-submitted to any conquerors; but the rest of Spain and south-western
-Gaul was, before half of the fifth century had passed, formed into the
-great West-Gothic kingdom. ♦Gothic kingdom of Toulouse.♦ That kingdom
-stretched from the pillars of Hêraklês to the Loire and the Rhone,
-and its capital was placed, not on Spanish but on Gaulish ground, at
-the Gaulish Tolosa or _Toulouse_. The Gothic dominion in Gaul was
-doomed not to be lasting; the Gothic dominion in Spain lasted down to
-the Saracen conquest, and all the later Christian kingdoms of Spain
-may be looked on as fragments or revivals of it. Spain however never
-changed her name for that of her conquerors. ♦Gothia.♦ The only parts
-of the Gothic kingdom which ever bore the Gothic name were those small
-parts both of Spain and Gaul which kept the name of _Gothia_ through
-later causes. ♦Andalusia.♦ The Vandals, on the other hand, though they
-passed altogether out of Spain, have left their name to this day in its
-southern part under the form of _Andalusia_, a name which, under the
-Saracen conquerors, spread itself over the whole peninsula.
-
-♦The Franks.♦
-
-The other great Teutonic nations or confederacies of which we have to
-speak have had a far more lasting effect on the nomenclature of Europe.
-We have now to trace the steps by which the _Franks_ gradually became
-the ruling people both of Germany and of Gaul. They have stamped their
-name on both countries. ♦Uses of the word _Francia_.♦ The dominions
-of the Franks got the name of _Francia_, a name whose meaning has
-constantly varied according to the extent of the Frankish dominion at
-different times. In modern use it still cleaves to two parts of their
-dominions, to that part of Germany which is still called _Franken_ or
-_Franconia_, and to that part of Gaul which is still called _France_.
-♦The Alemanni.♦ And their history is closely mixed up with that of
-another nation or confederacy, that of the _Alemanni_, who again have,
-in the French tongue, given their name to the whole of Germany. ♦A.D.
-275.♦ Franks and Alemanni alike begin to be heard of in the third
-century, and the Alemanni even attempted an actual invasion of Italy;
-but the geographical importance of both confederacies does not begin
-till the fifth. All through the fourth century it is the chief business
-of the Emperors who ruled in Gaul to defend the frontier of the Rhine
-against their incursions, against the Alemanni along the upper part of
-its course, and against the Franks along its lower part. ♦Thuringians.
-| The Low-Dutch tribes.♦ To the east of the Franks and Alemanni lay
-the _Thuringians_; to the north, along the coasts of the German Ocean,
-the Low-Dutch tribes, _Saxons_ and _Frisians_. In the course of the
-fifth century their movements also began to affect the geography of the
-Empire.
-
-During the whole of that century the Franks were pressing into Gaul.
-The Imperial city of Trier was more than once taken, and the seat of
-the provincial government was removed to Arles. ♦Reign of Chlodwig.
-A.D. 481-511.♦ The union of the two chief divisions of the Frankish
-confederacy, and the overthrow of the Alemanni, made the Franks, under
-their first Christian king, Chlodwig or Clovis, the ruling people of
-northern Gaul and central Germany. Their territory thus took in both
-lands which had been part of the Empire, and lands which had never
-been such. ♦Character and divisions of the Frankish kingdom.♦ This is
-a special characteristic of the Frankish settlement, and one which
-influences the whole of their later history. There was, from the very
-beginning, long before any such distinction was consciously drawn, a
-_Teutonic_ and a _Latin Francia_. There were Frankish lands to the
-East which never had been Roman. There were lands in northern Gaul
-which remained practically Roman under the Frankish dominion. ♦Roman
-Germany Teutonized afresh.♦ And between them lay, on the left bank
-of the Rhine, the Teutonic lands which had formed part of the Roman
-province of Gaul, but which now became Teutonic again. _Moguntiacum_,
-_Augusta Treverorum_, and _Colonia Agrippina_, cities founded on
-Teutonic soil, now again became German, ready to be in due time, by the
-names of _Mainz_, _Trier_, and _Köln_, the metropolitan and electoral
-cities of Germany. ♦Eastern and Western _Francia_.♦ These lands, with
-the original German lands, formed the _Eastern_ or _Teutonic Francia_,
-where the Franks, or their German allies and subjects, formed the real
-population of the country. In the _Western Francia_, between the Loire
-and the Channel, though the Franks largely settled and influenced
-the country in many ways, the mass of the population remained Roman.
-♦Armorica or Britanny.♦ Over the western peninsula of _Armorica_ the
-dominion of the Franks was always precarious and, at most, external.
-Here the ante-Roman population still kept its Celtic language, and it
-was further strengthened by colonies from Britain, from which the land
-took its later name of the _Lesser Britain_ or _Britanny_. ♦Extent
-of the Frankish dominion. A.D. 500.♦ Thus, at the end of the fifth
-century, the Frankish dominion was firmly established over the whole of
-central Germany and Northern Gaul. Their dominion was fated to be the
-most lasting of the Teutonic kingdoms formed on the Roman mainland. The
-reason is obvious; while the Goths in Spain and the Vandals in Africa
-were isolated Teutonic settlers in a Roman land, the Franks in Gaul
-were strengthened by the unbroken Teutonic mainland at their back.
-
-♦The Burgundians.♦
-
-The greater part of Gaul was thus, at the end of the fifth century,
-divided between the Franks in the north and the West-Goths in the
-south. But, early in the fifth century, a third Teutonic power grew up
-in south-eastern Gaul. ♦Their kingdom.♦ The _Burgundians_, a people
-who, in the course of the Wandering of the Nations, seem to have made
-their way from the shores of the Baltic, established themselves in
-the lands between the Rhone and the Alps, where they formed a kingdom
-which bore their name. Their dominion in Gaul may be said to have
-been more lasting than that of the Goths, less lasting than that of
-the Franks. ♦Meaning of the word _Burgundy_.♦ _Burgundy_ is still a
-recognized name; but no name in geography has so often shifted its
-place and meaning, and it has for some centuries settled itself on a
-very small part of the ancient kingdom of the Burgundians. ♦Provence
-Burgundian. A.D. 500-510. | 510-536.♦ At the end of the fifth century
-the Rhone was a Burgundian river; _Autun_, _Besançon_, _Lyons_, and
-_Vienne_ were Burgundian cities; but the sea coast, the original Roman
-_Province_, the land which has so steadily kept that name, though it
-fell for a moment under the Burgundian power, followed at this time,
-as became the first Roman land beyond the Alps, the fortunes of Italy
-rather than those of Gaul.
-
-♦Invasion of the Huns.♦
-
-Among these various conquests and shiftings of dominion, all of which
-affected the map at the time, some of which have affected history and
-geography ever since, it may be well to mention, if only by way of
-contrast, an inroad which fills a great place in the history of the
-fifth century, but which had no direct effect on geography. ♦Battle
-of Châlons. A.D. 451.♦ This was the invasion of Italy and Gaul by
-the _Huns_ under Attila, and their defeat at Châlons by the combined
-forces of Romans, West-Goths, and Franks. This battle is one of the
-events which is remarkable, not for working change, but for hindering
-it. Had Attila succeeded, the greatest of all changes would have
-taken place throughout all Western Europe. As it was, the map of Gaul
-was not affected by his inroad. ♦Destruction of Aquileia, and origin
-of Venice.♦ On the map of Italy it did have an indirect effect; he
-destroyed the city of Aquileia, and its inhabitants, fleeing to the
-Venetian islands, laid the foundation of one of the later powers of
-Europe in the form of the commonwealth of _Venice_.
-
-While Spain and Gaul were thus rent away from the Empire, Italy and
-Rome itself were practically rent away also, though the form which
-the event took was different. ♦Reunion of the Empire. | Rule of
-Odoacer. A.D. 476-493.♦ A vote of the Senate reunited the Western
-Empire to the Eastern; the Eastern Emperor Zeno became sole Emperor,
-and the government of the diocese of Italy—that is, it will be
-remembered, of a large territory besides the Italian peninsula—was
-entrusted by his commission to Odoacer, a general of barbarian
-mercenaries, with the rank of Patrician. No doubt Odoacer was
-practically independent of the Empire; but the union of the Empire was
-preserved in form, and no separate kingdom of Italy was set up. ♦The
-East-Goths in Italy.♦ Presently Odoacer was overthrown by Theodoric
-king of the East-Goths, who, though king of his own people, reigned
-in Italy by an Imperial commission as Patrician. ♦Rule of Theodoric.
-A.D. 493-526.♦ Practically, he founded an East-Gothic kingdom, taking
-in Italy and the other lands which formed the dioceses of Italy and
-Western Illyricum. ♦Extent of his dominion.♦ His dominion also took in
-the coast of what we may now call _Provence_, and his influence was
-extended in various ways over most of the kingdoms of the West. The
-seat of the Gothic dominion, like that of the later Western Empire, was
-at Ravenna. Practically Theodoric and his successors were independent
-kings, and, as chiefs of their own people, they bore the kingly title.
-♦Theory of the Empire.♦ Hence, as Rome formed part of their dominions,
-it is true to say that under them Rome ceased to be part of the Roman
-Empire. Still in theory the Imperial supremacy went on, and in this
-way it became much easier for Italy to be won back to the Empire at a
-somewhat later time.
-
-
-§ 4. _Settlement of the English in Britain._
-
-Meanwhile, in another part of Europe, a Teutonic settlement of quite
-another character from those on the mainland was going on. ♦The Romans
-withdrawn from Britain. A.D. 411.♦ Spain and Gaul fell away from
-the Empire by slow degrees; but the Roman dominion in Britain came
-to an end by a definite act at a definite moment. The Roman armies
-were withdrawn from the province, and its inhabitants were left to
-themselves. Presently, a new settlement took place in the island which
-was thus left undefended. ♦Difference between the conquest of Britain
-and other Teutonic conquests.♦ It is specially important to mark
-the difference between the Teutonic settlements in Britain and the
-Teutonic conquests on the mainland. The Teutonic conquests in Gaul and
-Spain were made by Teutonic neighbours who had already learned to know
-and respect the Roman civilization, who were either Christians already
-or became Christians soon after they entered the Empire. They pressed
-in gradually by land; they left the Roman inhabitants to live after the
-Roman law, and they themselves gradually adopted the speech and much of
-the manners of Rome. The only exception to this rule on the continent
-is to be found in the lands immediately on the Rhine and the Danube,
-where the Teutonic settlement was complete, and where the Roman tongue
-and civilization were pretty well wiped out. This same process happened
-yet more completely in the Teutonic conquest of Britain. ♦Character of
-the English settlement; | long struggle with the Britons.♦ The great
-island possession of Rome had been virtually abandoned by Rome before
-the Teutonic settlements in it began. The invaders had therefore to
-struggle rather with native Britons than with Romans. Moreover, they
-were invaders who came by sea, and who came from lands where little or
-nothing was known of the Roman law or religion. They therefore made
-a settlement of quite another kind from the settlement of the Goths
-or even from that of the Franks. They met with a degree of strictly
-national resistance such as no other Teutonic conquerors met with;
-therefore in the end they swept away all traces of the earlier state
-of things in a way which took place nowhere else. ♦The English remain
-Teutonic.♦ As far as such a process is possible, they slew or drove out
-the older inhabitants; they kept their heathen religion and Teutonic
-language, and were thus able to grow up as a new Teutonic nation in
-their new home without any important intermixture with the earlier
-inhabitants, Roman or British.
-
-♦The Low-Dutch settlements in Britain.♦
-
-The conquerors who wrought this change were our own forefathers, the
-Low-Dutch inhabitants of the border lands of Germany and Denmark,
-quite away from the Roman frontier; and among them three tribes, the
-_Angles_, the _Saxons_, and the _Jutes_, had the chief share in the
-conquest of Britain. ♦Saxons.♦ The Saxons had, as has already been
-said, attempted a settlement in the fourth century. They were therefore
-the tribe who were first known to the Roman and Celtic inhabitants of
-the island; the Celts of Britain and Ireland have therefore called
-all the Teutonic settlers _Saxons_ to this day. ♦Origin of the name
-_English_.♦ But, as the Angles or _English_ occupied in the end much
-the greater part of the land, it was they who, when the Teutonic tribes
-in Britain began to form one nation, gave their name to that nation and
-its land. That nation was the _English_, and their land was _England_.
-While _Britain_ therefore remains the proper geographical name of the
-whole island, _England_ is the name of that part of Britain which was
-step by step conquered by the English. Before the end of the fifth
-century several Teutonic kingdoms had begun in Britain. ♦Jutes in Kent.
-A.D. 449.♦ The Jutes began the conquest by their settlement in _Kent_,
-and presently the _Saxons_ began to settle on the South coast and on
-a small part of the East coast, in _Sussex_, _Wessex_, and _Essex_.
-♦Saxon and Anglian settlements.♦ And along a great part of the eastern
-coast various _Anglian_ settlements were made, which gradually grew
-into the kingdoms of _East-Anglia_, _Deira_, and _Bernicia_, which two
-last formed by their union the great kingdom of _Northumberland_. But,
-at the end of the sixth century, the English had not got very far from
-the southern and eastern coasts. ♦The Welsh and Scots.♦ The Britons,
-whom the English called _Welsh_ or strangers, held out in the West, and
-the Picts and Scots in the North. The _Scots_ were properly the people
-of Ireland; but a colony of them had settled on the western coast of
-northern Britain, and, in the end, they gave the name of Scotland to
-the whole North of the island.
-
-
-§ 5. _The Eastern Empire._
-
-♦Contrast between the Eastern and Western Empires.♦
-
-We have already seen the differences between the position of the
-Eastern and Western Empires during this period. While in the West the
-provinces were gradually lopped away by the Teutonic settlements, the
-provinces of the East, though often traversed by Teutonic armies,
-or rather nations, did not become the seats of lasting Teutonic
-settlements. ♦The Tetraxite Goths.♦ We can hardly count as an exception
-the settlement of the _Tetraxite Goths_ in the Tauric Chersonêsos, a
-land which was rather in alliance with the Empire than actually part
-of it. ♦Rivalry with Persia.♦ The distinctive history of the Eastern
-Empire consists, as has been already said, in the long struggle between
-East and West, in which Rome had succeeded to the mission of Alexander
-and the Seleukids as the representative of Western civilization. To
-this mission was afterwards added the championship of Christianity,
-first against the Fire-worshipper and then against the Moslem. In
-Eastern history no event is more important and more remarkable than
-the uprising of the regenerate _Persian_ nation against its Parthian
-masters. ♦Revival of the Persian kingdom. A.D. 226.♦ But, as far as
-either the history or the geography of Rome is concerned, the Persian
-simply steps into the place of the Parthian as the representative of
-the East against the West. From our point of view, the long wars
-on the Eastern frontier of Rome, and the frequent shiftings of that
-frontier, form one unbroken story, whether the enemy that was striven
-against is the successor of Arsakes or the successor of Artaxerxes.
-♦Position of Armenia.♦ And besides the natural rivalry of two great
-powers in such a position, the border kingdom of _Armenia_, a name
-which has changed its meaning and its frontiers almost as often as
-Burgundy or Austria, supplied constant ground for dispute between Rome
-and her eastern rival, whether Parthian or Persian.
-
-In the geographical aspect of this long struggle three special
-periods need to be pointed out. ♦Conquests of Trajan. A.D. 114-117.♦
-The first is that of the momentary conquests of Trajan. Under him
-_Armenia_, hitherto a vassal kingdom of Rome, was incorporated as a
-Roman province. _Albania_ and _Iberia_ took its place as the frontier
-vassal states. Beyond the Euphrates, even beyond the Tigris, the Roman
-dominion took in _Mesopotamia_, _Atropatênê_, and _Babylonia_. The
-Parthian capital of Ktesiphôn and the outlying Greek free city of
-Seleukeia were included within the boundaries of an Empire which for a
-moment touched the Caspian and the Persian Gulf. Rome, as the champion
-of the West, seemed to have triumphed for ever over her Eastern rival,
-when the Parthian kingdom was thus shorn of the border lands of the
-two worlds, and when its king was forced to become a Roman vassal
-for the dominions that were left to him. But this vast extension of
-the Roman power was strictly only for a moment. ♦Conquests of Trajan
-surrendered by Hadrian. A.D. 117.♦ What Trajan had conquered Hadrian
-at once gave back; the Empire was again bounded by the Euphrates, and
-Armenia was again left to form matter of dispute between its Eastern
-and its Western claimant. ♦Conquests of Marcus. A.D. 162-166.♦ The
-second stage begins when, under Marcus, the Roman frontier again began
-to advance. ♦Of Severus. A.D. 197-202.♦ Between the Euphrates and the
-Tigris _Osrhoênê_ became a Roman dependency: under the house of Severus
-it became a Roman province; and the fortress of _Nisibis_, so famous
-in later wars, was planted as the Eastern outpost of Rome against
-the Parthian. Ten years later the Parthian power was no more; but,
-as seen with Western eyes, the revived monarchy of Persia had simply
-stepped into its place. The wars of Alexander Severus, the captivity
-of Valerian, the wasting march of Sapor through the Roman provinces,
-left no trace on the map. ♦Conquests under Diocletian. A.D. 297.♦ But
-under the mighty rule of Diocletian the glories of Trajan were renewed.
-Mesopotamia again became Roman; five provinces beyond the Tigris were
-added to the Empire; Armenia, again the vassal of Rome, was enlarged
-at the expense of Persia, and Iberia was once more a Roman dependency.
-In the third stage the Roman frontier again went back. The wars of
-the second Sapor did little but deprive Rome of two Mesopotamian
-fortresses. ♦Surrender of provinces by Jovian. A.D. 363.♦ But after the
-fall of Julian the lands beyond the Tigris were given back to Persia;
-even Nisibis was yielded, and the Persian frontier again reached the
-Euphrates. ♦Division of Armenia. 387. | The Hundred Years’ Peace. 421.♦
-Armenia was now tossed to and fro, conquered and reconquered, till the
-kingdom was divided between the vassals of the two Empires, a division
-which was again confirmed by the hundred years’ peace between Rome and
-Persia. This was the state of the Eastern frontier of Rome at the time
-when the West-Goths were laying the foundation of their dominion in
-Spain and Aquitaine, when Goth and Roman joined together to overthrow
-the mingled host of Attila at Châlons, and when the first English keels
-were on their way to the shores of Britain.
-
-This then is the picture of the civilized world at the end of the
-fifth century. The whole of the Western dominions of Rome, including
-Italy and Rome herself, have practically, if not everywhere formally,
-fallen away from the Roman Empire. The whole West is under the rule of
-Teutonic kings. The Frank has become supreme in northern Gaul, without
-losing his ancient hold on western and central Germany. The West-Goth
-reigns in Spain and Aquitaine; the Burgundian reigns in the lands
-between the Rhone and the Alps. Italy and the lands to the north of the
-Alps and the Hadriatic have become, in substance though not in name, an
-East-Gothic kingdom. But the countries of the European mainland, though
-cut off from Roman political dominion, are far from being cut off
-from Roman influences. The Teutonic settlers, if conquerors, are also
-disciples. Their rulers are everywhere Christian; in Northern Gaul they
-are even Orthodox. Africa, under the Arian Vandal, is far more utterly
-cut off from the traditions of Rome than the lands ruled either by the
-Catholic Frank or by the Arian Goth. To the north of the Franks lie the
-independent tribes of Germany, still untouched by any Roman influence.
-They are beginning to find themselves new homes in Britain, and, as
-the natural consequence of a purely barbarian and heathen conquest, to
-sever from the Empire all that they conquered yet more thoroughly than
-Africa itself was severed. Such is the state of the West. In the East
-the Roman power lives on in the New Rome, with a dominion constantly
-threatened and insulted by various enemies, but with a frontier which
-has varied but little since the time of Aurelian. No lasting Teutonic
-settlement has been made within its borders. In its endless wars with
-Persia, its frontier sometimes advances and sometimes retreats. In our
-next chapter we shall see how much of life still clung to the majesty
-of the Roman name, and how large a part of the ancient dominion of Rome
-could still be won back again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE FINAL DIVISION OF THE EMPIRE.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Reunion of the Empire._
-
-♦Continuity of Roman rule.♦
-
-The main point to be always borne in mind in the history, and
-therefore in the historical geography, of the sixth, seventh, and
-eighth centuries, is the continued existence of the Roman Empire. It
-was still the Roman Empire, although the seat of its dominion was no
-longer at the Old Rome, although for a while the Old Rome was actually
-separated from the Roman dominion. Gaul, Spain, Africa, Italy itself,
-had been lopped away. Britain had fallen away by another process. But
-the Roman rule went on undisturbed in the Eastern part of the Empire,
-and even in the West the memory of that rule had by no means wholly
-died out. ♦Position of the Teutonic kings.♦ Teutonic kings ruled in
-all the countries of the West; but nowhere on the continent had they
-become national sovereigns. They were still simply the chiefs of their
-own people reigning in the midst of a Roman population. The Romans
-meanwhile everywhere looked to the Cæsar of the New Rome as their
-lawful sovereign, from whose rule they had been unwillingly torn away.
-Both in Spain and in Italy the Gothic kings had settled in the country
-as Imperial lieutenants with an Imperial commission. The formal aspect
-of the event of 476 had been the reunion of the Western Empire with
-the Eastern. ♦Recovery of territory by the Empire.♦ It was perfectly
-natural therefore that the sole Roman Emperor reigning in the New Rome
-should strive, whenever he had a chance, to win back territories which
-he had never formally surrendered, and that the Roman inhabitants of
-those territories should welcome him as a deliverer from barbarian
-masters. The geographical limits within which, at the beginning of the
-sixth century, the Roman power was practically confined, the phænomena
-of race and language within those limits, might have suggested another
-course. But considerations of that kind are seldom felt at the time;
-they are the reflexions of thoughtful men long after. ♦Extent of the
-Roman dominion at the accession of Justinian, 527.♦ The Roman dominion,
-at the accession of Justinian, was shut up within the Greek and
-Oriental provinces of the Empire; its enemies were already beginning
-to speak of its subjects as Greeks. Its truest policy would have been
-to have anticipated several centuries of history, to have taken up the
-position of a Greek state, defending its borders against the Persian,
-withstanding or inviting the settlement of the Slave, but leaving the
-now Teutonic West to develope itself undisturbed. But in such cases
-the known past is always more powerful than the unknown future, and it
-seemed the first duty of the Roman Emperor to restore the Roman Empire
-to its ancient extent.
-
-♦Conquests of Justinian.♦
-
-It was during the reign of Justinian that this work was carried out
-through a large part of the Western Empire. Lost provinces were won
-back in two continents. The growth of independent Teutonic powers was
-for ever stopped in Africa, and it received no small check in Europe.
-The Emperor was enabled, through the weakness and internal dissensions
-of the Vandal and Gothic kingdoms, to win back Africa and Italy to the
-Empire. The work was done by the swords of Belisarius and Narses—the
-Slave and the Persian being now used to win back the Old Rome to the
-dominion of the New. ♦Vandal war. 533-535.♦ The short _Vandal_ war
-restored Africa in the Roman sense, and a large part of Mauritania,
-to the Empire. ♦Gothic war. 537-554.♦ The long _Gothic_ war won back
-Illyricum, Italy, and the Old Rome. Italy and Africa were still ruled
-from Ravenna and from Carthage; but they were now ruled not by Teutonic
-kings, but by Byzantine exarchs. ♦Conquest of southern Spain. 550.♦
-Meanwhile, while the war with the East-Goths was going on in Italy,
-a large part of southern Spain was won back from the West-Goths. Two
-Teutonic kingdoms were thus wiped out; a third was weakened, and the
-acquisition of so great a line of sea-coast, together with the great
-islands, Sicily, Sardinia, Corsica, and the Balearic Islands, gave
-the Empire an undisputed supremacy by sea. In one corner only did the
-Imperial frontier even nominally go back, or any Teutonic power advance
-at its expense. ♦Provence ceded to the Franks, 548.♦ The sea-board of
-Provence, which had long been practically lost to the Empire, was now
-formally ceded to the Franks. In this one corner the Roman Terminus
-withdrew.
-
-♦Geographical changes under Justinian.♦
-
-In a geographical aspect the map of Europe has seldom been so
-completely changed within a single generation as it was during the
-reign of Justinian. At his accession his dominion was bounded to the
-west by the Hadriatic, and he was far from possessing the whole of the
-Hadriatic coast. Under his reign the power of the Roman arms and the
-Roman law were again extended to the Ocean. The Roman dominion was
-indeed no longer spread round the whole shore of the Mediterranean;
-the Imperial territories were no longer continuous as of old: but,
-if the Empire was not still, as it had once been, the only power in
-the Mediterranean lands, it had again become beyond all comparison
-the greatest power. ♦Effects of Justinian’s conquests.♦ Moreover, by
-the recovery of so large an extent of Latin-speaking territory, the
-tendency of the Empire to change into a Greek or Oriental state was
-checked for several centuries. We are here concerned only with the
-geographical, not with the political or moral aspect of the conquests
-of Justinian. Some of those conquests, like those of Trajan, were
-hardly more than momentary. But the changes which they made for the
-time were some of the most remarkable on record, and the effect of
-those changes remained, both in history and geography, long after their
-immediate results were again undone.
-
-
-§ 2. _Settlement of the Lombards in Italy._
-
-The conquests of Justinian hindered the growth of a national Teutonic
-kingdom in Italy, such as grew up in Gaul and Spain, and they
-practically made the cradle of the Empire, Rome herself, an outlying
-dependency of her great colony by the Bosporos. But the reunion of all
-Italy with the Empire lasted only for a moment. The conquest was only
-just over when a new set of Teutonic conquerors appeared in Italy.
-♦Pannonian kingdom of the Lombards.♦ These were the _Lombards_, who,
-in the great wandering, had made their way into the ancient Pannonia
-about the time that the East Goths passed into Italy. They were thus
-settled within the ancient boundaries of the Western Empire. But the
-Roman power had now quite passed away from those regions, and the
-Lombard kingdom in Pannonia was practically altogether beyond the
-Imperial borders; it had not even that Roman tinge which affected the
-Frankish and Gothic kingdoms. ♦Gepidæ.♦ To the east of the Lombards,
-in the ancient Dacia, another Teutonic kingdom had arisen; that of the
-_Gepidæ_, a people seemingly closely akin to the Goths. ♦Avars.♦ The
-process of wandering had brought the Turanian _Avars_ into those parts,
-and their presence seriously affected all later history and geography.
-♦Teutonic powers on the Lower Danube.♦ With the Gepidæ in Dacia and
-the Lombards in Pannonia, there was a chance of two Teutonic states
-growing up on the borders of East and West. These might possibly have
-played the same part in the East which the Franks and Goths played in
-the West, and they might thus have altogether changed the later course
-of history. But the Lombards allied themselves with the Avars. ♦The
-Gepidæ overthrown by the Lombards and Avars. 566. | The Lombards pass
-into Italy. 567.♦ In partnership with their barbarian allies, they
-overthrew the kingdom of the Gepidæ, and they themselves passed into
-Italy. Thus the growth of Teutonic powers in those regions was stopped.
-A new and far more dangerous enemy was brought into the neighbourhood
-of the Empire, and the way was opened for the Slavonic races to play in
-some degree the same part in the East which the Teutons played in the
-West. But while the East lost this chance of renovation, for such it
-would have been, the Lombard settlement in Italy was the beginning of a
-new Teutonic power in that country. ♦Character of the Lombard kingdom.♦
-But it was not a power which could possibly grow up into a national
-Teutonic kingdom of all Italy, as the dominion of the East-Goths might
-well have done. ♦Incomplete conquest of Italy.♦ The Lombard conquest
-of Italy was at no time a complete conquest; part of the land was won
-by the Lombards; part was kept by the Emperors; and the Imperial and
-Lombard possessions intersected one another in a way which hindered
-the growth of any kind of national unity under either power. ♦Lombard
-duchies.♦ The new settlers founded the great Lombard kingdom in the
-North of Italy, which has kept the Lombard name to this day, and the
-smaller Lombard states of _Spoleto_ and _Beneventum_. But a large part
-of Italy still remained to the Empire. ♦Imperial possessions in Italy.♦
-Ravenna, the dwelling-place of the Exarchs, Rome itself, Naples, and
-the island city of Venice were all centres of districts which still
-acknowledged the Imperial rule. The Emperors also kept the extreme
-southern points of both the peninsulas of Southern Italy, and, for the
-present, the three great islands. The Lombard Kings were constantly
-threatening Rome and Ravenna. ♦Ravenna taken by the Lombards. c. 753.♦
-Rome never fell into their hands, but in the middle of the eighth
-century Ravenna was taken, and with it the district specially known as
-the _Exarchate_ was annexed to the Lombard dominion. But this greatest
-extent of the Lombard power caused its overthrow: for it led to a chain
-of events which, as we shall presently see, ended in transferring not
-only the Lombard kingdom, but the Imperial crown of the West to the
-hands of the Franks.
-
-
-§ 3. _Rise of the Saracens._
-
-But, before we give any account of the revolutions which took place
-among the already existing powers of Western Europe, it will be well to
-describe the geographical changes which were caused by the appearance
-of absolutely new actors on two sides of the Empire. ♦Roman province
-in Spain recovered by the Goths. 534-572.♦ One point however may be
-noticed here, as standing apart from the general course of events,
-namely, that the Roman province in Spain was won gradually back by the
-West-Goths. ♦616-624.♦ The inland cities, as Cordova, were hardly kept
-forty years, and the whole of the Imperial possessions in Spain were
-lost during the reign of Heraclius. Thus the great dominion which
-Justinian had won back in the West, important as were its historical
-results, was itself of very short duration; a large part of Italy was
-lost almost as soon as it was won, and the recovered dominion in Spain
-did not abide more than ninety years.
-
-But meanwhile, in the course of the seventh century, nations which
-had hitherto been unknown or unimportant began to play a great part
-in history and greatly to change the face of the map. These new
-powers fall under two heads; those who appeared on the northern and
-those who appeared on the eastern frontier of the Empire. The nations
-who appeared on the North were, like the early Teutonic invaders of
-the Empire, ready to act, if partly as conquerors, partly also as
-disciples; those who appeared on the East were the champions of an
-utterly different system in religion and everything else. In short, the
-old rivalry of the East and West now takes a distinctly aggressive form
-on the part of the East. ♦Wars between Rome and Persia.♦ As long as
-the Sassanid dynasty lasted, Rome and Persia still continued their old
-rivalry on nearly equal terms. The long wars between the two Empires
-made little difference in their boundaries. ♦Wars of Chosroes and
-Heraclius, 603-628.♦ In the last stage of their warfare Chosroes took
-Jerusalem and Antioch, and encamped at Chalkêdôn. Heraclius pressed his
-eastern victories beyond the boundaries of the Empire under Trajan.
-But even these great campaigns made no lasting difference in the map,
-except so far as, by weakening Rome and Persia alike, they paved the
-way for the greatest change of all. ♦Extension of the Roman power on
-the Euxine.♦ More important to geography was a change which took place
-at somewhat earlier time when, during the reign of Justinian, the
-Roman power was extended on the Eastern side of the Euxine in _Colchis_
-or _Lazica_. ♦The Arabian vassals of Rome and Persia.♦ The southern
-borders of each Empire were to some extent protected by the dominion
-of dependent Arabian kings, the _Ghassanides_ being vassals of Rome,
-and the _Lachmites_ to the east of them being vassals of Persia. But a
-change came presently which altogether overthrew the Persian kingdom,
-which deprived the Roman Empire of its Eastern, Egyptian, and African
-provinces, and which gave both the Empire and the Teutonic kingdoms of
-the West an enemy of a kind altogether different from any against whom
-they hitherto had to strive.
-
-♦Rise of the Saracens.♦
-
-The cause which wrought such abiding changes was the rise of the
-_Saracens_ under Mahomet and his first followers. A new nation, that
-of the Arabs, now became dominant in a large part of the lands which
-had been part of the Roman Empire, as well as in lands far beyond its
-boundaries. ♦Arabia united under Mahomet, 622-632.♦ The scattered
-tribes of Arabia were first gathered together into a single power by
-Mahomet himself, and under his successors they undertook to spread the
-Mahometan religion wherever their swords could carry it. And, with the
-Mahometan religion, they carried also the Arabic language, and what
-we may call Eastern civilization as opposed to Western. A strife, in
-short, now begins between Aryan and Semitic man. Rome and Persia, with
-all their differences, were both of them Aryan powers. ♦Conquests of
-the Saracens.♦ The most amazing thing is the extraordinary speed with
-which the Saracens pressed their conquests at the expense of both Rome
-and Persia, forming a marked contrast to the slow advance both of Roman
-conquest and of Teutonic settlement. In the course of less than eighty
-years, the Mahometan conquerors formed a dominion greater than that of
-Rome, and, for a short time, the will of the Caliph of the Prophet was
-obeyed from the Ocean to lands beyond the Indus. ♦Loss of the Eastern
-provinces of Rome. 632-639.♦ In a few campaigns the Empire lost all
-its possessions beyond Mount Tauros; that is, it lost one of the three
-great divisions of the Empire, that namely in which neither Greek nor
-Roman civilization had ever thoroughly taken root.
-
-While the Roman Empire was thus dismembered, the rival power of Persia
-was not merely dismembered, but utterly overwhelmed. ♦Saracen conquest
-of Persia. 632-651.♦ The Persian nationality was again, as in the
-days of the Parthians, held down under a foreign power, to revive
-yet again ages later. But the Saracen power was very far from merely
-taking the place of its Parthian and Persian predecessors. The mission
-of the followers of Mahomet was a mission of universal conquest,
-and that mission they so far carried out as altogether to overthrow
-the exclusive dominion of Rome in her own Mediterranean. Under
-Justinian, if the Imperial possession of the Mediterranean coast was
-not absolutely continuous, the small exceptions in Africa, Spain, and
-Gaul in no way interfered with the maritime supremacy of the Empire,
-and Gaul and Spain, even where they were not Roman, were at least
-Christian. ♦Saracen conquest of Africa. 647-711.♦ But now a gradual
-advance of sixty-four years annexed the Roman dominions in Africa to
-the Mahometan dominion. ♦Of Spain. 711-714.♦ Thence the Saracens passed
-into Spain, and found the West-Gothic kingdom an easier prey than the
-Roman provinces. Within three years after the final conquest of Africa,
-the whole peninsula was conquered, save where the Christian still held
-out in the inaccessible mountain fastnesses. ♦Saracen provinces in
-Gaul, 713-755.♦ The Saracen power was even carried beyond the Pyrenees
-into the province of Septimania, the remnant of the Gaulish dominion of
-the West-Gothic kings. Narbonne, Arles, Nîmes, all became for a while
-Saracen cities.
-
-♦Effects of Saracen conquest.♦
-
-In this way, of the three continents round the Mediterranean, Rome
-lost all her possessions in Africa, while both in Europe and Asia
-she had now a neighbour and an enemy of quite another kind from any
-which she had had before. The Teutonic conquerors, if conquerors,
-had been also disciples; they became part of the Latin world. The
-Persian, though his rivalry was religious as well as political, was
-still merely a rival, fighting along a single line of frontier. But
-every province that was conquered by the Saracens was utterly lopped
-away; it became the possession of men altogether alien and hostile in
-race, language, manners, and religion. A large part of the Roman world
-passed from Aryan and Christian to Semitic and Mahometan dominion.
-♦Different fates of the Eastern, Latin, and Greek provinces.♦ But the
-essential differences among the three main parts of the Empire now
-showed themselves very clearly. The Eastern provinces, where either
-Roman or Greek life was always an exotic, fell away at the first touch.
-♦647-709.♦ Africa, as being so greatly Romanized, held out for sixty
-years. The provinces of Asia Minor, now thoroughly Greek, were often
-ravaged, but never conquered. Spain and Septimania were far more easily
-conquered than Africa—a sign perhaps that the West-Gothic rule was
-still felt as foreign by the Roman inhabitants.
-
-♦Greatest extent of Saracen provinces.♦
-
-With the conquest of Spain the undivided Saracenic Empire, the dominion
-of the single Caliph, reached its greatest extent in the three
-continents. Detached conquests in Europe were made long after, but on
-the whole the Saracen power went back. ♦750.♦ Forty years later they
-lost _Sind_, their furthest possession to the East. ♦Separation of
-Spain. 755.♦ Five years later Spain became the seat of a rival dynasty,
-which after a while grew into a rival Caliphate. In the same year the
-Saracen dominion for the first time went back in Europe. ♦Battle of
-Tours. 732. | Frankish conquest of Septimania. 755.♦ The battle of
-Tours answers to the repulse of Attila at Châlons; it did not make
-changes, but hindered them; but before long the one province which the
-Saracens held beyond the Pyrenees, that of _Septimania_ or _Gothia_,
-was won from them by the Franks.
-
-
-§ 4. _Settlements of the Slavonic Nations._
-
-The movements of the sixth century began to bring into notice a
-branch of the Aryan family of nations which was to play an important
-part in the affairs both of the East and of the West. ♦Movements of
-the Slaves.♦ These nations were the _Slaves_. It is needless for our
-purpose to attempt to trace their earlier history; but the movements
-of the _Avars_ in the sixth century seem to have had much the same
-effect upon the Slaves which the movements of the Huns in the fourth
-century had upon the Teutons. The inroads of the Avars had, as we have
-seen, checked the growth of Teutonic powers on the Lower Danube, and
-had led to the Lombard settlement in Italy. But the Avars only formed
-the vanguard of a number of Turanian nations, some at least of them
-Turkish, which were now pressing westward. ♦Kingdom of the Avars. |
-Magyars, &c.♦ The Avars formed a great kingdom in the lands north of
-the Danube; to the east of these, along the northern coasts of the
-Euxine, bordering on the outlying possessions and allies of the Empire
-in those regions, lay _Magyars_, _Patzinaks_, and the greater dominion
-of the _Chazars_. All these play a part in Byzantine history; and
-the Avars were in the seventh century the most dangerous invaders
-and ravagers of the Roman territory. But south of the Danube they
-appeared mainly as ravagers; geography knows them only in their settled
-kingdom to the north of that river. Even that kingdom lasted no very
-great time; the real importance of all these migrations consists in
-the effect which they had on the great Aryan race which now begins to
-take its part in history. ♦North-western and South-western Slaves.♦
-The Slaves seem to have been driven by the Turanian incursions in two
-directions; to the North-west and to the South-west. The North-western
-division gave rise to more than one European state, and their relations
-with Germany form an important part of the history of the Western
-Empire. These North-western Slaves do not become of importance till a
-little later. But the South-western division plays a great part in the
-history of the sixth and seventh centuries. ♦Analogy between Teutons
-and Slaves.♦ Their position with regard to the Eastern Empire is a kind
-of shadow of the position held by the Teutonic nations with regard to
-the Western Empire. The Slaves play in the East, though less thoroughly
-and less brilliantly, the same part, half conquerors, half disciples,
-which the Teutons played in the West. During the sixth century they
-appear only as ravagers; in the seventh they appear as settlers.
-♦Slavonic settlements under Heraclius. c. 620.♦ There seems no doubt
-that Heraclius encouraged Slavonic settlements south of the Danube,
-doubtless with a view to defence against the more dangerous Avars. Much
-like the Teutonic settlers in the West, the Slaves came in at first as
-colonists under Imperial authority, and presently became practically
-independent. A number of Slavonic states thus arose in the lands north
-and east of the Hadriatic, as _Servia_, _Chrobatia_ or _Croatia_,
-_Carinthia_, of which the first two are historically connected with
-the Eastern, and the third with the Western Empire. _Istria_ and
-_Dalmatia_ now became Slavonic, with the exception of the maritime
-cities, which, among many vicissitudes, clave to the Empire. And even
-among them considerable revolutions took place. ♦Destruction of Salona,
-639.♦ Thus _Salona_ was destroyed, and out of Diocletian’s palace in
-its neighbourhood arose the new city of _Spalato_. ♦Origin of Spalato
-and Ragusa.♦ The Dalmatian _Epidauros_ was also destroyed, and _Ragusa_
-took its place. In many of these inroads Slaves and Avars were mixed up
-together; but the lasting settlements were all Slavonic. And the state
-of things which thus began has been lasting; the north-eastern coast of
-the Hadriatic is still a Slavonic land with an Italian fringe.
-
-♦Displacement of the Illyrians.♦
-
-In these migrations the Slaves displaced whatever remnants were left
-of the old Illyrian race in the lands near the Danube. They have
-themselves to some extent taken the Illyrian name, a change which has
-sometimes led to confusion. But at the time the movement went much
-further south than this. ♦Extent of Slavonic settlement.♦ The Slaves
-pressed on into a large part of Macedonia and Greece, and, during the
-seventh and eighth centuries, the whole of those countries, except the
-fortified cities and a fringe along the coast, were practically cut
-off from the Empire. The name of _Slavinia_ reached from the Danube
-to Peloponnêsos, leaving to the Empire only islands and detached
-points of coast from Venice round to Thessalonica. Their settlements
-in these regions gave a new meaning to an ancient name, and the
-word _Macedonian_ now began to mean _Slavonic_. ♦Albanians.♦ And it
-must have been at this time that the Illyrians, the _Skipetar_ or
-_Albanians_, pressed southward and formed those colonies in Greece,
-some of which still keep the Albanian language, while the Slavonic
-language has vanished from those lands for ages. ♦Nature of Slavonic
-settlement in Greece.♦ The Slavonic occupation of Greece is a fact
-which must neither be forgotten nor exaggerated. It certainly did not
-amount to an extirpation of the Greek nation; but it certainly did
-amount to an occupation of a large part of the country, which was
-Hellenized afresh from those cities and districts which remained Greek
-or Roman. While these changes were going on in the Hadriatic and Ægæan
-lands, another immigration later in the seventh century took place
-in the lands south of the lower Danube, and drove back the Imperial
-frontier to Haimos. ♦Settlement of the Bulgarians, c. 679.♦ This was
-the incursion of the _Bulgarians_, another Turanian people, but one
-whose history has been different from that of most of the Turanian
-immigrants. By mixture with Slavonic subjects and neighbours they
-became practically Slavonic, and they still remain a people speaking a
-Slavonic language. ♦The Eastern Empire cut short in its own peninsula.♦
-Thus the Empire, though it still kept its possessions in Italy with the
-great Mediterranean islands, though its hold on Western Africa lasted
-on into the eighth century, though it still kept outlying possessions
-on the northern and eastern coasts of the Euxine, was cut short in that
-great peninsula which seems made to be the immediate possession of the
-New Rome.
-
-♦Moral influence of Constantinople.♦
-
-But, exactly as happened in the West, the loss of political dominion
-carried with it the growth of moral dominion. The nations which pressed
-into these provinces gradually accepted Christianity in its Eastern
-form, and they have always looked up to the New Rome with a feeling
-the same in kind, but less strong in degree, as that with which the
-West has looked up to the Old Rome. ♦Extent of the Eastern Empire.♦
-But, at the beginning of the eighth century, though the Imperial power
-still held posts here and there from the pillars of Hêraklês to the
-Kimmerian Bosporos, Saracens on the one side and Slaves on the other
-had cut short the continuous Roman dominion to a comparatively narrow
-space. The unbroken possessions of Cæsar were now confined to Thrace
-and that solid peninsula of Asia Minor which the Saracens constantly
-ravaged, but never conquered. Mountains had taken place of rivers as
-the great boundaries of the Empire: instead of the Danube and the
-Euphrates, the Roman Terminus had fallen back to Haimos and Tauros.
-
-
-§ 5. _The Transfer of the Western Empire to the Franks._
-
-♦Growth of the Franks.♦
-
-Meanwhile we must go back to the West, and trace the growth of the
-great power which was there growing up, a power which, while the elder
-Empire was thus cut short in the East, was in the end to supplant it in
-the West by the creation of a rival Empire. For a while the _Franks_
-and the Empire had only occasional dealings with each other. Next to
-Britain, which had altogether ceased to be part of the Roman world, the
-part of the Western Empire which was least affected by the re-awakening
-of the Roman power in the East was the former province of Transalpine
-Gaul. The power of the Franks was fast spreading, both in their old
-home in Germany and in their new home in Gaul. ♦Frankish conquest
-of the Alemanni, 496;♦ The victory of Chlodwig over the _Alemanni_
-made the Franks the leading people of Germany. The two German powers
-which had so long been the chief enemies of the Roman power along
-the Rhine were now united. Throughout the sixth century the German
-dominion of the Franks was growing. ♦of the Thuringians, c. 530; | of
-Bavaria.♦ The Frankish supremacy was extended over _Thuringia_, and
-later in the century over _Bavaria_. The Bavaria of this age, it must
-be remembered, has a much wider extent than the name has in modern
-geography, reaching to the northern borders of Italy. The Bavarians
-seem to have been themselves but recent settlers in the land between
-the Alps and the Danube; but their immigration and their reduction
-under Frankish supremacy made the lands immediately south of the Danube
-thoroughly Teutonic, as the earlier Frankish conquests had done by
-the lands immediately west of the Rhine. Long before this time, the
-Franks had greatly extended their dominions in Gaul also. ♦Conquest
-of Aquitaine [507-511] and Burgundy. 532-534.♦ In the later years of
-Chlodwig the greater part of _Aquitaine_ was won from the West-Goths.
-Further conquests at their expense were afterwards made, and about the
-same time Burgundy came under Frankish supremacy.
-
-The Franks now held, either in possession or dependence, the whole
-oceanic coast of Gaul; but they were still shut out from the
-Mediterranean. The West-Goths still kept the land from the Pyrenees to
-the Rhone, the land of _Septimania_ or _Gothia_, to which the last name
-clave as being now the only Gothic part of Gaul. The land which was
-specially _Provincia_, the first Roman possession in Transalpine Gaul,
-the coast from the Rhone to the Alps, formed part of the East-Gothic
-dominions of Theodoric. An invasion of Italy during the long wars
-between the Goths and Romans failed to establish a Frankish dominion on
-the Italian side of the Alps. But as the Franks, by their conquest of
-Burgundy, were now neighbours of Italy, it led to a further enlargement
-of their Gaulish dominions, and to their first acquisition of a
-Mediterranean sea-board. ♦Cession of Provence. 536.♦ It was now that
-Massalia, Arelate, and the rest of the Province were, by an Imperial
-grant, one of the last exercises of Imperial power in those regions,
-added to the kingdom of the Franks. ♦Extent of the Frankish dominions.♦
-By the time that the Roman reconquest of Italy was completed, the
-Frankish dominion, united for a moment under a single head, took in
-the whole of Gaul, except the small remaining West-Gothic territory,
-together with central Germany and a supremacy over the Southern German
-lands. To the north lay the still independent tribes of the Low-Dutch
-stock, Frisian and Saxon.
-
-♦Position of the Franks.♦
-
-As the Frankish dominion plays so great a part in European history and
-geography, a part in truth second only to that played by the Roman
-dominion, it will be needful to consider the historical position of
-the Franks. Their dominion was that of a German people who had made
-themselves dominant alike in Germany and in Gaul. But it was only in
-a small part of the Frankish territory that the Frankish people had
-actually settled. ♦The cession of Gaulish possessions.♦ It was only
-in northern Gaul and central Germany, in the countries to which they
-have permanently given their name, that the Franks can be looked on as
-really occupying the land. In their German territory they of course
-remained German; in northern Gaul their position answered to that of
-the other Teutonic nations which had formed settlements within the
-Empire. They were a dominant Teutonic race in a Roman land. Gradually
-they adopted the speech of the conquered, while the conquered in the
-end adopted the name of the conquerors. ♦Slow fusion of Franks and
-Romans.♦ But the fusion of German and Roman was slower in the Frankish
-part of Gaul than elsewhere, doubtless because elsewhere the Teutonic
-settlements were cut off from their older Teutonic homes, while the
-Franks in Gaul had their older Teutonic home as a background. ♦German
-and Gaulish dependencies of the Franks.♦ Beyond the bounds of these
-more strictly Frankish lands, German and Gaulish, the dominion of the
-Franks was at most a political supremacy, and in no sense a national
-settlement. In Germany Bavaria was ruled by its vassal princes; in Gaul
-south of the Loire the Frank was at most an external ruler. Aquitaine
-had to be practically conquered over and over again, and new dynasties
-of native princes were constantly rising up. ♦Ethnology of Southern
-Gaul.♦ The Teutonic element in these lands, an element much slighter
-than the Teutonic element in Northern Gaul, is not Frankish, but Gothic
-and Burgundian. The native Romance speech of those lands is wholly
-different from the Romance speech of Northern Gaul. In short, there was
-really nothing in common between the two great parts of Gaul, the lands
-south and the lands north of the Loire, except their union, first under
-Roman and then under Frankish dominion. And in Armorica the old Celtic
-population, strengthened by the settlers from Britain, formed another
-and a yet more distinct element.
-
-♦Divisions of the Frankish dominions.♦
-
-Thus there were within the Frankish dominions wide national
-diversities, containing the germs of future divisions. It needed a
-strong hand even to keep the Teutonic and the Latin _Francia_ together,
-much less to keep together all the dependent lands, German and Gaulish.
-During the ages while the Empire was being cut short by Lombards,
-Goths, Slaves, and Saracens, the Frankish dominion was never in the
-like sort cut short by foreign settlements; but its whole history
-under the Merowingian dynasty is a history of divisions and reunions.
-The tendencies to division which were inherent in the condition of
-the country were strengthened by endless partitions among the members
-of the reigning house. ♦_Austria_ and _Neustria_.♦ Speaking roughly,
-it may be said that the more strictly Frankish territory showed a
-tendency to divide itself into two parts, the Eastern or Teutonic
-land, _Austria_ or _Austrasia_, and _Neustria_, the Western or Romance
-land. These were severally the germs which grew into the kingdoms of
-Germany and France. ♦Use of the name _Francia_.♦ As for the mere name
-of _Francia_, like other names of the kind, it shifted its geographical
-use according to the wanderings of the people from whom it was derived.
-After many such changes of meaning, it gradually settled down as the
-name for those parts of Germany and Gaul where it still abides. There
-are the Teutonic or Austrian _Francia_, part of which still keeps
-the name of _Franken_ or _Franconia_, and the Romance or Neustrian
-_Francia_, which by various annexations has grown into modern _France_.
-
-♦The Karlings. Dukes, 687-752; Kings, 752-987.♦
-
-At last, after endless divisions, reconquests, and reunions of the
-different parts of the Frankish territory, the whole Frankish dominion
-was again, in the second half of the eighth century, joined together
-under the Austrasian, the purely German, house of the _Karlings_. The
-Dukes and Kings of that house consolidated and extended the Frankish
-dominion in every direction. Under Pippin and Charles the Great, the
-power of the ruling race was more firmly established over the dependent
-states, such as Bavaria and Aquitaine. ♦Pippin conquers Septimania.
-752. | Conquests of Charles the Great. 768-814.♦ Under Pippin the
-conquest of the Saracen province of Septimania extended the Frankish
-power over the whole of Gaul; and under Charles the Great, the Frankish
-dominion was extended by a series of conquests in every direction. Of
-these, his Italian conquests were rather the winning of a new crown for
-the Frankish king than the extension of the Frankish kingdom. But the
-conquest of _Saxony_ at the one end and of the _Spanish March_ at the
-other, as well as the overthrow of the Pannonian kingdom of the Avars,
-were in the strictest sense extensions of the Frankish dominions.
-♦German character of the Frankish power.♦ The Frankish power which now
-plays so great a part in the world was a power essentially German. The
-Franks and their kings, the kings who reigned from the Elbe to the
-Ebro, were German in blood, speech, and feeling; but they bore rule
-over other lands, German, Latin, and Celtic, in many various degrees of
-incorporation and subjection.
-
-♦The three great powers of the eighth century; Romans, Franks,
-Saracens.♦
-
-Thus the effect of the Saracen conquests was to leave in Europe one
-purely European power, namely the kingdom of the Franks, one power
-both European and Asiatic, namely the Roman Empire with its seat at
-Constantinople, and one power at once Asiatic, African, and European,
-namely the Saracen Caliphate. Through the eighth century these three
-are the great powers of the world, to which the other nations of
-Europe and Asia form, as far as we are concerned, a mere background.
-♦Character of the Caliphate.♦ But the Caliphate, as a Semitic and
-Mahometan power, could be European only in a geographical sense.
-♦The Saracen dominion in Spain.♦ Even after the establishment of the
-independent Saracen dominion in Spain, the new power still remained
-an exotic. A great country of Western Europe was no longer ruled from
-Damascus or Bagdad; but the emirate, afterwards Caliphate, of Cordova,
-and the kingdoms into which it afterwards broke up, still remained only
-geographically European. They were portions of Asia—in after times
-rather of Africa—thrusting themselves into Europe, like the Spanish
-dominion of Carthage in earlier times. The two great Christian powers,
-the two great really European powers, are the Roman and the Frankish.
-We now come to the process which for a while caused the Roman and
-Frankish names to have the same meaning within a large part of Europe,
-and by which the two seats of Roman dominion were again parted asunder,
-never to be reunited.
-
-♦Relations of the Franks and the Empire.♦
-
-The way by which the Roman and Frankish powers came to affect one
-another was through the affairs of Italy. ♦The Imperial possessions in
-Italy.♦ The steps by which the Imperial power was, during the eighth
-century, weakened step by step in the territories which still remained
-to the Empire in central Italy are, either from an ecclesiastical or
-from a strictly historical point of view, of surpassing interest. But,
-as long as the authority of the Emperor was not openly thrown off,
-no change was made on the map. ♦Lombard conquest of the Exarchate.
-| Overthrow of the Lombards by Charles. 774.♦ The events of those times
-which did make a change on the map were, first the conquest of the
-Exarchate by the Lombards, and secondly, the overthrow of the Lombard
-kingdom itself by the Frank king Charles the Great. The Frankish power
-was thus at last established on the Italian side of the Alps, but it
-must be remarked that the new conquest was not incorporated with the
-Frankish dominion. ♦Lombardy a separate kingdom.♦ Charles held his
-Italian dominion as a separate dominion, and called himself King of
-the Franks and Lombards. He also bore the title of Patrician of the
-Romans; but, though the assumption of that title was of great political
-significance, it did not affect geography. ♦Title of Patrician.♦ The
-title of Patrician of itself implied a commission from the Emperor,
-and, though it was bestowed by the Bishop and people of Rome without
-the Imperial consent, the very choice of the title showed that the
-Imperial authority was not formally thrown off. Charles, as Patrician,
-was virtually sovereign of Rome, and his acquisition of the patriciate
-practically extended his dominion from the Ocean to the frontiers
-of Beneventum. ♦Nominal authority of the Empire.♦ But, down to his
-Imperial coronation in the last week of the eighth century, the Emperor
-who reigned in the New Rome was still the nominal sovereign of the old.
-The event of the year 800, with all its weighty significance, did not
-practically either extend the territories of Charles or increase his
-powers.
-
-♦Effect of the Imperial coronation of Charles. 800.♦
-
-Still the Imperial coronation of Charles is one of the great landmarks
-both of history and of historical geography. The whole political
-system of Europe was changed when the Old Rome cast off its formal
-allegiance to the New, and chose the King of the Franks and Lombards
-to be Emperor of the Romans. Though the powers of Charles were not
-increased nor his dominions extended, he held everything by a new
-title. ♦Final division of the Empire.♦ The Roman Empire was divided,
-never to be joined together again. But its Western half now took in,
-not only the greatest of its lost provinces, but vast regions which
-had never formed part of the Empire in the days of Trajan himself.
-Again, the distinctive character of the older Roman Empire had been
-the absence of nationality. The whole civilized world had become Rome,
-and all its free inhabitants had become Romans. ♦Growing nationality
-of the two Empires, German and Greek.♦ But from this time each of the
-two divisions of the Empire begins to assume something like a national
-character. East and West alike remained Roman in name and in political
-traditions. The Old Rome was the nominal centre of one; the New Rome
-was both the nominal and the real centre of the other. But there was
-a sense in which both alike ceased from this time to be Roman. The
-Western Empire has passed to a German king, and later changes tended
-to make his Empire more and more German. The Eastern Empire meanwhile,
-by the successive loss of the Eastern provinces, of Latin Africa, and
-of Latin Italy, became nearly conterminous with those parts of Europe
-and Asia where the Greek speech and Greek civilization prevailed. From
-one point of view, both Empires are still Roman; from another point of
-view, one is fast becoming German, the other is fast becoming Greek.
-♦Rivalry of the two Empires.♦ And the two powers into which the old
-Roman Empire is thus split are in the strictest sense two Empires.
-They are no longer mere divisions of an Empire which has been found
-to be too great for the rule of one man. The Emperors of the East and
-West are no longer Imperial colleagues dividing the administration
-of a single Empire between them. They are now rival potentates, each
-claiming to be exclusively the one true Roman Emperor, the one true
-representative of the common predecessors of both in the days when the
-Empire was still undivided.
-
-♦The two Caliphates.♦
-
-It is further to be noted that the same kind of change which now
-happened to the Christian Empire, had happened earlier in the century
-to the Mahometan Empire. The establishment of a rival dynasty at
-Cordova, even though the assumption of the actual title of Caliph
-did not follow at once, was exactly analogous to the establishment
-of a rival Empire in the Old Rome. The Mediterranean world has now
-four great powers, the two rival Christian Empires, and the two rival
-Mahometan Caliphates. Among these, it naturally follows that each
-is hostile to its neighbour of the opposite religion, and friendly
-to its neighbour’s rival. The Western Emperor is the enemy of the
-Western Caliph, the friend of the Eastern. ♦Rivalry of the Empires and
-Caliphates.♦ The Eastern Emperor is the enemy of the Eastern Caliph,
-the friend of the Western. Thus the four great powers stood at the
-beginning of the ninth century. And it was out of the dismemberments of
-the two great Christian and the great Mahometan powers that the later
-states, Christian and Mahometan, of the Mediterranean world took their
-rise.
-
-♦Extent of the Carolingian Empire.♦
-
-It is a point of geographical as well as of historical importance that
-Charles the Great, after he was crowned Emperor, caused all those who
-had been hitherto bound by allegiance to him as King of the Franks
-to swear allegiance to him afresh as Roman Emperor. This marks that
-all his dominions, Frankish, Lombard, and strictly Roman, are to be
-looked on as forming part of the Western Empire. Thus the Western
-Empire now took in all those German lands which the old Roman Emperors
-never could conquer. Germany became part of the Roman Empire, not by
-Rome conquering Germany, but by Rome choosing the German king as her
-Emperor. ♦Contrast of its boundaries with those of the elder Empire.♦
-The boundaries of the Empire thus became different from what they had
-ever been before. Of the old provinces of the Western Empire, Britain,
-Africa, and all Spain save one corner, remained foreign to the new
-Roman Empire of the Franks. But, on the other hand, the Empire now took
-in all the lands in Germany and beyond Germany over which the Frankish
-power now reached, but which had never formed part of the elder Empire.
-♦Conquest of Saxony. 772-804.♦ The long wars of Charles with the Saxons
-led to their final conquest, to the incorporation of _Saxony_ with the
-Frankish kingdom, and, after the Imperial coronation of the Frankish
-king, to its incorporation with the Western Empire.
-
-The conquests of Charles had thus, among their other results, welded
-Germany into a single whole. For though the Franks had long been the
-greatest power in Germany, yet Germany could not be said to form a
-single whole as long as the Saxons, the greatest people of Northern
-Germany, remained independent. The conquest of Saxony brought the
-Frankish power for the first time in contact with the _Danes_ and the
-other people of _Scandinavia_. ♦Boundary of the Eider.♦ The dominions
-of Charles took in what was then called Saxony beyond the Elbe, that is
-the modern Holstein, and the _Eider_ was fixed as the northern boundary
-of the Empire. More than one Danish king did homage to Charles and to
-some of the Emperors after him; but Denmark was never incorporated with
-the Empire or even made permanently dependent. ♦Slavonic allies and
-neighbours.♦ To the east, the immediate dominions of Charles stretched
-but a little way beyond the Elbe; but here the Western Empire came in
-contact, as the Eastern had done at an earlier time and by a different
-process, with the widely spread nations of the Slavonic race. The same
-movements which had driven one branch of that race to the south-west
-had driven another branch to the north-west, and the wars of Charles
-in those regions gave his Empire a fringe of Slavonic allies and
-dependents along both sides of the Elbe, forming a barrier between
-the immediate dominions of the Empire and the independent Slaves to
-the east. ♦Overthrow of the Avar kingdom. 796.♦ To the south Charles
-overthrew the kingdom of the _Avars_; he thus extended his dominions
-on the side of south-eastern Germany, and here he came in contact with
-the southern branch of the Slaves, a portion of whom, in _Carinthia_
-and the neighbouring lands, became subjects of his Empire. ♦The Spanish
-March. 778.♦ In Spain he acquired the north-eastern corner as far as
-the Ebro, forming the Spanish March, afterwards the county of Barcelona.
-
-♦Divisions of the Empire.♦
-
-Thus the new Western Empire took in all Gaul, all that was then
-Germany, the greater part of Italy, and a small part of Spain.[7] It
-thus took in both Teutonic and Romance lands, and contained in it the
-germs of the chief nations of modern Europe. It was a step towards
-their formation when Charles, following the example both of earlier
-Roman Emperors and of earlier Frankish kings, planned several divisions
-of his dominions among his sons. Owing to the deaths of all his sons
-but one, none of these divisions took effect. And it should be noticed
-that as yet none of these schemes of division agreed with any great
-natural or national boundary. They did not as yet foreshadow the
-division which afterwards took place, and out of which the chief states
-of Western Europe grew. In two cases only was anything like a national
-kingdom thought of. ♦Kingdom of Aquitaine.♦ Charles’s son Lewis reigned
-under him as king in _Aquitaine_, a kingdom which took in all Southern
-Gaul and the Spanish March, answering pretty nearly to the lands of
-the Provençal tongue or tongue of _Oc_. ♦Death of Charles. 814.♦ And
-when Charles died, and was succeeded in the Empire by Lewis, Charles’s
-grandson Bernard still went on reigning under his uncle as King of
-Italy. ♦Kingdom of Italy.♦ The _Kingdom of Italy_ must be understood
-as taking in the Italian mainland, except the lands in the south which
-were held by the dependent princes of Beneventum and by the rival
-Emperors of the East. ♦Use of the name _Francia_.♦ During this period
-_Francia_ commonly means the strictly Frankish kingdoms, Gaulish
-and German. The words _Gallia_ and _Germania_ are used in a strictly
-geographical sense.
-
-
-§ 6. _Northern Europe._
-
-♦Scandinavians and English.♦
-
-Meanwhile other nations were beginning to show themselves in those
-parts of Europe which lay beyond the Empire. In north-western Europe
-two branches of the Teutonic race were fast growing into importance;
-the one in lands which had never formed part of the Empire, the other
-in a land which had been part of it, but which had been so utterly
-severed from it as to be all one as if it had never belonged to it.
-These were the _Scandinavian_ nations in the two great peninsulas of
-Northern Europe, and the _English_ in the Isle of Britain. The history
-of these two races is closely connected, and it has an important
-bearing on the history of Europe in general.
-
-♦Stages of the English conquest of Britain.♦
-
-In Britain itself the progress of the English arms had been gradual.
-Sometimes conquests from the Britons were made with great speed:
-sometimes the English advance was checked by successes on the British
-side, by mere inaction, or by wars between the different English
-kingdoms. The fluctuations of victory, and consequently of boundaries,
-between the English kingdoms were quite as marked as the warfare
-between the English and the Britons. ♦The English kingdoms.♦ Among the
-many Teutonic settlements in Britain, small and great, seven kingdoms
-stand out as of special importance, and three of these, _Wessex_,
-_Mercia_, and _Northumberland_, again stand out as candidates for a
-general supremacy over the whole English name. ♦Britain at the end of
-the eighth century.♦ At the end of the eighth century a large part
-of Britain remained, as it still remains, in the hands of the elder
-Celtic inhabitants; but the parts which they still kept were now cut
-off from each other. ♦Celtic states.♦ _Cornwall_ or _West-Wales_,
-_North-Wales_ (answering nearly to the modern principality), and
-_Strathclyde_ or _Cumberland_ (a much larger district than the modern
-county so called) were all the seats of separate, though fluctuating,
-British states. Beyond the Forth lay the independent kingdoms of the
-_Picts_ and _Scots_, which, in the course of the ninth century, became
-one.
-
-♦West-Saxon supremacy under Ecgberht. 802-837.♦
-
-It was the West-Saxon kingdom to which the supremacy over all the
-kingdoms of Britain, Teutonic and Celtic, came in the end. Ecgberht,
-its king, had been a friend and guest of Charles the Great, and he had
-most likely been stirred up by his example to do in his own island
-what Charles had done on the mainland. In the course of his reign,
-West-Wales was completely conquered; the other English kingdoms,
-together with North-Wales, were brought into a greater or less
-degree of dependence. But both in North-Wales and also in Mercia,
-Northumberland, and East-Anglia, the local kings went on reigning under
-the supremacy of the King of the West-Saxons, who now began sometimes
-to call himself _King of the English_. In the north both Scotland and
-Strathclyde remained quite independent.
-
-♦The Scandinavian nations.♦
-
-That part also of the Teutonic race which lay altogether beyond the
-bounds of the Empire now begins to be of importance. ♦The Danes.♦ The
-_Danes_ are heard of as early as the days of Justinian; but neither
-they nor the other Scandinavian nations play any great part in history
-before the time of Charles the Great. A great number of small states
-gradually settled down into three great kingdoms, which remain still,
-though their boundaries have greatly changed. The boundary between
-Denmark and the Empire was, as we have seen, fixed at the Eider.
-♦Extent of Denmark and Norway.♦ Besides the peninsula of Jutland
-and the islands which still belong to it, Denmark took in _Scania_
-and other lands in the south of the great peninsula that now forms
-_Sweden_ and _Norway_. Norway, on the other hand, ran much further
-inland, and came down much further south than it does now. These points
-are of importance, because they show the causes of the later history
-of the three Scandinavian states. ♦Sweden.♦ Both Denmark and Norway
-had a great front to the Ocean, while _Swithiod_ and _Gauthiod_, the
-districts which formed the beginning of the kingdom of Sweden, had no
-opening that way, but were altogether turned towards the Baltic. It
-thus came about that for some centuries both Denmark and Norway played
-a much greater part in the general affairs of Europe than Sweden did.
-♦Danish and Norwegian settlements.♦ Denmark was an immediate neighbour
-of the Empire, and from both Denmark and Norway men went out to conquer
-and settle in various parts of Britain, Ireland and Gaul, besides
-colonizing the more distant and uninhabited lands of _Iceland_ and
-_Greenland_. ♦Pressure of Swedes to the East.♦ Meanwhile, the Swedes
-pressed eastward on the Finnish and Slavonic people beyond the Baltic.
-In this last way they had a great effect on the history of the Eastern
-Empire; but in Western history Sweden counts for very little till a
-much later time.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Summary.♦
-
-During the period which has been dealt with in this chapter, taking in
-the sixth, seventh, and eighth centuries, we thus see, first of all the
-reunion of the greater part of the Roman Empire under Justinian—then
-the lopping away of the Eastern and African provinces by the conquests
-of the Saracens—then the gradual separation of all Italy except the
-south, ending in the re-establishment of a separate Western Empire
-under Charles the Great. We thus get two great Christian powers, the
-Eastern and Western Empires, balanced by two great Mahometan powers,
-the Eastern and Western Caliphates. All the older Teutonic kingdoms
-have either vanished or have grown into something wholly different.
-The Vandal kingdom of Africa and the East-Gothic kingdom have wholly
-vanished. The West-Gothic kingdom, cut short by Franks on one side and
-Saracens on the other, survives only in the form of the small Christian
-principalities which still held their ground in Northern Spain. The
-Frankish kingdom, by swallowing up the Gothic and Burgundian dominions
-in Gaul, the independent nations of Germany, the Lombard kingdom, and
-the more part of the possessions of the Empire in Italy, has grown
-into a new Western Empire. The two Empires, both still politically
-Roman, are fast becoming, one German and the other Greek. Meanwhile,
-nations beyond the bounds of the Empire are growing into importance.
-The process has begun by which the many small Teutonic settlements in
-Britain grew in the end into the one kingdom of England. The three
-Scandinavian nations, Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians or Northmen, now
-begin to grow into importance. In a religious point of view, if Syria,
-Egypt, Africa, and the more part of Spain were lost to Christendom,
-the loss was in some degree made up by the conversion to Christianity
-of the Angles and Saxons in Britain, of the Old-Saxons in Germany, and
-of the other German tribes which at the beginning of the sixth century
-had still been heathen. At no time in the world’s history did the map
-undergo greater changes. This period is the time of real transition
-from the older state of things represented by the undivided Roman
-Empire to the newer state of things in which Europe is made up of a
-great number of independent states. The modern kingdoms outside the
-Empire, in Britain and Scandinavia, were already forming. The great
-continental nations of Western Europe had as yet hardly begun to form.
-They were to grow out of the break-up of the Carolingian Empire, the
-Roman Empire of the Franks.[8]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[7] The geographical extent of the Frankish dominion before and after
-the conquest of Charles is most fully marked by Einhard, Vita Karoli,
-c. 15.
-
-[8] While I was revising this chapter, I became acquainted with C. J.
-Jireček’s _Geschichte der Bulgaren_ (Prag, 1876), the third chapter
-of which is devoted to an examination of the early settlements of
-the Slaves in the Eastern peninsula. He makes it probable that they
-were there earlier than is generally thought. They seem, exactly
-like the Teutons, to have first entered the Empire as captives and
-colonists, a process which may have begun as early as the second and
-third centuries. He shows also that the march of Theodoric into Italy
-had the effect of laying a large region open to their settlements.
-But he leaves my general propositions untouched. It is not till the
-sixth century that those Slavonic movements began which are of real
-importance to historical geography.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE BEGINNING OF THE MODERN EUROPEAN STATES.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Division of the Frankish Empire._
-
-♦Dissolution of the Frankish dominion.♦
-
-The great dominion of the Franks, the German kingdom which had so
-strangely grown into a new Western Roman Empire, did not last long.
-In the course of the ninth century it altogether fell to pieces. ♦The
-chief states of modern Europe spring out of it.♦ But the process by
-which it fell to pieces must be carefully traced, because it was out
-of its dismemberment that the chief states of Western Europe arose.
-Speaking roughly, the Carolingian Empire took in Germany, so far as
-Germany had yet spread to the East, all Gaul, a great part of Italy,
-and a small part of Spain. ♦National kingdoms not yet formed.♦ Of
-these, it was only Italy, and sometimes Aquitaine, which showed any
-approach to the character of a separate or national kingdom. ♦Extent
-of _Francia_.♦ Northern Gaul and central Germany were still alike
-_Francia_; and, though the Romance speech prevailed in one, and the
-Teutonic speech in the other, no national distinction was drawn between
-them during the time of Charles the Great. Among the proposed divisions
-of his Empire, none proposed to separate _Neustria_ and _Austria_,
-the Western and the Eastern _Francia_. ♦Separate being of Italy and
-Aquitaine.♦ But Italy did form a separate kingdom under the superiority
-of the Emperor; and so for a while there was an under-kingdom of
-Aquitaine, answering roughly to Gaul south of the Loire. This is the
-land of the _Provençal_ tongue, the _tongue of Oc_, a tongue which,
-it must be remembered, reached to the Ebro. ♦Division under Lewis
-the Pious. | First glimpses of Modern France.♦ It is in the various
-divisions, contemplated and actual, among the sons of Lewis the Pious,
-the successor of Charles the Great, that we see the first approaches to
-a national division between Germany and Gaul, and the first glimmerings
-of a state answering in any way to _France_ in the modern sense.
-
-♦Division of 817.♦
-
-The earliest among those endless divisions that we need mention is the
-division of 817, by which two new subordinate kingdoms were founded
-within the Empire. Lewis and his immediate colleague Lothar kept in
-their own hands _Francia_, German and Gaulish, and the more part of
-Burgundy. South-western Gaul, Aquitaine in the wide sense, with some
-small parts of Septimania and Burgundy, formed the portion of one
-under-king; South-eastern Germany, Bavaria and the march-lands beyond
-it, formed the portion of another. Italy still remained the portion of
-a third. Here we have nothing in the least answering to modern France.
-The tendency is rather to leave the immediate Frankish kingdom, both in
-Gaul and Germany, as an undivided whole, and to part off its dependent
-lands, German, Gaulish, and Italian. ♦Union of Neustria and Aquitaine
-the first step to the creation of _France_. 838.♦ But, in a much later
-division, Lewis granted Neustria to his son Charles, and in the next
-year, on the death of Pippin of Aquitaine, he added his kingdom to
-that of Charles. A state was thus formed which answers roughly to the
-later kingdom of France, as it stood before the long series of French
-encroachments on the German and Burgundian lands. ♦Character of the
-_Western Kingdom_.♦ The kingdom thus formed had no definite name, and
-it answered to no national division. It was indeed mainly a kingdom
-of the Romance speech, but it did not answer to any one of the great
-divisions of that speech. It was a kingdom formed by accident, because
-Lewis wished to increase the portion of his youngest son. Still there
-can be no doubt that we have here the first beginning of the kingdom
-of _France_, though it was not till after several other stages that
-the kingdom thus formed took that name. ♦Division of Verdun. 843.♦ The
-final division of Verdun went a step further in the direction of the
-modern map. It left Charles in possession of a kingdom which still more
-nearly answered to France, as France stood before its Burgundian and
-German annexations. It also founded a kingdom which roughly answered
-to the later _Germany_ before its great extension to the East at the
-expense of the Slavonic nations. And, as the Western kingdom was
-formed by the addition of Aquitaine to the Western _Francia_, so the
-Eastern kingdom was formed by the addition of the Eastern _Francia_ to
-Bavaria. Lewis of Bavaria became king of a kingdom which we are tempted
-to call the kingdom of _Germany_. Still it would as yet be premature
-to speak of France at all, or even to speak of Germany, except in the
-geographical sense. ♦Kingdoms of the Eastern and Western Franks.♦ The
-two kingdoms are severally the kingdoms of the _Eastern_ and of the
-_Western Franks_. But between these two states the policy of the ninth
-century instinctively put a barrier. The Emperor Lothar, besides Italy,
-kept a long narrow strip of territory between the dominions of his
-Eastern and Western brothers. After him, Italy remained to his son the
-Emperor Lewis, while the border lands of Germany and Gaul passed to the
-younger Lothar. ♦Kingdom of _Lotharingia_, Lothringen, Lorraine.♦ This
-land, having thus been the dominion of two Lothars, took the name of
-_Lotharingia_, _Lothringen_, or _Lorraine_, a name which part of it has
-kept to this day. This land, sometimes attached to the Eastern kingdom,
-sometimes to the Western, sometimes divided between the two, sometimes
-separated from both, always kept its character of a border-land. ♦The
-Western Kingdom called _Karolingia_.♦ The kingdom to the west of it, in
-like manner took the name of _Karolingia_, which, according to the same
-analogy, should be _Charlaine_. It is only by a caprice of language
-that the name of Lotharingia has survived, while that of Karolingia has
-died out.
-
-♦Burgundy, or the Middle Kingdom.♦
-
-Meanwhile, in South-eastern Gaul, between the Rhone and the Alps,
-another kingdom arose, namely the kingdom of _Burgundy_. ♦Union under
-Charles the Fat. 884.♦ Under Charles the Third, commonly known as the
-Fat, all the Frankish dominions, except Burgundy, were again united for
-a moment. ♦Division on his deposition. 887.♦ On his deposition they
-split asunder again. We now have four distinct kingdoms, those of the
-_Eastern_ and _Western Franks_, the forerunners of Germany and France,
-the kingdom of _Italy_, and _Burgundy_, sometimes forming one kingdom
-and sometimes two. _Lotharingia_ remained a border-land between the
-Eastern and Western kingdoms, attached sometimes to one, sometimes to
-another. Out of these elements arose the great kingdoms and nations
-of Western Europe. The four can hardly be better described than they
-are by the Old-English Chronicler: ‘Arnulf then dwelled in the land to
-the East of Rhine; and Rudolf took to the middle kingdom; and Oda to
-the West deal; and Berengar and Guy to the Lombards’ land, and to the
-lands on that side of the mountain.’ But the geography of all the four
-kingdoms which now arose must be described at somewhat greater length.
-
-It must be borne in mind that all these divisions of the great Frankish
-dominion were, in theory, like the ancient divisions of the Empire,
-a mere parcelling out of a common possession among several royal
-colleagues. ♦No formal titles or names of the Frankish kingdoms.♦ The
-Kings had no special titles, and their dominions had no special names
-recognized in formal use. Every king who ruled over any part of the
-ancient _Francia_ was a King of the Franks, just as much as all among
-the many rulers of the Roman Empire in the days of Diocletian and
-Constantine were equally Roman Augusti or Cæsars. As the kings and
-their kingdoms had no formal titles specially set apart for them, the
-writers of the time had to describe them as they might.[9] ♦Various
-names of the Eastern Kingdom or _Germany_.♦ The Eastern part of the
-Frankish dominions, the lot of Lewis the German and his successors,
-is thus called the _Eastern Kingdom_, the _Teutonic Kingdom_. Its
-king is the _King of the East-Franks_, sometimes simply the King of
-the _Eastern men_, sometimes the _King of Germany_. This last name,
-convenient in use, was inaccurate as a formal title, for the _Regnum
-Teutonicum_ lay geographically partly in Germany, partly in Gaul.[10]
-To the men of the Western kingdom the Eastern king sometimes appeared
-as the _King beyond the Rhine_. The title of _King of Germany_ is
-often found in the ninth century as a description, but it was not a
-formal title. The Eastern king, like other kings, for the most part
-simply calls himself _Rex_, till the time came when his rank as King of
-Germany or of the East-Franks became simply a step towards the higher
-title of Emperor of the Romans. ♦Connexion between the Eastern Kingdom
-and the Empire.♦ But it must be remembered, that the special connexion
-between the Roman Empire and the German kingdom did not begin at once
-on the division of 887. ♦Imperial coronation of Arnulf. 896. | Homage
-of Odo to Arnulf. 888.♦ Arnulf indeed, the first German King after the
-division, made his way to Rome and was crowned Emperor; and it marks
-the position of the Eastern kingdom as the chief among the kingdoms of
-the Franks, that the West-Frankish King Odo did homage to Arnulf before
-his lord’s Imperial coronation, when he was still simple German king.
-♦Final union of Germany with the Empire under Otto the Great. 963.♦
-The rule that whoever was chosen King of Germany had a right, without
-further election, to the kingdom of Italy and to the Roman Empire,
-began only with the coronation of Otto the Great. Up to that time, the
-German king is simply one of the kings of the Franks, though it is
-plain that he held the highest place among them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Extent of the German kingdom.♦
-
-This Eastern or German kingdom, as it came out of the division of
-887, had, from north to south, nearly the same extent as the Germany
-of later times. It stretched from the Alps to the Eider. Its southern
-boundaries were somewhat fluctuating. _Verona_ and _Aquileia_ are
-sometimes counted as a German march, and the boundary between Germany
-and Burgundy, crossing the modern Switzerland, often changed. To the
-North-east the kingdom hardly stretched beyond the Elbe, except in the
-small Saxon land between the Elbe and the Eider. The great extension of
-the German power over the Slavonic lands beyond the Elbe had hardly
-yet begun. ♦The Austrian and Carinthian marks.♦ To the South-east lay
-the two border-lands or _marks_; the _Eastern Mark_, which grew into
-the later duchy of _Oesterreich_ or the modern _Austria_, and to the
-south of it the mark of _Kärnthen_ or _Carinthia_. ♦The great duchies.♦
-But the main part of the kingdom consisted of the great duchies of
-_Saxony_, _Eastern Francia_, _Alemannia_, and _Bavaria_. ♦Saxony.♦ Of
-these the two names of Saxony and Bavaria must be carefully marked
-as having widely different meanings from those which they bear on
-the modern map. Ancient Saxony lies, speaking roughly, between the
-Eider, the Elbe, and the Rhine, though it never actually touches
-the last-named river. ♦Eastern or Teutonic _Francia_.♦ To the south
-of Saxony lies the Eastern _Francia_, the centre and kernel of the
-German kingdom. The Main and the Neckar both join the Rhine within
-its borders. To the south of Francia lie _Alemannia_ and _Bavaria_.
-♦Alemannia and Bavaria.♦ This last, it must be remembered, borders on
-Italy, with Bötzen for its frontier town. Alemannia is the land in
-which both the Rhine and the Danube take their source; it stretches
-on both sides of the _Bodensee_ or Lake of Constanz, with the Rætian
-Alps as its southern boundary. For several ages to come, there is no
-distinction, national or even provincial, between the lands north and
-south of the Bodensee.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Lotharingia.♦
-
-These lands make up the undoubted Eastern or German territory. To the
-west of this lies the border land of _Lotharingia_, which has a history
-of its own. For the first century after the division of 887, the
-possession of Lotharingia fluctuated several times between the Eastern
-and the Western kingdom. ♦987.♦ After the change of dynasty in the
-Western kingdom, Lotharingia became definitely and undoubtedly German
-in allegiance, though it always kept up something of a distinct being,
-and its language was partly German and partly Romance. Lotharingia took
-in the two duchies of the _Ripuarian Lotharingia_ and _Lotharingia on
-the Mosel_. The former contains a large part of the modern Belgium
-and the neighbouring lands on the Rhine, including the royal city of
-Aachen. Lotharingia on the Mosel answers roughly to the later duchy of
-that name, though its extent to the East is considerably larger.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Western Kingdom.♦
-
-The part of the Frankish dominions to which the Frankish name has
-stuck most lastingly has been the Western kingdom or _Karolingia_,
-which gradually got the special name of _France_. This came about
-through the events of the ninth and tenth centuries. ♦Its extent.♦
-The Western kingdom, as it was formed under Charles the Bald and as
-it remained after the division of 887, nominally took in a great part
-of modern France, namely all west of the Rhone and Saône. It took in
-nothing to the east of those rivers, and Lotharingia, as we have seen,
-was a border land which at last settled down as part of the Eastern
-kingdom. Thus the extent of the old _Karolingia_ to the east was very
-much smaller than the extent of modern France. But, on the other hand,
-the Western kingdom took in lands at three points which are not part
-of modern France. These are the march or county of _Flanders_ in the
-north, the greater part of which forms part of the modern kingdom of
-Belgium; the _Spanish March_, or county of _Barcelona_, which is now
-part of Spain; and the _Norman Islands_ which are now held by the
-sovereign of England. And it is hardly needful to say that, even within
-these boundaries, the whole land was not in the hands of the King of
-the West-Franks. He had only a supremacy, which was apt to become
-nearly nominal, over the vassal princes who held the great divisions
-of the kingdom. ♦The great fiefs.♦ South of the Loire the chief of
-these vassal states were the duchy of _Aquitaine_, a name which now
-means the land between the Loire and the Garonne—the duchy of _Gascony_
-between the Garonne and the Pyrenees—the county of _Toulouse_ to the
-east of it—the marches of _Septimania_ and _Barcelona_. North of the
-Loire were _Britanny_, where native Celtic princes still reigned under
-a very doubtful supremacy on the part of the Frankish kings—the march
-of _Flanders_ in the north—and the duchy of _Burgundy_, the duchy which
-had Dijon for its capital, and which must be carefully distinguished
-from other duchies and kingdoms of the same name. ♦The Duchy of
-France.♦ And, greatest of all, there was the duchy of _France_, that is
-_Western_ or _Latin France_, _Francia Occidentalis_ or _Latina_. Its
-capital was Paris, and its princes were called _Duces Francorum_, a
-title in which the word _Francus_ is just beginning to change from its
-older meaning of _Frank_ to its later meaning of _French_. ♦Normandy
-cut off from France. 912.♦ From this great duchy of France several
-great fiefs, as _Anjou_ and _Champagne_, were gradually cut off, and
-the part of France between the Seine and the Epte was granted to the
-Scandinavian chief Rolf, which, under him and his successors, grew
-into the great duchy of _Normandy_. Its capital was Rouen, and this
-settlement of the Normans had the effect of cutting off France and its
-capital Paris from the sea.
-
-The modern French kingdom gradually came into being during the century
-after the deposition of Charles the Fat. ♦Fluctuations between the
-Duchy of the French at Paris and the Karlings at Laon. 888-987.♦ During
-this time the crown of the Western kingdom passed to and fro more
-than once between the Dukes of the French at Paris and the princes of
-the house of Charles the Great, whose only immediate dominion was the
-city and district of _Laon_ near the Lotharingian border. Thus, for
-a hundred years, the royal city of the Western kingdom was sometimes
-Laon and sometimes Paris, and the King of the West-Franks was sometimes
-the same person as the Duke of the French and sometimes not. ♦Union
-of the French Duchy with the West-Frankish kingdom. 987.♦ But after
-the election of Hugh Capet, the kingdom and the duchy were never again
-separated. The Kings of _Karolingia_ or the Western kingdom, and the
-Dukes of the _Western Francia_, were now the same persons. ♦New meaning
-of the word _France_.♦ _France_ then—the Western or Latin _Francia_,
-as distinguished from the German _Francia_ or _Franken_—properly meant
-only the King’s immediate dominions. Though Normandy, Aquitaine, and
-the Duchy of Burgundy, all owed homage to the French king, no one
-would have spoken of them as parts of France. ♦Advance of the French
-kingdom.♦ But, as the French kings, step by step, got possession of the
-dominions of their vassals and other neighbours, the name of _France_
-gradually spread, till it took in, as it now does, by far the greater
-part of Gaul. On the other hand, Flanders, Barcelona, and the Norman
-islands, though once under the homage of the French kings, have fallen
-altogether away, and have therefore never been reckoned as parts of
-France. Thus the name of _France_ supplanted the name of _Karolingia_
-as the name of the Western kingdom. ♦Title of _Rex Francorum_.♦ And,
-as it so happened that the Western kings kept on the title of _Rex
-Francorum_ after it had been dropped in the Eastern kingdom, that
-title gradually came to mean, not King of the _Franks_, but King of
-the _French_, King of the new Romance-speaking nation which grew up
-under them. ♦Origin of the French nation.♦ Thus it was that the modern
-kingdom and nation of France arose through the crown of the Western
-kingdom passing to the Dukes of the Western _Francia_. ♦Paris the
-kernel of France.♦ Paris is not only the capital of the kingdom; it is
-the kernel round which the kingdom and nation grew.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Middle Kingdom or Burgundy.♦
-
-Of all geographical names, that which has changed its meaning the
-greatest number of times is the name of _Burgundy_. ♦Various meanings
-of the name _Burgundy_.♦ It is specially needful to explain its
-different meanings at this stage, when there are always two, and
-sometimes more, distinct states bearing the Burgundian name. ♦The
-French Duchy.♦ Of the older Burgundian kingdom, the north-western
-part, forming the land best known as the _Duchy of Burgundy_, was,
-in the divisions of the ninth century, a fief of Karolingia or the
-Western kingdom. This is the Burgundy which has Dijon for its capital,
-and which was held by more than one dynasty of dukes as vassals of
-the Western kings, first at Laon and then at Paris. This Burgundy,
-which, as the name of France came to bear its modern sense, may be
-distinguished as the _French Duchy_, must be carefully distinguished
-from the _Royal_ Burgundy, the _Middle Kingdom_ of our own chronicler.
-♦The Kingdom of Burgundy or Arles.♦ This is a state which arose out of
-the divisions of the ninth century, and which, sometimes as a single
-kingdom, sometimes as two, took in all the rest of the old Burgundian
-kingdom which did not form part of the French duchy. It may be roughly
-defined as the land between the Rhone and Saône and the Alps, though
-its somewhat fluctuating boundaries sometimes stretched west of the
-Rhone, and its eastern frontier towards Germany changed more than once.
-It thus took in the original Roman province in Gaul, which may be now
-spoken of as _Provence_, with its great cities, foremost among them
-_Arelate_ or _Arles_, which was the capital of the kingdom, and from
-which the land was sometimes called the _Kingdom of Arles_. ♦Cities
-of the Burgundian kingdom.♦ It also took in Lyons, the primatial city
-of Gaul, Geneva, Besançon, and other important Roman towns. In short,
-from its position, it contained a greater number of the former seats
-of Roman power than any of the new kingdoms except Italy itself.
-♦Cis-jurane.♦ When Burgundy formed two kingdoms, the Northern or
-_Trans-jurane_ Burgundy took in, speaking roughly, the lands north of
-Lyons, and _Cis-jurane_ Burgundy those between Lyons and the sea. These
-last are now wholly French. The ancient Transjurane Burgundy is in
-modern geography divided between France and Switzerland.
-
-♦Burgundy separated from the Frankish kingdoms.♦
-
-The history of this Burgundian kingdom differs in one respect from
-that of any other of the states which arose out of the break-up of the
-Frankish Empire. It parted off wholly from the Carolingian dominion
-before the division of 887. It formed no part of the reunited Empire
-of Charles the Fat. It may therefore be looked on as having parted off
-altogether from the immediately Frankish rule, though it often appears
-as more or less dependent on the kings of the Eastern Francia. But its
-time of separate being was short. ♦Union of the kingdom with Germany.
-| Later history of Burgundy: mostly annexed by France.♦ After about a
-century and a half from its foundation, the Burgundian kingdom was
-united under the same kings as Germany, and its later history consists
-of the way in which the greater part of the old Middle Kingdom has
-been swallowed up bit by bit by the modern kingdom of France. The only
-part which has escaped is that which now forms the western cantons of
-Switzerland. ♦Partly represented by Switzerland.♦ In truth the Swiss
-Confederation may be looked on as having, in some slight degree,
-inherited the position of the Burgundian kingdom as a middle state.
-Otherwise, while the Eastern and Western kingdoms of the Franks have
-grown into two of the greatest powers and nations in modern Europe,
-the Burgundian kingdom has been altogether wiped out. Not only its
-independence, but its very name, has passed from it. The name Burgundy
-has for a long time past been commonly used to express the French duchy
-only.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Kingdom of Italy.♦
-
-Italy, unlike Burgundy, formed part of the reunited dominion of
-Charles the Fat; but it altogether passed away from Frankish rule
-at the division of 887. It must be remembered that, though Lombardy
-was conquered by Charles the Great, yet it was not merged in the
-Frankish dominions, but was held as a separate kingdom by the King
-of the Franks and Lombards. ♦Carolingian Kings of Italy.♦ Till the
-reunion under Charles the Fat, Italy, as a separate kingdom, was
-ruled by kings of the Carolingian house, some of whom were crowned
-at Rome as Emperors. After the final division, it had separate kings
-of its own, being not uncommonly disputed between two rival kings.
-♦Italian Emperors.♦ Some of these kings even obtained Imperial rank.
-♦Extent of the Italian kingdom.♦ The Italian kingdom, it must be
-remembered, was far from taking in the whole Italian peninsula. Its
-southern boundary was much the same as the old boundaries of Latium
-and Picenum, reaching somewhat further to the south on the Hadriatic
-coast. ♦Separate principalities of Benevento and Salerno.♦ To the south
-were the separate principalities of _Benevento_ and _Salerno_, and
-the lands which still clave to the Eastern Emperors. The kingdom thus
-took in Lombardy, Liguria, _Friuli_ in the widest sense, taking in
-_Trent_ and _Istria_, though these latter lands are sometimes counted
-as a German march, while the Venetian islands still kept up their
-connexion with the Eastern Empire. It took in also _Tuscany_, _Romagna_
-or the former Exarchate of Ravenna, _Spoleto_, and _Rome_ itself. ♦The
-Kingdom of Italy represents the Lombard Kingdom.♦ The Italian kingdom
-thus represented the old Lombard kingdom, together with the provinces
-which were formally transferred from the Eastern to the Western Empire
-by the election of Charles the Great. But it may be looked on as
-essentially a continuation of the Lombard kingdom. ♦Milan its capital.♦
-The rank of capital of the Italian kingdom, as distinguished from the
-Roman Empire, passed away from the old Lombard capital of _Pavia_
-to the ecclesiastical metropolis of _Milan_, and Milan became the
-crowning-place of the Kings of Italy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Abeyance of the Empire.♦
-
-For nearly eighty years after the division of 887, the Roman Empire of
-the West may be looked on as having fallen into a kind of abeyance.
-One German and several Italian kings were crowned Emperors; but they
-never obtained any general acknowledgement throughout the West. There
-could not be said to be any Western Empire with definite geographical
-boundaries. ♦Restoration of the Western Empire by Otto.♦ A change in
-this respect took place in the second half of the tenth century under
-the German king Otto the Great. ♦952.♦ While he was still only German
-king, Berengar King of Italy became his man, as Odo of Paris had
-become the man of Arnulf. ♦962, 963.♦ Afterwards Otto himself obtained
-the Italian kingdom, and was crowned Emperor at Rome. The rule was now
-fully established that the German king who was crowned at Aachen had
-a right to be crowned King of Italy at Milan and Emperor at Rome. A
-geographical Western Empire was thus again founded, consisting of the
-two kingdoms of Germany and Italy, to which Burgundy was afterwards
-added. ♦The three Imperial kingdoms.♦ These three kingdoms now formed
-the Empire, which thus consisted of the whole dominions of Charles
-the Great—allowing for a different eastern frontier—except the part
-which formed the Western kingdom, _Karolingia_, afterwards _France_.
-This union of three of the four kingdoms gave a more distinct and
-antagonistic character to the fourth which remained separate.
-Karolingia looked like a part of the great Frankish dominion lopped off
-from the main body. ♦Relations between the Empire and France.♦ On the
-other hand, now that the German kings, the Kings of the East-Franks,
-were also Kings of Italy and Burgundy and Emperors of the Romans, they
-gradually dropped their Frankish style. But, as that style was kept
-by the Western kings, and still more as the name of their duchy of
-France gradually spread over so large a part of Gaul, the kingdom of
-France had a superficial look of representing the old Frankish kingdom.
-The newly-constituted Empire had thus a distinctly rival power on its
-western side. And we shall find that a great part of our story will
-consist of the way in which, on this side, the Imperial frontier went
-back, and the French frontier advanced. On the other side, the Eastern
-frontier of the Empire was capable of any amount of advance at the cost
-of its Slavonic neighbours.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Eastern Empire._
-
-♦The Eastern Empire.♦
-
-The effect of the various changes of the seventh and eighth centuries,
-the rise of the Saracens, the settlement of the Slaves, the transfer
-of the Western Empire to the Franks, seem really to have had the
-effect of strengthening the Eastern Empire which they so terribly cut
-short. It began for the first time to put on something of a national
-character. ♦It takes a Greek character.♦ As the Western Empire was
-fast becoming German, so the Eastern Empire was fast becoming Greek.
-♦Rivalry of the Eastern and Western or Greek and Latin Churches.♦ And
-a religious distinction was soon added to the distinction of language.
-As the schism between the Churches came on, the Greek-speaking lands
-attached themselves to the Eastern, and not to the Western, form of
-Christianity. The Eastern Empire, keeping on all its Roman titles and
-traditions, had thus become nearly identical with what may be called
-the artificial Greek nation. It continues the work of hellenization
-which was begun by the old Greek colonies and which went on under the
-Macedonian kings. ♦Fluctuations in the extent of the Empire.♦ No power
-gives more work for the geographer; through the alternate periods of
-decay and revival which make up nearly the whole of Byzantine history,
-provinces were always being lost and always being won back again. And
-it supplies also a geographical study of another kind, in the new
-divisions into which the Empire was now mapped out, divisions which,
-for the most part, have very little reference to the divisions of
-earlier times.
-
-♦The _Themes_ as described by Constantine Porphyrogennêtos.♦
-
-The _Themes_ or provinces of the Eastern Empire, as they stood in
-the tenth century, have had the privilege of being elaborately
-described by an Imperial geographer in the person of Constantine
-Porphyrogennêtos.[11] He speaks of the division as comparatively
-recent, and of some themes as having been formed almost in his own
-time. The themes would certainly seem to have been mapped out after
-the Empire had been cut short both to the north and to the east.
-The nomenclature of the new divisions is singular and diversified.
-♦Asiatic Themes.♦ Some ancient national names are kept, while the
-titles of others seem fantastic enough. Thus in Asia _Paphlagonia_
-and _Kappadokia_ remain names of themes with some approach to their
-ancient boundaries; but the _Armenian_ theme is thrust far to the
-west of any of the earlier uses of the name, so that the Halys flows
-through it. Between it and the still independent Armenia lay the theme
-of _Chaldia_, with Trapezous, the future seat of Emperors, for its
-capital. Along the Saracen frontier lie the themes of _Kolôneia_,
-_Mesopotamia_—a shadowy survival indeed of the Mesopotamia of Trajan,
-of which it was not even a part—_Sebasteia_, _Lykandos_, _Kappadokia_,
-and _Seleukeia_, called from the Isaurian or Kilikian city of that
-name. Along the south coast the city of _Kibyra_ has given—in mockery,
-says Constantine—its name to the theme of the _Kibyrraiotians_, which
-reaches as far as Milêtos. The isle of _Samos_ gives its name to a
-theme reaching from Milêtos to Adramyttion, while the theme of the
-_Ægæan Sea_, besides most of the islands, stretches on to the mainland
-of the ancient Aiolis. The rest of the Propontis is bordered by themes
-bearing the strange names of _Opsikion_ and _Optimatôn_, names of Latin
-origin, in the former of which the word _obsequium_ is to be traced.
-To the east of them the no less strangely named _Thema Boukellariôn_
-takes in the Euxine Hêrakleia. Inland and away from the frontier are
-the themes _Thrakêsion_ and _Anatolikon_, while another Asiatic theme
-is formed by the island of _Cyprus_.
-
-♦The European Themes.♦
-
-The nomenclature of the European themes is more intelligible. Most
-of them bear ancient names, and the districts which bear them are at
-least survivals of the lands which bore them of old. After a good deal
-of shifting, owing to the loss and recovery of so many districts, the
-Empire under Constantine Porphyrogennêtos numbered twelve European
-themes. _Thrace_ had shrunk up into the land just round Constantinople
-and Hadrianople, the latter now a frontier city against the Bulgarian.
-_Macedonia_ had been pushed to the east, leaving the more strictly
-Macedonian coast-districts which the Empire still kept to form the
-themes of _Strymôn_ and _Thessalonikê_. ♦Use of the name Hellas.♦
-Going further south, the name of _Hellas_ has revived, and that with
-a singular accuracy of application. Hellas is now the eastern side of
-continental Greece, taking in the land of Achilleus. The abiding name
-of Achaia has vanished for a while, and the peninsula which had been
-won back from the Slave again bears its name of _Peloponnêsos_. But
-_Lakedaimonia_ now appears on the list of its chief cities instead
-of Sparta. This and other instances in which one Greek name has been
-supplanted by another are witnesses of the Slavonic occupation of
-Hellas and its recovery by a Greek-speaking power. Off the west coast
-the realm of Odysseus seems to revive in the theme of _Kephallênia_,
-which takes in also the mythic isle of Alkinoos. Such parts of
-Epeiros and Western Greece as clave to the Empire form the theme of
-_Nikopolis_. ♦The Hadriatic lands.♦ To the north, on the Hadriatic
-shore, was the theme of _Dyrrhachion_, and beyond that again, the
-Dalmatian and Venetian cities still counted as outlying portions
-of the Empire. ♦Possessions of the Empire in Italy.♦ Beyond the
-Hadriatic, southern Italy forms the theme of _Lombardy_, interrupted
-by the principality of _Salerno_, while Naples, Gaeta, and Amalfi were
-outlying posts like Venice and Ragusa. _Sicily_ was still reckoned as
-a theme; but it was now wholly lost to the Saracen. ♦Chersôn.♦ And far
-away in the Tauric peninsula, the last of the Hellenic commonwealths,
-the furthest outpost of Hellenic civilization, had sunk in the ninth
-century into the Byzantine theme of _Chersôn_.
-
-♦Seeming Asiatic character of the Empire.♦
-
-The first impression conveyed by this geographical description is that
-the Eastern Empire had now become a power rather Asiatic than European.
-It is only in Asia that any solid mass of territory is kept. ♦Nature
-of its European possessions.♦ Elsewhere there are only islands and
-fringes of coast. ♦Maritime supremacy of the Empire.♦ But they were
-almost continuous fringes of coast, fringes which contained some of
-the greatest cities of Christendom, and which gave their masters an
-undisputed supremacy by sea. If the Mediterranean was not a Byzantine
-lake, it was only the presence of the Saracen, the occasional visits
-of the Northman, which hindered it from being so. Then again, the
-whole history of the Empire, if a history of losses, is also a history
-of recoveries, and before long the Roman arms again became terrible
-by land. The picture of Constantine Porphyrogennêtos shows us the
-Empire at a moment when neither process was actually going on; but
-the times before and after his reign were times, first of loss and
-then of recovery. ♦Loss and recovery of Crete. 823-960.♦ Early in the
-ninth century _Crete_ was suddenly seized by Saracen adventurers from
-Spain; about the same time began the long and slow Saracen conquest
-of _Sicily_. ♦Loss of Sicily. 827-878. | Advance in Italy, Dalmatia,
-and Greece. c. 802.♦ But, almost at the moment when Sicily was lost,
-the Imperial province in Italy was largely increased, and the Imperial
-influence in Dalmatia was largely restored. About the same time
-Peloponnêsos was won back from the Slaves. ♦Recovery of provinces in
-the East. 964-976.♦ In the latter half of the tenth century Crete was
-won back; so were Kilikia and part of Syria, with the famous cities
-of Tarsos, Edessa, and Antioch on the Orontes. ♦Conquest of Bulgaria.
-981-1018.♦ Presently Basil the Second overthrew the _Bulgarian_ kingdom
-in Europe and the _Armenian_ kingdom in Asia; the lands at the foot of
-Caucasus admitted the Imperial supremacy, and the Byzantine rule was
-carried round the greater part of the Euxine. ♦Loss of Cherson. 988.♦
-Cherson indeed was lost; the old Megarian city passed into the hands
-of the Russian. At the other end of the Empire, the recovery of Sicily
-was actually begun, and, if the Saracen was not driven out, his power
-was weakened in the interest of the next set of invaders. ♦The Eastern
-Empire under Basil the Second.♦ Early in the eleventh century the
-Eastern Rome was again the head of a dominion which was undoubtedly the
-greatest among Christian powers, a dominion greater than it had been at
-any time since the Saracenic and Slavonic inroads began.
-
-
-§ 3. _Origin of the Spanish Kingdoms._
-
-The historical geography of two of the three great Southern peninsulas
-is thus bound up with that of the Empires of which they were severally
-the centres. ♦Position of Spain.♦ The case is quite different with
-the third great peninsula, that of Spain. There the Roman dominion,
-even the province which had been recovered by Justinian, had quite
-passed away, and it was only a small part of the land which was ever
-reincorporated, even in the most shadowy way, with either Empire. ♦The
-Saracen conquest. 710-713.♦ Spain was now conquered by the Saracens,
-as it had before been conquered by the Romans, with this difference,
-that it had been among the longest and hardest of the Roman conquests,
-while no part of the Saracen dominion was won in a shorter time.
-But, if the Roman conquest was slow, it was in the end complete. The
-swifter Saracen conquest was never quite complete; it left a remnant
-by which the land was in the end to be won back. But the part of the
-land which withstood the Saracen was, as could hardly fail to be the
-case, the same part as that which held out for the longest time against
-the Roman. The mountainous regions of the North were never wholly
-conquered. ♦Asturia 732, | united with Cantabria, 751.♦ _Cantabria_ and
-_Asturia_, which had never fully submitted to the Goths, now became the
-seat of resistance under princes who claimed to represent the Gothic
-kings, and part of whose dominions bore the name of _Gothia_. Twenty
-years after the conquest, Asturia was again a Christian principality,
-which was presently united with Cantabria. ♦Kingdom of Leon, 916.♦ This
-grew into the kingdom of _Leon_. ♦County of Castile, 904. | Kingdom,
-1033.♦ The great fiefs of this kingdom on its eastern and western
-borders, the counties of _Gallicia_ and _Castile_—the last originally
-a line of _castles_ against the Saracen enemy—both showed from an
-early time strong tendencies to separation. ♦Kingdom of Navarre. 905.♦
-Meanwhile the kingdom of _Navarre_ grew up to the east, stretching,
-it must be remembered, on both sides of the Pyrenees, though by far
-the larger portion of it lay on their southern side. ♦County of Aragon
-c. 760.♦ To the east of Navarre the small counties of _Aragon_ and
-_Riparanensia_ were the beginning of the kingdom of _Aragon_. ♦The
-Spanish March. 778.♦ To the east again of this was the land which,
-after the final expulsion of the Saracens from Gaul, became part of the
-Carolingian Empire by the name of the _Spanish March_. The shiftings
-of territory, the unions and separations of these various kingdoms
-and principalities, belong to the special history of Spain. But early
-in the eleventh century the whole north-western part of Spain, and a
-considerable fringe of territory in the north-east, had been formed
-into Christian states. ♦Beginnings of Castile and Aragon.♦ Among these
-had been laid the foundations of two kingdoms, those of Castile and
-Aragon, which were to play a great part in the affairs of Europe.
-
-It will be at once seen that those among the Spanish powers which were
-destined to play the greatest part in later history were not among
-the first to take the form of separate kingdoms. ♦Slow growth of the
-greater kingdoms.♦ At this stage even Castile has hardly taken the form
-of a distinct state. Aragon is only beginning; _Portugal_ has not even
-begun. ♦History of Castile and Aragon.♦ Of these three, Castile was
-fated to play the same part that was played by Wessex in England and by
-France in Gaul, to become the leading power of the peninsula. Aragon,
-when her growth had brought her to the Mediterranean, was to fill for
-a long time a greater place in general European politics than any
-other Spanish power. The union of Castile and Aragon was to form that
-great Spanish monarchy which became the terror of Europe. ♦Portugal.♦
-Meanwhile Portugal, lying on the Ocean, had first of all to extend
-her borders at the cost of the common enemy, and afterwards to become
-a beginner of European enterprise in distant lands, a path in which
-Castile and other powers did but follow in her steps.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Break-up of the Spanish Caliphate.♦
-
-Meanwhile the advance of the Christians was helped by the division of
-the Saracenic power. The Caliphates of the East and of the West fell to
-pieces, exactly as the Christian Empires did. The undivided Mahometan
-dominion in Spain was at the height of its power in the tenth century.
-Yet even then, amid many fluctuations, the Christian frontier was on
-the whole advancing in the north-west. In the north-east Christian
-progress was slower. ♦1028.♦ But, early in the eleventh century, the
-Caliphate of Cordova broke in pieces, and out of its fragments arose
-a crowd of small Mahometan kingdoms at Cordova, Seville, Lisbon,
-Zaragoza, Toledo, Valencia, and elsewhere. It was now only by renewed
-invasions from Africa that the Mahometan power in Spain was kept up.
-But, as the Christian states are now fully formed, such mention of
-these African dynasties as concerns geography will come more fittingly
-at a later stage.
-
-
-§ 4. _Origin of the Slavonic States._
-
-♦Slavonic and Turanian invasions.♦
-
-We left the borders of both the Eastern and the Western Empire beset by
-neighbours of Slavonic race, who, in the case of the Eastern Empire,
-were largely mingled with other neighbours of Turanian race. Of these
-last, _Avars_, _Patzinaks_, _Khazars_, have passed away; they have
-left no trace on the modern map of Europe. With two of the Turanian
-settlements the case is different. ♦Bulgarians.♦ The settlement of
-the _Bulgarians_, the foundation of a kingdom of Slavonized Turanians
-south of the Danube, has been already mentioned. They still keep their
-place and nation, though in bondage. Another Turanian settlement to the
-north of the Bulgarians has been of yet greater importance in European
-history. ♦Settlement of the Magyars or Hungarians, 895.♦ In the last
-years of the ninth century the Finnish _Magyars_ or _Hungarians_, the
-_Turks_ of the Byzantine writers, began to count as a power in Europe.
-From their seats between the mouths of the Dnieper and the Danube, they
-pressed eastward into the lands which had been Dacia and Pannonia.
-♦Great Moravia.♦ The Bulgarian power was thus confined to the lands
-south of the Danube, and _Great Moravia_, a name which then took in the
-western part of modern Hungary, fell wholly under Magyar dominion.
-
-This settlement is one which stands altogether by itself. ♦Peculiar
-character of the Magyar settlement.♦ The Magyars and the Ottoman Turks
-are the only Turanian settlers in Europe who have grown into permanent
-Turanian powers on European ground. The Bulgarians have been lost in
-the mass of their Slavonic neighbours and subjects, whose language they
-have adopted. Magyars and Ottomans still remain speaking a Turanian
-tongue on Aryan soil. But of these it is only the Magyars that have
-grown into a really European state. ♦The Kingdom of Hungary.♦ After
-appearing as momentary ravagers in Germany, Italy, and even Gaul,
-the Magyars settled down into a Christian kingdom, which, among many
-fluctuations of supremacy and dependence, has remained a distinct
-kingdom to this day. ♦Effect of its religious connexion with Rome.♦ The
-Christianity of Hungary however came from the Western Church and not
-from the Eastern. And this fact has had a good deal of bearing upon
-the history of those regions. But for this almost incidental connexion
-with the Old Rome, Hungary, though settled by a Turanian people, would
-most naturally have taken its place among the Slavonic states which
-fringed the dominion of the New Rome. As it has turned out, difference
-of religion has stepped in to heighten difference of blood, and Hungary
-has formed a kingdom quite apart, closely connected in its history
-with Servia and Bulgaria, but running a course which has been in many
-things unlike theirs.
-
-♦The Magyars separate the Northern and Southern Slaves.♦
-
-The geographical results of the Magyar settlement were to place a
-barrier between the Northern and the Southern Slaves. This it did
-both directly and indirectly. The _Patzinaks_ pressed into what had
-been the former Magyar territory; they appear in the pages of the
-Imperial geographer as a nation with whom the Empire always strove to
-maintain peace, as they formed a barrier against both Hungarians and
-_Russians_. ♦The Russians.♦ This last name begins to be of importance
-in the ninth century. A part of the Eastern branch of the Slavonic
-race, they were cut off from the other members of that branch south
-of the Danube by these new Turanian settlements. The Magyars again
-parted the South-eastern Slaves from the North-western, while the
-Russians were still neighbours of the North-western Slaves. ♦Effects
-of the geographical position of the Slaves.♦ The geographical position
-of these three divisions of the Slavonic race has had an important
-effect on European history. ♦History of the South-eastern Slaves.♦ The
-South-eastern Slaves in Servia, Croatia, Dalmatia, and the neighbouring
-lands, formed a debateable ground between the two Empires, the Magyar
-kingdom, and the Venetian republic, as soon as Venice grew into a
-distinct and conquering state. These lands have, down to our own time,
-played an important, but commonly a secondary, part in history. And in
-later times their history has chiefly consisted in successive changes
-of masters. The states which they formed will have to be spoken of in
-connexion with the greater and more lasting powers to which they have
-commonly been adjuncts. ♦The North-western Slaves.♦ The North-western
-Slaves appear for the most part in different degrees of vassalage or
-incorporation with the Western Empire. ♦Bohemia, Poland.♦ But, besides
-several considerable duchies, there grew up among them the kingdoms of
-_Bohemia_ and _Poland_, of which the latter established its complete
-independence of the Empire, and became for a while one of the chief
-powers of Europe. ♦Russia.♦ Russia meanwhile, forming a third division,
-appears, in the ninth and tenth centuries, first as a formidable
-enemy, then as a spiritual conquest, of the Empire and Church of
-Constantinople. Russia had then already assumed the character which it
-has again put on in later times, that of the one great European power
-at once Slavonic in race and Eastern in faith. Russia is now fully
-established as an European power. The variations of its territorial
-extent must be traced in a distinct chapter.
-
-
-§ 5. _Northern Europe._
-
-♦The Scandinavian settlements.♦
-
-The European importance of the Scandinavian nations at this time
-chiefly arises from their settlements in various parts of Europe, and
-specially in Britain and Ireland. The three great Scandinavian kingdoms
-were already formed. Sweden was doing its work towards the east; the
-Norwegians, specially known as Northmen, colonized the extreme north
-of Britain, the Scandinavian earldoms of Caithness and Sutherland,
-together with the islands to the north and west of Britain, Orkney,
-Shetland, Faroe, the so-called Hebrides, and Man. They also colonized
-the eastern coast of Ireland, where they were known as _Ostmen_. And
-it was from Norway also that the settlers came by which the coast of
-France in the strictest sense, the French duchy, was cut off from the
-dominion of Paris to form the Duchy of Normandy. ♦England and Denmark.
-789-1017.♦ But the chief field for the energy of Denmark properly so
-called lay within the limits of that part of Britain which we may now
-begin to call _England_. It was during this period that the united
-English kingdom grew up, that the many English settlements in Britain
-coalesced into one English nation. And this work was in a singular way
-promoted by the very cause, namely, the Danish invasions, which seemed
-best suited to hinder it.
-
-Up to this time the great island had been in truth, as it was often
-called, another world, influencing but little, and but little
-influenced by, any of the lands which formed part of either of the
-continental Empires. ♦Formation of the Kingdom of England.♦ The English
-history of these times, a history which is specially connected with
-geography, consists of two great facts. The first is the union of
-all the English states in Britain into one English kingdom under the
-West-Saxon kings. The other is the establishment of a vague supremacy
-on the part of those kings over the whole island. ♦West-Saxon supremacy
-under Ecgberht. 825-830.♦ The dominion established by Ecgberht was
-in no sense a kingdom of England. It consisted simply in a supremacy
-on the part of the West-Saxon king over all the princes of Britain,
-Teutonic and Celtic, save only the Picts, Scots, and Welsh of
-Strathclyde or Cumberland. The smaller kingdoms of Kent, Sussex, and
-Essex formed appanages for West-Saxon _æthelings_; but the superiority
-over East-Anglia, Mercia, Northumberland, and the Welsh princes was
-purely external. The change of this power into an united English
-kingdom holding a supremacy over the whole island was largely helped
-by the Danish incursions and settlements. ♦The Danish invasions. 789.♦
-These incursions began in the last years of the eighth century; they
-became more frequent and more dangerous in the middle of the ninth;
-and in the latter part of that century they grew from mere incursions
-into actual settlements. This was the result of the great struggle in
-the days of the first Æthelred and his more famous brother Ælfred.
-♦Division between Ælfred and Guthrum. 878.♦ By Ælfred’s treaty with the
-Danish Guthrum, the West-Saxon king kept his own West-Saxon kingdom
-and all the other lands south of the Thames, together with western
-Mercia. The rest of Mercia, with East-Anglia and _Deira_ or southern
-Northumberland, passed under Danish rule. ♦Bernicia not Danish.♦
-_Bernicia_, or northern Northumberland from the Tees to the Forth,
-still kept its Anglian princes, seemingly under Danish supremacy.
-Over the lands which thus became Danish the West-Saxon king kept a
-mere nominal and precarious supremacy. ♦Scandinavian settlements in
-Cumberland.♦ In Scotland and Strathclyde the succession of the Celtic
-princes was not disturbed; but in part at least of Strathclyde, in
-the more modern Cumberland, a large Scandinavian population, though
-probably Norwegian rather than Danish, must have settled.
-
-♦Increase of the immediate kingdom of Wessex.♦
-
-By these changes the power of the West-Saxon king as an over-lord
-was greatly cut short, while his immediate kingdom was enlarged. The
-dynasty which had come so near to the supremacy of the whole island
-seemed to be again shut up in its own kingdom and the lands immediately
-bordering on it. ♦Second West-Saxon advance. 910-954.♦ But, by
-overthrowing the other English kingdoms, the Danes had prepared the
-way for the second West-Saxon advance in the tenth century. Saxon king
-was now the only English king, and he further became the English and
-Christian champion against intruders who largely remained heathen.
-♦Wessex grows into England.♦ The work of the first half of the tenth
-century was to enlarge the Kingdom of Wessex into the Kingdom of
-England. Eadward the Elder, King, not merely of the West-Saxons but
-of the English, extended his immediate frontier, the frontier of the
-one English kingdom, to the Humber. ♦First submission of Scotland and
-Strathclyde. 923.♦ Wales, Northumberland, English and Danish, and now,
-for the first time, Scotland and Strathclyde, all acknowledged the
-English supremacy. ♦926.♦ Under Æthelstan Northumberland was for the
-first time incorporated with the kingdom, and after several revolts and
-reconquests, it finally became an integral part of England, forming
-sometimes one, sometimes two, English earldoms. ♦Cumberland granted
-as a fief to Scotland. 945.♦ Meanwhile Cumberland was subdued by
-Eadmund, and was given as a fief to the Kings of Scots, who commonly
-granted it as an appanage to their sons. ♦Lothian granted to Scotland.♦
-Meanwhile, partly, it would seem, by conquest, partly by cession, the
-Scottish kings became possessed of the northern part of Northumberland,
-under the name of the earldom of Lothian. Thus, in the second half of
-the tenth century, a single kingdom of England had been formed, of
-which the Welsh principalities, as well as Scotland, Strathclyde, and
-Lothian, were vassal states.
-
-♦The English Empire.♦
-
-Thus the English kingdom was formed, and with it the English Empire.
-♦Use of the Imperial titles.♦ For the English kings in the tenth and
-eleventh centuries, acknowledging no superiority in the Cæsar either of
-East or West and holding within their own island a position analogous
-to that of the Emperors on the mainland, did not scruple to assume the
-Imperial title, and to speak of themselves as Emperors of the other
-world of Britain. The kingdom and Empire thus formed were transferred
-by the wars of Swegen and Cnut from a West-Saxon to a Danish king.
-♦Northern Empire of Cnut. 1016-1035.♦ Under Cnut England was for a
-moment the chief seat, and Winchester the Imperial city, of a Northern
-Empire which might fairly claim a place alongside of the Old and the
-New Rome. England, Denmark, Norway, had a single king, whose supremacy
-extended further over the rest of Britain, over Sweden and a large
-part of the Baltic coast. That Empire split in pieces on his death.
-The Scandinavian kingdoms were again separated; England itself was
-divided for a moment. ♦The Norman Conquest. 1066-70.♦ The kingdom,
-again reunited, first passed back to the West-Saxon house, and then, by
-a second conquest, to the Norman. After this last revolution a division
-of the kingdom was never more heard of. ♦England finally united by
-William.♦ William the Conqueror put the finishing stroke to the work of
-Ecgberht, and made England for ever one. And, by uniting England under
-the same ruler as Normandy, and by thus leading her into the general
-current of continental affairs, he gave her an European position such
-as she had never held under her native kings.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Summary.♦
-
-By the end of the eleventh century then the chief nations of Europe
-had been formed. The Western Empire, after many shiftings, had taken
-a definite shape. ♦The Western Empire and the Imperial Kingdoms.♦
-The Imperial dignity and the two royal crowns of Italy and Burgundy
-were now attached to the German kingdom. The Empire, in short,
-though keeping its Roman titles and associations, and with them its
-influence over the minds of men, had practically become a German
-power. Its history from this time mainly consists in the steps by
-which the German Emperors of Rome lost their hold on their Italian and
-Burgundian kingdoms, and of the steps by which the German dominion
-was extended over the Slaves to the East. ♦France.♦ To the West the
-Western Kingdom has altogether detached itself from the Empire; the
-union of its crown with the Duchy of France has created the French
-kingdom and nation, with its centre at Paris, and with a supremacy, as
-yet little more than nominal, over a large part of Gaul. ♦The Eastern
-Empire.♦ As the Western Empire has become German, the Eastern Empire
-has become Greek; in the early years of the eleventh century it again
-forms a powerful and compact state, ruling from Naples to Antioch.
-♦The Slavonic states.♦ Of the states to the north of it, Bulgaria has
-been reincorporated with the Empire; Servia, Hungary, Russia, have
-taken their definite position among the Christian powers of Europe. So
-have Poland and Bohemia on the borders of the Western Empire. Prussia,
-Lithuania, and the Finnish lands to the immediate north of them remain
-heathen. ♦Spain.♦ In Spain, the Christians have won back a large part
-of the peninsula. Castile and Navarre are already kingdoms; Aragon,
-though not yet a kingdom, has begun her history. ♦The Scandinavian
-kingdoms.♦ In Northern Europe, the three Scandinavian nations are
-clearly distinguished and firmly established. ♦England and Normandy.♦
-Within the isle of Britain the kingdoms of England and Scotland have
-been formed, and the union of England and Normandy under a single
-prince has opened the way to altogether new relations between the
-continent and the great island. In short, the only European powers
-which play a part in strictly mediæval history which are not yet formed
-are Portugal and the Sicilian kingdoms.
-
-From this point then, when most of the European powers have come into
-being, and when the two Roman Empires are fast becoming a German and a
-Greek power alongside of other powers, it will be well to change the
-form of our present inquiry. Thus far we have treated the historical
-geography of Europe as a whole, gathering round two centres at the
-Old and the New Rome. It will henceforth be more convenient to take
-the history of the great divisions of Europe separately, and to trace
-out in distinct chapters the changes which the boundaries of each have
-gone through from the eleventh century to our own time. ♦Ecclesiastical
-geography.♦ But before we enter on these several national divisions, it
-will be well to take a view of the ecclesiastical divisions of Western
-Christendom, which are of great importance and which are constantly
-referred to in the times with which we are now concerned.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[9] The best account of the various names by which the East-Frankish
-kings and their people are described is given by Waitz, _Deutsche
-Verfassungsgeschichte_, v. 121 et seqq.
-
-[10] So Wippo (2) describes the gathering of the men of the kingdom:
-‘Cis et circa Rhenum castra locabant. Qui dum Galliam a Germanis
-dividat, ex parte _Germaniæ_ Saxones cum sibi adjacentibus Sclavis,
-Franci orientales, Norici, Alamanni, convenere. De _Gallia_ vero Franci
-qui super Rhenum habitant, Ribuarii, Liutharingi, coadunati sunt.’ The
-two sets of Franks are again distinguished from the Latin or French
-‘Franci.’
-
-[11] See special treatise on the Themes in the third volume of the Bonn
-edition. The Treatise which follows, ‘de Administrando Imperio,’ is
-also full of geographical matter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE ECCLESIASTICAL GEOGRAPHY OF WESTERN EUROPE.
-
-
-♦Character of ecclesiastical geography.♦
-
-The ecclesiastical geography of Western Europe was by this time
-formed. The great ecclesiastical divisions were now almost everywhere
-mapped out, and from hence they are more permanent than the political
-divisions. ♦Permanence of the ecclesiastical divisions.♦ The
-ecclesiastical geography in truth constantly preserves an earlier
-political geography. ♦They represent older civil divisions.♦ The
-ecclesiastical divisions were always mapped out according to the
-political divisions of the time when they were established, and they
-often remained unaltered while the political divisions went through
-many revolutions. ♦Illustrations from England and France.♦ Thus
-in France the dioceses represented the jurisdictions of the Roman
-cities; in England they represented the ancient English kingdoms and
-principalities. In both cases they outlived by many ages the political
-divisions which they represented. While the political map was altered
-over and over again, the ecclesiastical map remained down to quite
-modern times, with hardly any change beyond the occasional division of
-a large diocese or the occasional union of two smaller dioceses. Thus
-the greater permanence of the ecclesiastical map often makes it useful
-as a standard for reference in describing political changes. ♦Lyons and
-Rheims.♦ To take an instance, the city of Lyons has been at different
-times under Burgundian and under Frankish kings; it has been a free
-city of the Empire and a city of the modern kingdom of France. But,
-among all these changes, the Archbishop of Lyons has always remained
-Primate of all the Gauls, while the Archbishop of Rheims has held a
-wholly different position alongside of him as first prelate and first
-peer of the modern kingdom of France. Paris meanwhile, the political
-capital of the modern kingdom, remained till the seventeenth century
-the seat of a simple bishoprick.
-
-In this way the ecclesiastical division will be found almost everywhere
-to keep up the remembrance of an earlier political state of things.
-♦Patriarchates, Provinces, Dioceses.♦ As the Empire became Christian,
-it was mapped out into _Patriarchates_ as well as into Prefectures.
-Under these were the metropolitan and episcopal districts, which in
-after-times borrowed, though in a reverse order of dignity, the civil
-titles of _provinces_ and _dioceses_. ♦Divisions within and without
-the Empire.♦ As the Church carried her spiritual conquests beyond the
-bounds of the Empire, new ecclesiastical districts were of course
-formed in the newly converted countries. As a rule, every kingdom had
-at least one archbishopric; the smaller principalities, provinces,
-or other divisions became the dioceses of bishops. But the different
-social conditions of southern and northern Europe caused a marked
-difference in the ecclesiastical arrangements of the two regions. In
-the South the bishop was bishop of a city; in the North he was bishop
-of a tribe or a district. Within the Empire each city had its bishop.
-Thus in Italy and Southern Gaul, where the cities were thickest on
-the ground, the bishops were most numerous and their dioceses were
-smallest. ♦Bishops of cities and of tribes.♦ In Northern Gaul the
-cities are fewer and the dioceses larger, while outside the Empire,
-the dioceses which represented a tribe or principality were larger
-again. Also again, within the Empire the bishop, as bishop of a city,
-always took his title from the city; outside the Empire, especially in
-the British islands both Celtic and Teutonic, the bishop of a tribe or
-principality bore a tribal or territorial title.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Great Patriarchates._
-
-♦The Patriarchates suggested by the Prefectures.♦
-
-The highest ecclesiastical divisions, the Patriarchates, though they
-did not exactly answer to the Prefectures, were clearly suggested
-by them. And whenever the boundaries of the Patriarchates departed
-from the boundaries of the Prefectures, they came nearer to the great
-divisions of race and language. For our purpose, it is enough to
-take the Patriarchates, as they grew up, after the establishment of
-Christianity, in the course of the fourth and fifth centuries. The
-four older ones were seated at the _Old_ and the _New Rome_, and at
-the two great Eastern cities of _Antioch_ and _Alexandria_. Out of
-the patriarchate of Antioch the small patriarchate of _Jerusalem_ was
-afterwards taken. This last seems a piece of sentimental geography;
-the other divisions were eminently practical. ♦Rome.♦ Whether we look
-on the original jurisdiction of the Bishop of the Old _Rome_ as taking
-in the whole _prefecture_ of Italy or only the _diocese_ of Italy, it
-is certain that it was gradually extended over the two prefectures
-of Italy and Gaul. ♦Extended beyond the Empire.♦ That is, it took in
-the Latin part of the Empire, and it spread thence over the Teutonic
-converts in the West, as well as over Hungary and the Western Slaves.
-♦Constantinople.♦ The Patriarchate of _Constantinople_ or New Rome took
-in the Prefecture of Illyricum, and three dioceses in the Prefecture
-of the East, those of Thrace, Asia, and Pontus. This territory pretty
-well answers to the extent of the Greek language and influence. The
-two Illyrian dioceses, possibly through some confusion arising out of
-the two meanings of the word _Illyricum_, were claimed by the Popes of
-Old Rome; but, when the Empires and Churches parted asunder, Macedonia
-and Greece were not likely to cleave to the Western division. ♦Its
-relation to the Eastern Empire and to the Slaves.♦ In course of time
-the Byzantine patriarchate became nearly coextensive with the Byzantine
-Empire, and it became the centre of conversion to the Slaves of the
-East, just as the patriarchate of Old Rome was to the Teutons of the
-West. ♦Antioch. | Jerusalem.♦ The patriarchate of _Antioch_, before its
-dismemberment in favour of the tiny patriarchate of _Jerusalem_, took
-in the whole diocese of the East, and the churches beyond the limits
-of the Empire in that direction. ♦Alexandria.♦ The patriarchate of
-_Alexandria_ answered to the diocese of Egypt, with the churches beyond
-the Empire on that side, specially the _Abyssinian_ church, which has
-kept its nationality to our own time. That these Eastern patriarchates
-have been for ages disputed by claimants belonging to different sects
-of Christianity is a fact which concerns both theology and history,
-but does not concern geography. Whether the see was in Orthodox or
-heretical—that is commonly in national—hands, the see and its diocese,
-the geographical extent on the map, remained the same.
-
-♦Later nominal patriarchates.♦
-
-These then are the five great patriarchates which formed the most
-ancient geographical divisions of the Church. In later times the
-name patriarchate has been more loosely applied. As the Roman bishop
-grew into something more than the Patriarch of the West, the title
-of Patriarch was given to several metropolitans, sometimes, as far
-as one can see, without any particular reason. ♦Lisbon, Venice,
-Aquileia.♦ The title has been borne by the Bishops of _Lisbon_ and
-_Venice_, and specially by the Metropolitans of _Aquileia_. These last
-assumed the title during a time of separation from the Roman see. But
-nominal patriarchates of this kind must be carefully distinguished
-from the five great churches to which the name was anciently attached.
-♦Patriarchate of Moscow. 1587.♦ In the East the name was never extended
-beyond its four original holders, till a new patriarchate of _Moscow_
-arose in Russia, to mark the greatest spiritual conquest of the
-Orthodox Church. Of the four original Eastern patriarchates it is only
-that of Constantinople which plays much part in later history. The
-seats of the other three fell into the hands of the Saracens in the
-very beginning of their conquests.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Italy._
-
-♦Great numbers of the Italian bishoprics.♦
-
-In no part of Christendom do the bishoprics lie so thick upon the
-ground as in Italy, and especially in the southern part. But from
-that very fact it follows that the ecclesiastical divisions of Italy
-are of less historical importance than those of most other Western
-countries. ♦Small size of the provinces.♦ In southern Italy above
-all, the bishoprics were so numerous, and the dioceses therefore
-so small, that the archiepiscopal provinces were hardly so large
-as the episcopal dioceses in more northern lands. So it is in the
-islands; Sicily contained four provinces and Sardinia three. ♦Effect
-of the commonwealths on the position of the prelates.♦ The peculiar
-characteristics of Italian history also hindered ecclesiastical
-geography from being of the same importance as elsewhere. Where every
-city became an independent commonwealth, the Bishop, and even the
-Metropolitan, sank to a lower rank than they held in the lands where
-each prelate was a great feudal lord.
-
-It follows then that there are only a few of the archbishoprics
-and bishoprics of Italy which at all stand out in general history.
-♦Relation to the Roman See.♦ The growth of the Roman see also more
-distinctly overshadowed the Italian bishops than it did those of other
-lands. ♦Rivals of Rome.♦ The bishoprics which have most historical
-importance are those which at one time or another stood out in rivalry
-or opposition to Rome. ♦Milan. | Aquileia.♦ Such was the great see of
-_Milan_, whose province took in a crowd of Lombard bishoprics; such was
-the patriarchal see of _Aquileia_, whose metropolitan jurisdiction took
-in Como at one end and the Istrian Pola at the other. The patriarchs of
-Aquileia, standing as they did on the march of the Italian, Teutonic,
-and Slavonic lands, grew, unlike most of the Italian prelates,
-into powerful temporal princes. ♦Ravenna.♦ _Ravenna_ was the head
-of a smaller province than either Milan or Aquileia; but _Ravenna_
-too stands out as one of the churches which kept up for a while an
-independent position in the face of the growing power of Rome. Milan
-and Ravenna, in short, never lost the memory of their Imperial days;
-and Aquileia took advantage, first of a theological difference, and
-secondly of its temporal position as the great border see.
-
-♦The immediate Roman Province.♦
-
-In the rest of Italy the case is different. Rome herself was the
-immediate head of a large province stretching from sea to sea.
-Within this the _suburbicarian_ sees, those close around Rome, stood
-in a special and closer relation to the patriarchal see itself.
-♦Metropolitan sees of central Italy.♦ The famous cities of _Genoa_,
-_Bologna_, _Pisa_, _Florence_, and _Sienna_, were also metropolitan
-sees, though their ecclesiastical dignity is quite overshadowed by
-their civic greatness. _Lucca_ has been added to the same list in
-modern times. ♦Pisa and Genoa.♦ The provinces of Pisa and Genoa
-are notable as having been extended into the island of Corsica
-after its recovery from the Saracens. The history and extent of the
-Italian dioceses is, with these few exceptions, a matter almost
-wholly of local ecclesiastical concern. ♦The southern province.♦ In
-the south and in Sicily the endless archiepiscopal sees preserve
-the names of some famous cities, as _Capua_—the later Capua on the
-site of Casilinum—_Tarentum_, _Bari_, and others. But some even of
-the metropolitan churches are fixed in places of quite secondary
-importance, and the simple bishoprics are endless.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Gaul and Germany._
-
-By taking a single view of the ecclesiastical arrangements of the whole
-of the Western Empire on this side of the Alps and the Pyrenees, some
-instructive lessons may be learned. Such a way of looking at the map
-will bring out more strongly the differences between bishoprics of
-earlier and later foundation. ♦Gaulish and German dioceses.♦ And, if
-we take the name of Gaul in the old geographical sense, taking in the
-German lands west of the Rhine which formed part of the older Empire,
-we shall find that several ecclesiastical provinces may be called
-either Gaulish or German. With the boundaries of the French kingdom we
-have no concern, except so far as the boundary between the Eastern and
-Western kingdoms of the Franks did to some extent follow ecclesiastical
-lines. Modern annexations of course have had no regard to them.
-
-♦Province of South Gaul.♦
-
-On first crossing the Alps from Italy, we find the ecclesiastical
-phænomena of Italy continued in the lands nearest to it. The two
-provinces of _Tarantaise_ (answering to the civil division of _Alpes
-Penninæ_) and _Embrun_ (_Alpes Maritimæ_) which take in the mountain
-region between Italy and Gaul, are of small size, though of course in
-the actual mountain lands the bishoprics are less thick on the ground.
-♦Tarantaise.♦ The Tarantasian province contained only three suffragan
-sees, _Sitten_, _Aosta_, and _St. John of Maurienne_, three bishoprics
-which now belong to three distinct political powers. ♦Embrun.♦ But
-in the southern part of the province of Embrun, which reaches to the
-sea, the bishops’ sees are thick on the ground, just as they are in
-Italy. ♦Aix and Arles.♦ So they are in the small provinces of _Aix_
-(_Narbonensis Secunda_) and _Arles_. But, as soon as we get out of
-Provence into the parts of Gaul which were less thoroughly Romanized,
-and where cities, and consequently bishoprics, lay less close together,
-the phænomena of the ecclesiastical map begin to change. ♦Vienne.
-| Narbonne.♦ The Provençal provinces of Aix and Aries are bounded to
-the north and west by those of _Vienne_ (which with Arles answers
-nearly to the civil _Viennensis_) and _Narbonne_ (answering nearly to
-_Narbonensis Secunda_). These provinces are of much greater size, and
-the suffragan sees are much further apart. ♦Auch.♦ To the west lies
-_Auch_, answering to the oldest Aquitaine or _Novempopulana_, and to
-the north of these, in the remainder of Gaul, the original provinces
-are of still greater size. Most of them answer very nearly to the older
-civil divisions. ♦Bourges, Bourdeaux, Lyons, Rouen, Tours, and Sens.♦
-_Aquitania Prima_ is the province of _Bourges_, _Aquitania Secunda_
-that of _Bourdeaux_. _Lugdunensis Prima_, _Secunda_, _Tertia_, and
-_Quarta_, answer to _Lyons_, _Rouen_, _Tours_, and _Sens_. Of these
-Lyons, as having been the temporal capital, became the seat of the
-Primate of all the Gauls. The province of Rouen too answers very
-nearly to the duchy of which that metropolis became the capital; its
-Archbishop still bears the title of Primate of Normandy.
-
-These are the oldest ecclesiastical arrangements, closely following
-the civil divisions of the Empire. These divisions lived through the
-Teutonic conquests; and, though here and there a see was translated
-from one city to another, they were not seriously interfered with till
-the fourteenth century. ♦Foundation of the provinces of Toulouse and
-Alby, 1322.♦ Pope John the Twenty-second raised the see of _Toulouse_
-in the province of Narbonne and that of _Alby_ in the province of
-Bourges to metropolitan rank, thus forming two new provinces. He also
-founded new bishoprics in several towns in these two new provinces
-and in that of Narbonne. ♦Avignon, 1475.♦ In the next century Sixtus
-the Fourth made the church of _Avignon_ metropolitan. These changes
-help to give this whole district more of the character of Italy and
-Provence than originally belonged to it. ♦Paris, 1622.♦ Lastly, in
-the seventeenth century the province of _Sens_ was also divided, and
-the church of _Paris_ became metropolitan. Some of these changes show
-how closely the ecclesiastical divisions followed the oldest civil
-divisions, and how slowly they were affected by changes in the civil
-divisions. When Gaul was first mapped out, Tolosa was of less account
-than Narbo; the Parisii and their city were of less account than the
-great nation of the _Senones_. Tolosa became the royal city of the
-Goth; but it did not rise to the highest ecclesiastical rank till ages
-after the Gothic kingdom had passed away. Paris, after having been
-several times a momentary seat of dominion, became the birthplace of
-the modern French kingdom. But it had been the continuous seat of
-kings for more than six hundred years before it became the seat of an
-archbishop.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As we draw nearer to German ground, the ecclesiastical boundaries
-are found to have been somewhat more strongly affected by political
-changes. ♦Besançon.♦ The ecclesiastical province of _Besançon_ answers
-to _Maxima Sequanorum_; but it is not quite of the same extent; the
-boundary of the German and Burgundian kingdoms passed through the
-Roman province: its eastern part is therefore found in a German
-diocese. ♦Rheims.♦ The province of _Rheims_ answers nearly, but not
-quite, to _Belgica Secunda_: for the ecclesiastical province took in
-some territory to the east of the Scheld. Here again the boundary of
-the Eastern and Western kingdoms passed through the province. The
-metropolitan city lay within the region which became the kingdom
-of France, and it became the ecclesiastical head of the kingdom.
-Yet one of its suffragan sees, that of _Cambray_, was a city of the
-Empire. ♦Trier, 785.♦ The province of _Trier_ took in no part of the
-Western kingdom; but, besides the old province of _Belgica Prima_, it
-stretched away over the German lands even beyond the Rhine. ♦Köln,
-785.♦ When the old Gaulish bishoprick of _Colonia Agrippina_ became
-metropolitan under Charles the Great, its province took in nearly all
-the old Gaulish province of _Germania Secunda_; but it too came to
-stretch beyond the Rhine and beyond the Weser. These two metropolitan
-sees, Trier and Köln, were old Gaulish bishopricks of the frontier
-land. ♦Mainz, 747.♦ The see of _Mainz_ has no certain historical being
-before Boniface in the eighth century. It too was founded on what was
-geographically Gaulish soil; but the greater part of its vast extent
-was strictly German. Three only of its suffragans, _Worms_, _Speyer_,
-and _Argentoratum_ or _Strassburg_, were even geographically Gaulish.
-No province has had more fluctuating boundaries: the elevation of
-Köln to metropolitan rank cut it short to the west, while it grew
-indefinitely to the north, south, and east, as its boundaries were
-enlarged by conversion and conquest. ♦Prag, 1344.♦ To the east it was
-cut short in the fourteenth century when the kingdom of Bohemia and its
-dependencies were formed into the ecclesiastical province of _Prag_.
-♦Bamberg, 1007.♦ The famous bishoprick of _Bamberg_, locally in the
-province of Mainz, was from the beginning immediately dependent on the
-see of Rome.
-
-♦The three ecclesiastical Electors and Arch-chancellors.♦
-
-These three great archbishopricks of the frontier land, all of whose
-sees were on the Gaulish side of the Rhine, remained distinguished by
-their temporal rank during the whole life of the German kingdom. All
-the German prelates became princes; but only these three were Electors.
-The prelates of these three were the Arch-chancellors of the three
-Imperial kingdoms, Mainz of Germany, Köln of Italy, Trier of Gaul.
-But, as the Frankish or German kingdom spread to the north-east, new
-ecclesiastical provinces were formed. ♦Salzburg, 798.♦ The bishoprick
-of _Salzburg_ became metropolitan under Charles the Great, with a
-province stretching away to the East towards his conquests from the
-Avars. ♦Bremen or Hamburg, 788.♦ The bishoprick of _Bremen_, another
-foundation of Charles the Great, was transferred under his son to
-_Hamburg_, as a metropolitan see which was designed to be a missionary
-centre for the Scandinavian nations. ♦1223.♦ After some fluctuations,
-the see was finally settled at Bremen, as the metropolis of a province,
-which had now become in no way Scandinavian, but partly Old-Saxon,
-partly Wendish. ♦Magdeburg, 968.♦ Lastly, Otto the Great founded the
-metropolitan see of _Magdeburg_ on the Slavonic march. Thus the German
-kingdom formed six ecclesiastical provinces, all of vast extent as
-compared with those of Southern Europe, and with their suffragan sees
-few and far apart. The difference is here clearly marked between the
-earlier sees which arose from the very beginning in the Roman cities,
-and the sees of later foundation which were gradually founded as new
-lands were brought under the dominion of the Empire and the Church.
-Still the old tradition went on so far that each Bishop had his see in
-a city, and took his name from that city. Though the German dioceses
-were of large extent, yet none of the German bishoprics were in
-strictness territorial.
-
-♦Modern ecclesiastical divisions of Germany and France.♦
-
-In no part of Christendom have the ecclesiastical divisions been more
-completely upset in modern times than they have been in Germany. In
-France the number of dioceses was greatly lessened by the _Concordat_
-under the first Buonaparte; but the main ecclesiastical landmarks were
-to a great extent respected. In Germany, on the other hand, no trace
-of them is left. The country has been mapped out afresh to suit the
-boundaries of patched-up modern kingdoms. Mainz and Trier are no longer
-metropolitan sees, while the modern map shows such novelties as an
-Archbishop of München and an Archbishop of Freiburg. ♦Changes of Philip
-the Second in the Netherlands.♦ Long before, under Philip the Second of
-Spain, those parts of the German kingdom which had become practically
-detached under the Dukes of Burgundy underwent a complete change in
-their ecclesiastical divisions. ♦Cambray, Mechlin, Utrecht.♦ _Cambray_
-and _Mechlin_ in the province of Rheims, and _Utrecht_ in the province
-of Köln, became metropolitan sees. Modern political changes have made
-these three cities members of three distinct political powers.
-
-
-§ 4. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Spain._
-
-♦Peculiarities of Spanish ecclesiastical geography.♦
-
-The ecclesiastical history of the Spanish peninsula presents phænomena
-of a different kind from those of Italy, Gaul, or Germany. In Italy
-and Gaul the ecclesiastical divisions go on uninterruptedly from the
-earliest days of Christianity. Western Germany must count for these
-purposes as part of Gaul. In eastern Germany the ecclesiastical
-divisions were formed in later times, as Christianity was spread
-over the country. In Spain the country must have been mapped out for
-ecclesiastical purposes at least as early as Gaul. ♦Old divisions lost,
-and mapped out afresh after the recovery from the Saracens.♦ But the
-Mahometan conquest of the greater part of the country, followed by the
-Christian reconquest, caused the old ecclesiastical lines to be wiped
-out, and new divisions had to be traced out afresh as the land was
-gradually won back. ♦Ecclesiastical divisions under the West-Goths.♦
-The ecclesiastical divisions of Spain in the time of the Gothic kingdom
-simply reproduce the civil divisions of the period, as those civil
-divisions are only a slight modification of the Roman provinces.
-_Lusitania_ and _Bætica_ survived, with a slight change of frontier,
-both as civil and as ecclesiastical divisions. _Tarraconensis_ was for
-both purposes divided into three, _Tarraconensis_, _Carthagenensis_,
-and _Gallæcia_. As the land was won back, and as new ecclesiastical
-provinces were formed, the number was greatly increased, and some of
-them found their way to new sites. ♦Tarragona, Zaragoza, Valencia.♦
-Thus the Tarraconensian province was again divided into three, those
-of _Tarragona_, _Zaragoza_, and _Valencia_, answering nearly to the
-kingdom of Aragon. ♦Toledo.♦ New Carthage lost its metropolitan rank in
-favour of the great metropolis of _Toledo_, which numbered _Cordova_
-and _Valladolid_ among its suffragans. ♦Compostella, Burgos, Seville,
-and Granada. | Braga, Evora, Lisbon.♦ Leaving out some anomalous
-districts, the rest of the peninsula formed the provinces of St.
-James of _Compostella_, _Burgos_, _Seville_, _Granada_, with _Braga_,
-_Evora_, and the patriarchal see of _Lisbon_, the last three answering
-to the kingdom of Portugal. And it must be remembered that the Pyrenees
-did not form an eternal boundary in ecclesiastical, any more than in
-civil geography. ♦Dioceses of Pampeluna and Bayonne.♦ As the kingdom of
-Navarre stretched on both sides of the mountains, so did the diocese
-of _Pampeluna_; and to the west of it the Gaulish diocese of _Bayonne_
-stretched on what is now Spanish ground. All these are survivals of a
-time when, to use the phrase of a later day, there were no Pyrenees, or
-when at least the same rulers, first Gothic and then Saracen, reigned
-on both sides of them.
-
-
-§ 5. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of the British Islands._
-
-♦The British islands.♦
-
-The historical phænomena of the British islands have points in common
-with more than one of the continental countries. In a very rough and
-general view of things, Britain has some analogies with Spain. It is
-not altogether without reason that in some legendary stories the names
-of Saxons and Saracens get confounded. In both cases a land which had
-been Christian was overrun by conquerors of another creed; in both a
-Christian people held their ground in a part of the country; and in
-both the whole land was won back to Christianity, though by different
-and even opposite processes in the two cases. ♦The Celtic episcopate.♦
-But there is no reason to believe that the Celtic churches in Britain
-and Ireland had anything like the same complete ecclesiastical
-organization as the Spanish churches under the Goths. ♦Tribal
-episcopacy.♦ The Celtic episcopate was of an irregular and anomalous
-kind, and, in its most intelligible shape, it was, as was natural under
-the circumstances of the country, not a city episcopate, hardly a
-territorial episcopate, but one strictly tribal. This is nearly the
-only fact in the history of the early Celtic churches which is of any
-importance for our purpose. It might be too much to say that traces of
-this peculiarity were handed on from the Celtic to the English Church.
-The little likeness that there is between them is rather due to the
-fact that in Northern Europe generally, whether Celtic or Teutonic,
-a strictly city episcopate like that of Italy and Gaul was something
-which in the nature of things could not be.
-
-In truth the antiquities of the Celtic churches may fairly be left to
-be matter of local or of special ecclesiastical inquiry. Their effect
-on history is slight; their effect on historical geography is still
-slighter. For our purpose the ecclesiastical geography of Britain may
-be looked on as beginning with the mission of Augustine. The English
-Church was formed, and the Welsh, Scottish, and Irish Churches were
-reconstructed, partly under its authority, altogether after its model.
-♦Schemes of Gregory the Great.♦ In the original scheme of Gregory the
-Great, Britain was clearly meant to be divided into two ecclesiastical
-provinces nearly equal in extent. ♦Two equal provinces in Britain.♦
-The Celtic churches were to be brought under the same ecclesiastical
-obedience as the heathen English. As Wales was to form part of the
-lot of the southern metropolitan, so Scotland was to form part of the
-lot of the northern. This scheme was never fully carried out. Wales
-was indeed brought into full submission to Canterbury; but Scotland
-was never brought into the same full submission to York. ♦Relation of
-the Scottish Bishops to York.♦ The allegiance of the Scottish sees to
-their Northumbrian metropolis was at all times very precarious, and
-it was in the end formally thrown off altogether. ♦Suffragan sees
-of Canterbury and York.♦ Of this came the singular disproportion in
-the territorial extent of the two English ecclesiastical provinces.
-Canterbury, since the English Church was thoroughly organized, has
-had a number of suffragans which would be unusual anywhere on the
-continent, while York has always had comparatively few, and for a
-considerable time had practically one only.
-
-♦Foundation of the existing dioceses.♦
-
-The systematic mapping out of Britain for ecclesiastical purposes, as
-designed by Gregory, was therefore never fully carried out. The actual
-provinces and dioceses were gradually formed, as the various English
-existing kingdoms embraced Christianity. As a rule, each kingdom or
-independent principality became a diocese. ♦Territorial bishoprics♦
-And, except in the case of a few sees fixed in cities which kept
-on something of old Roman memories, the bishops were more commonly
-called from the people who formed their flock, than from the cities
-which in some cases contained their chairs. For in many cases the
-_bishop-settle_, as our forefathers called it, was not placed in a city
-at all, but in some rural or even solitary spot. It was not till the
-time of the Norman Conquest that a movement began for systematically
-placing the ecclesiastical sees in the chief towns; from that time the
-civic title altogether displaces the territorial.
-
-♦Canterbury.♦
-
-As Kent was the first part of Teutonic Britain to accept Christianity,
-the metropolitan see of the south was fixed at _Canterbury_, the
-capital of that kingdom. It was thus fixed in a city which has at
-no time held that temporal preeminence which has in different ages
-belonged to York, Winchester, and London. ♦Rochester. | London.♦
-After Canterbury the earliest formed sees were _Rochester_ for the
-West-Kentish kingdom, and _London_ for the East-Saxons. ♦Dorchester
-or Winchester. Sherborne, Wells, Ramsbury.♦ The conversion of the
-West-Saxons led to the foundation of the great diocese whose see was
-first at _Dorchester_ on the Thames and then at _Winchester_, and from
-which the sees of _Sherborne_, _Wells_, and _Ramsbury_ were gradually
-parted off. ♦Elmham. | Dorchester or Lincoln.♦ The East-Angles formed a
-diocese with its see at _Elmham_; the Middle-Angles settled down, after
-some shiftings, into the vast diocese stretching from the Thames to the
-Humber, whose see, first at _Dorchester_, was afterwards translated to
-_Lincoln_. ♦Worcester, Hereford, Lichfield.♦ The West-Mercian lands
-formed the dioceses of the Hwiccas at _Worcester_, of the Magesætas at
-_Hereford_, and the great diocese of _Lichfield_, stretching northward
-to the Ribble. The South-Saxons, whose see kept its tribal name down
-to the Norman Conquest, had their see first at _Selsey_, and then at
-_Chichester_. ♦Exeter.♦ Devonshire and Cornwall, after forming two
-dioceses, were, just before the Norman Conquest, united under the
-single see of _Exeter_. ♦The Welsh Sees.♦ The Conquest too brought
-about the more complete submission of the four Welsh sees, _Saint
-David’s_, _Llandaff_, _Bangor_, and _Saint Asaph_. ♦Salisbury, 1078.
-| Ely, 1109.♦ To the times just before and just after the Conquest
-belong the union of Sherborne and Ramsbury to form the diocese of
-_Salisbury_, and the dismemberment of the huge diocese of Lincoln by
-the foundation of an episcopal see at _Ely_. Thus the province of
-Canterbury with its suffragan sees was gradually organized in the form
-which it kept from the reign of Henry the First to that of Henry the
-Eighth.
-
-Meanwhile in the northern province things never reached the same
-regular organization. ♦York. | Lindisfarn | or Durham, | Carlisle,
-1133.♦ York, after some changes, took the position of a metropolitan
-see, with one suffragan, first at _Lindisfarn_ and afterwards at
-_Durham_, and another at _Carlisle_. ♦Saint Andrews, 1471. | Glasgow.
-1492.♦ As the Scottish dioceses broke off from York, they first
-acknowledged a kind of precedence in the Bishop of _St. Andrews_; but
-it was not till a far later time that Scotland was divided into two
-regular ecclesiastical provinces with their sees at _St. Andrews_ and
-_Glasgow_. ♦Edinburgh. 1634.♦ Several of the Scottish dioceses always
-kept their territorial titles; their sees were mostly fixed in small
-places; and of the chief seats of Scottish royalty, Dunfermline and
-Stirling never attained episcopal rank at all, and _Edinburgh_ only
-attained it in quite modern times. ♦The four Irish provinces.♦ The
-endless and fluctuating bishoprics of Ireland were in the twelfth
-century gathered into the four provinces of _Armagh_, _Dublin_,
-_Cashel_, and _Tuam_, answering to the temporal divisions of _Ulster_,
-_Leinster_, _Munster_, and _Connaught_. It is to be noticed that, in
-marked contradiction to continental practice, the chief see in all the
-three British kingdoms has been placed in a city which has never held
-the first temporal rank. Canterbury, St. Andrews, Armagh, were never
-the temporal heads of England, Scotland, and Ireland. York, Dublin,
-Glasgow, though metropolitan sees, were of secondary rank, and London
-and Winchester were ordinary bishoprics.
-
-
-§ 6. _The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Northern and Eastern Europe._
-
-♦Ecclesiastical division in the converted lands.♦
-
-In the other parts of Europe which formed part of the communion of
-the Latin Church, the ecclesiastical divisions mark the steps by
-which Christianity was spread either by conversion or conquest. They
-continued the process of which the ecclesiastical organization of
-Eastern Germany was the beginning. As a rule, they strictly follow
-the political divisions of the age in which they were founded. ♦The
-Scandinavian provinces.♦ As the Church in the Scandinavian kingdoms
-became more settled, its bishoprics parted off from their allegiance
-to Hamburg or Bremen, and each of the three kingdoms formed an
-ecclesiastical province, whose boundaries exactly answered to the
-earlier boundaries of the kingdoms. ♦Lund, 1151.♦ Denmark had its
-metropolitan see at _Lund_, in that part of the Danish kingdom which
-geographically forms part of the greater Scandinavian peninsula, and
-which is now Swedish territory. Its boundary to the south was the
-Eider, the old frontier of Denmark and the Empire. The suffragan
-sees of this province, among which the specially royal bishopric of
-_Roeskild_ is the most famous, naturally lie thicker on the ground
-than they do in the wilder regions of the two more northern kingdoms.
-But the Baltic conquests of Denmark also placed part of the isle of
-Rügen in the province of Lund and the diocese of Roeskild, and also
-gave the Danish metropolitan a far more distant suffragan in the Bishop
-of _Revel_ on the Finnish gulf. ♦Upsala.♦ The metropolitan see of
-Sweden was placed at _Upsala_, and the province was carried by Swedish
-conquest to the east of the Gulf of Bothnia, where the single bishopric
-of _Abo_ took in the whole of the Swedish territory in that region.
-♦Trondhjem.♦ In the like sort, the Norwegian province of _Nidaros_ or
-_Trondhjem_ stretched far over the Ocean to the distant Colonies and
-dependencies of Norway in Iceland, Greenland, and Man.
-
-♦Poland, &c.♦
-
-The conversion of Poland and the conquest of Prussia and Livonia
-brought other lands within the pale of the Latin Church and her
-ecclesiastical organization. ♦Gnezna.♦ The original kingdom of Poland
-formed the province of _Gnezna_, a province whose boundaries were for
-some centuries very fluctuating, according as Poland or the Empire was
-stronger in the Slavonic lands on the Baltic. Each change of temporal
-dominion caused the ecclesiastical frontiers of Gnezna and Magdeburg
-to advance or fall back. The Silesian bishopric of _Breslau_ always
-kept its old relation to the Polish metropolis, except so far as it
-was held to be placed under the immediate superiority of Rome. The
-later union of Lithuania to the Polish kingdom added a _Lithuanian_
-and a _Samogitian_ bishopric to the original Polish province. ♦Riga.
-| Leopol.♦ The earlier Polish conquests from Russia formed a new
-province, the Latin province of _Leopol_ or _Lemberg_, a province whose
-southern boundaries advanced and fell back along with the boundary of
-the kingdom of which it formed a part. The conquests of the Teutonic
-knights in Prussia and Livonia formed the ecclesiastical province of
-_Riga_, which was divided into two parts by the province of Gnezna in
-its greater extent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It will be seen that some of the ecclesiastical divisions last
-mentioned belong to a later stage of European history than the point
-which we have reached in our general narrative. But it seemed better
-to continue the survey over the whole of the Latin Church in Europe,
-as the later foundations are a mere carrying out of the same process
-which began in the earlier. The ecclesiastical divisions represent the
-political divisions of the time, whether those political divisions are
-Roman provinces or independent Teutonic or Slavonic kingdoms. But the
-ecclesiastical divisions, when once fixed, were more lasting than the
-temporal divisions, and many disputes have arisen out of political
-changes which transferred one part of a province or diocese from one
-political allegiance to another. Since the splitting-up of the Western
-Church, the old ecclesiastical organization has altogether vanished
-from some countries, and has been greatly modified in others, in
-Germany most of all.
-
-It seems hardly needful for the understanding of European history
-to carry our ecclesiastical survey beyond the limits of the Latin
-Church. One of the Polish provinces, that of Leopol, has carried us
-to the borderland of the Eastern and Western Churches, and, if we
-pass southwards into the Magyar and South-Slavonic lands, we find
-ourselves still more distinctly on an ecclesiastical march. ♦Hungary.
-| Strigonium. | Kolocza.♦ The Kingdom of Hungary formed two Latin
-provinces, those of _Strigonium_ or Gran, and of _Kolocza_; the latter
-has a very fluctuating boundary to the south. ♦Dalmatia.♦ The Dalmatian
-coast, the borderland of all powers and of all religions, formed three
-Latin provinces. ♦Zara.♦ _Jadera_ or _Zara_, on her peninsula, was the
-head of a small province chiefly made up of islands. ♦Spalato.♦ Another
-metropolitan had his throne in the very mausoleum of Diocletian, and
-the province of _Spalato_ stretched some way inland over the lands
-which have so often changed masters. ♦Ragusa.♦ To the south, the see
-of _Ragusa_, the furthest outpost of Latin Christendom properly so
-called, had, besides its own coasts and islands, an indefinite frontier
-inland. This marks the furthest extent to which it is needful to
-trace our ecclesiastical map. It is the furthest point at which Latin
-Christianity can be said to be in any sense at home. The ecclesiastical
-organization of the crusading and Venetian conquests further to the
-south and east have but little bearing on historical geography. But,
-within the bounds of Latin Christendom, the ecclesiastical divisions
-both of the provinces and dioceses within the older Empire and what
-we may call the missionary provinces beyond it, are of the highest
-importance, and they should always be kept in mind alongside of the
-political geography.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE IMPERIAL KINGDOMS.
-
-
-♦The Kingdom of the _East-Franks_ or of _Germany_.♦
-
-The division of 887 parted off from the general mass of the Frankish
-dominions a distinct _Kingdom of the East-Franks_, the acknowledged
-head of the Frankish kingdoms, which, as being distinguished from its
-fellows as the _Regnum Teutonicum_, may be best spoken of as a _Kingdom
-of Germany_. ♦Merging of the Kingdom in the Empire.♦ But the lasting
-acquisition of the Italian and Imperial crowns by the German kings, and
-their later acquisition of the kingdom of Burgundy, gradually tended
-to obscure the notion of a distinct German kingdom. The idea of the
-Kingdom was merged in the idea of the Empire of which it formed a part.
-Later events too tended in the same direction. ♦The Emperors lose Italy
-and Burgundy, but keep Germany.♦ The Italian kingdom gradually fell
-off from any practical allegiance to its nominal king the Emperor. So
-did the greater part of the Burgundian kingdom. Meanwhile, though the
-powers of the Emperors as German kings were constantly lessening, their
-authority was never wholly thrown off till the present century. The
-Emperors in short lost their kingdoms of Italy and Burgundy, and kept
-their kingdom of Germany. In the fifteenth century the coronation of
-the Emperor at Rome had become a mere ceremony, carrying with it no
-real authority in Italy. In the sixteenth century the ceremony itself
-went out of use. ♦Charles the Fourth crowned at Arles, 1365.♦ The
-Burgundian coronation at Arles became irregular at a very early time,
-and it is last heard of in the fourteenth century. ♦1792.♦ But the
-election of the German kings at Frankfurt, their coronation, in earlier
-times at Aachen, afterwards at Frankfurt, went on regularly till the
-last years of the eighteenth century. ♦Endurance of the German Diet.♦
-So, while the national assemblies of Italy and Burgundy can hardly be
-said to have been regularly held at all, while they went altogether
-out of use at an early time, the national assembly of Germany, in one
-shape or another, never ceased as long as there was any one calling
-himself Emperor or German King. The tendency in all three kingdoms was
-to split up into separate principalities and commonwealths. ♦Comparison
-of Germany, Italy, and Burgundy.♦ But in Germany the principalities and
-commonwealths always kept up some show of connexion with one another,
-some show of allegiance to their Imperial head. In Italy and Burgundy
-they parted off altogether. Some became absolutely independent; were
-incorporated with other kingdoms or became their distant dependencies;
-some were even held by the Emperors themselves in some other character,
-and not by virtue either of their Empire or of their local kingship.
-♦The Empire identified with Germany.♦ Thus, as the Empire became more
-and more nearly coextensive with the German Kingdom, the distinction
-between the two was gradually forgotten. The small parts of the other
-kingdoms which kept any trace of their Imperial allegiance came to be
-looked on as parts of Germany. ♦The Empire becomes a Confederation.♦ In
-short, the Western Empire became a German kingdom; or rather it became
-a German Confederation with a royal head, a confederation which still
-kept up the forms and titles of the Empire. ♦1530.♦ As no German king
-received an Imperial coronation after Charles the Fifth, it might in
-strictness be said that the Empire came to an end at his abdication.
-♦1556.♦ And in truth from that date the Empire practically became a
-purely German power. But, as the Imperial forms and titles still went
-on, the Western Empire must be looked on as surviving, in the form of a
-German kingdom or confederation, down to its final fall.
-
-♦The German Kingdom represents the Empire.♦
-
-The Kingdom of Germany then may be looked on as representing the
-Western Empire, as being what was left of the Western Empire after
-the other parts of it had fallen away. But the German kingdom itself
-underwent, though in a smaller degree, the same fate as the other
-two Imperial kingdoms. ♦Separation of parts of the Kingdom.♦ While
-all Italy and all Burgundy, with some very trifling exceptions, fell
-away from the Empire, the mass of Germany remained Imperial. Still
-large parts of Germany were lost to the Empire no less than Italy and
-Burgundy. A considerable territory on the western and south-western
-frontier of Germany gradually fell away. Part of this territory has
-grown into independent states; part has been incorporated with the
-French kingdom. The Swiss Confederation has grown up on lands partly
-German, partly Burgundian, partly Italian, but of which the oldest and
-greatest part belonged to the German kingdom. The Confederation of the
-United Provinces, represented by the modern kingdom of the Netherlands,
-lay wholly[12] within the old German kingdom: so did by far the greater
-part of the modern kingdom of Belgium. ♦Modern Austria.♦ In our own
-day the same tendency has been shewn in south-eastern as well as
-south-western Germany; several members of the ancient kingdom have
-fallen away to form part of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. ♦Extension
-of Germany to the north-east.♦ But on the northern and north-eastern
-frontier the tendency to extension, with some fluctuations, has gone
-on from the beginning of the kingdom to our own day. ♦Geographical
-contrast of the earlier and later Empire.♦ This tendency to lose
-territory to the west and south, and to gain territory to the east and
-north, had the effect of gradually cutting off the Western Empire,
-as represented by the German kingdom, from any close geographical
-connexion with the earlier Empire of which it was the historical
-continuation. The Holy Roman Empire, at the time of its final fall,
-contained but little territory which had formed part of the Empire of
-Trajan. It contained nothing which had formed part of the Empire of
-Justinian, save some small scraps of territory in the north-eastern
-corner of the old Italian kingdom.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Kingdom of Germany._
-
-♦Change in the geography and nomenclature of Germany.♦
-
-In tracing out, for our present purpose, the geographical revolutions
-of Germany, it will be enough to look at them, as far as may be, mainly
-in their European aspect. Owing to the gradual way in which the various
-members of the Empire grew into practical sovereignty—owing to the
-constant division of principalities among many members of the same
-family—no country has undergone so many internal geographical changes
-as Germany has. In few countries also has the nomenclature shifted in
-a more singular way. ♦Ancient and modern Saxony and Bavaria.♦ To take
-two obvious examples, the modern kingdom of _Saxony_ has nothing but
-its name in common with the Saxony which was brought under the Frankish
-dominion by Charles the Great. The modern kingdom of _Bavaria_ has a
-considerable territory in common with the ancient Bavaria; but it has
-gained so much at one end and lost so much at the other that the two
-cannot be said to be in any practical sense the same country. ♦Uses of
-the name Austria.♦ The name of _Austria_ has shifted from the eastern
-part of the old _Francia_ to the German mark against the Magyar, and
-it has lately wandered altogether beyond the modern German frontier.
-♦Burgundy.♦ The name of _Burgundy_ has borne endless meanings, both
-within the Empire and beyond it. ♦Prussia.♦ Lastly, the ruling state
-of modern Germany, a state stretching across the whole land from
-east to west, strangely bears the name of the conquered and extinct
-_Prussian_ race. Many of these changes affect the history of Europe
-as well as the history of Germany; but many of the endless changes
-among the smaller members of the Empire are matters of purely local
-interest, which belong to the historical geography of Germany only, and
-which claim no place in the historical geography of Europe. I shall
-endeavour therefore in the present section, first to trace carefully
-the shiftings of the German frontier as regards other powers, and then
-to bring out such, and such only, of the internal changes as have a
-bearing on the general history of Europe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Extent of the Kingdom.♦
-
-The extent of the German kingdom as it stood after the division of
-887 has been roughly traced already. ♦Boundaries under the Ottos,
-936-1002.♦ It will now be well to go over its frontiers somewhat more
-minutely, as they stood at the time of final separation between the
-Empire and the West-Frankish kingdom, the time of final union between
-the Empire and the East-Frankish kingdom. This marks the great age of
-the Saxon Ottos. ♦Boundary towards the West.♦ The frontier towards
-the Western kingdom was now fairly ascertained, and it was subject
-to dispute only at a few points. ♦Lotharingia.♦ It is hardly needful
-to insist again on the fact that all Lotharingia, in the sense of
-those days, taking in all the southern Netherlands except the French
-fief of Flanders, was now Imperial. ♦Encroachments of France.♦ It
-is along this line that the German border has in later times most
-largely fallen back. The advance of France has touched Burgundy more
-than Germany; but it has, first swallowed up, and afterwards partly
-restored, a considerable part of the German kingdom. ♦The Netherlands.♦
-The Netherlands had been practically so cut off from Germany before the
-annexations of France in that quarter began, that they will be better
-spoken of in another section. ♦Lorraine and Elsass.♦ The other points
-at which the frontier has fluctuated on a great scale have been the
-border land of _Lorraine_—as distinguished from the Lower _Lotharingia_
-which has more to do with the history of the Netherlands—and the
-Swabian land of _Elsass_. ♦Fluctuations of Bar.♦ The Duchy of _Bar_,
-the borderland of the borderland, fluctuated more than once. ♦1473.♦
-After its union with the Duchy of Lorraine, it followed the fortunes
-of that state. ♦The Three Bishoprics, 1552.♦ In the next century came
-the annexation of the three Lotharingian bishoprics of _Metz_, _Toul_,
-and _Verdun_, which gave France three outlying possessions within the
-geographical borders of the Lotharingian duchy. ♦Loss of Austrian
-Elsass, 1648.♦ In the next century, as the result of the Thirty Years’
-War, France obtained by the Peace of Westfalia the formal cession of
-these conquests, and also the great advance of her frontier by the
-dismemberment of _Elsass_. The cession now made did not take in the
-whole of Elsass, but only the possessions and rights of the House of
-Austria in that country. This cession still left both Strassburg and
-various smaller towns and districts to the Empire; but it naturally
-opened the way to further French advances in a land where the frontier
-was so complicated and where difficulties were so easily raised as to
-treaty-rights. ♦Gradual annexation of Elsass, 1679-1789.♦ A series of
-annexations, _réunions_ as they were called, gradually united nearly
-all Elsass to France. ♦Seizure of Strassburg, 1681.♦ _Strassburg_,
-as all the world knows, was seized by Lewis the Fourteenth in time
-of peace. ♦Seizure of Lorraine, 1678-1697.♦ During the wars with the
-same prince, the duchy of Lorraine was seized and restored. ♦Its final
-annexation. 1766.♦ In the next century it was separated from the
-Empire to become the life-possession of the Polish king Stanislaus,
-and on his death it was finally added to France just before a far
-greater series of French annexations began. ♦Loss of the left bank
-of the Rhine, 1801.♦ The wars of the French Revolution, confirmed by
-the Peace of _Luneville_, tore away from Germany and the Empire all
-that lay on the left bank of the Rhine. In other words, the Western
-_Francia_, the duchy of the lords of Paris, advanced itself to the
-utmost limits of the Gaul of Cæsar. This was the last annexation of
-France at the expense of the old German kingdom. ♦Dissolution of the
-Kingdom and Empire, 1806.♦ It was indeed the main cause of the formal
-dissolution of the kingdom which happened a few years later. The utter
-transformation of Germany within and without which now followed must be
-spoken of at a later stage.
-
-♦Frontier of Germany and Burgundy.♦
-
-The frontier of Germany and Burgundy, while they still remained
-distinct kingdoms, fluctuated a good deal, especially in the lands
-which now form Switzerland. ♦Union of Burgundy with the Empire, 1033.♦
-But this frontier ceased to be of any practical importance when the
-Burgundian kingdom was united with the Empire. The later history of
-Burgundy, consisting of the gradual incorporation by France of the
-greater part of the kingdom, and the growth of the remnant into the
-western cantons of the Swiss Confederation, will be told elsewhere.
-
-♦Frontier of Germany and Italy.♦
-
-Towards Italy again the frontier was sometimes doubtful. _Chiavenna_,
-for instance, sometimes appears in the tenth and eleventh centuries as
-German; so do the greater districts of _Trent_, _Aquileia_, _Istria_,
-and even _Verona_. ♦The Marchland.♦ All these formed a marchland, part
-of which in the end became definitely attached to Germany and part to
-Italy. ♦Union of the Crowns, 961-1530. | 961-1250.♦ But here again,
-as long as the German and Italian crowns were united, and as long
-as their common king kept any real authority in either kingdom, the
-frontier was of no great practical importance. So in later times, both
-before and after the dissolution of the German Kingdom, the question
-has practically been a question between Italy and the House of Austria
-rather than between Italy and Germany as such. These changes also will
-better come in another section.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Eastern and Northern frontiers.♦
-
-The case is quite different with regard to the eastern and northern
-frontiers, on which the really greatest changes took place, and where
-Germany, as Germany, made its greatest advances. ♦Advance of the
-Empire.♦ Along this line the Roman Empire and the German Kingdom meant
-the same thing. On this side the frontier had to be marked, so far as
-it could be marked, against nations which had had nothing to do with
-the elder Empire. Here then for many ages the Roman Terminus advanced
-and fell back according to the accidents of a long warfare.
-
-The whole frontier of the kingdom towards its northern and eastern
-neighbours was defended by a series of _marks_ or border territories
-whose rulers were clothed with special powers for the defence and
-extension of the frontier.[13] They had to guard the realm against the
-Dane in the north, and against the Slave during the whole remaining
-length of the eastern frontier, except where, in the last years of the
-ninth century, the Magyar thrust himself in between the northern and
-southern Slaves. ♦Hungarian frontier. | Mark of Austria.♦ Here the
-frontier, as against Hungary and Croatia, was defended by the marks of
-_Krain_ or _Carniola_, _Kärnthen_ or _Carinthia_, _Austrian_ mark to
-the north of them. ♦Little change on this frontier.♦ This frontier has
-changed least of all. It may, without any great breach of accuracy, be
-said to have remained the same from the days of the Saxon Emperors till
-now. The part where it was at all fluctuating was along the Austrian
-mark, rather than along the two marks to the south of it. ♦Occasional
-homage of Hungary to the Emperors.♦ The Emperors claimed, and sometimes
-enforced, a feudal superiority over the Hungarian kings. But this kind
-of precarious submission does not affect geography. Hungary always
-remained a separate kingdom; the Imperial supremacy was something
-purely external, and it was always thrown off on the first opportunity.
-
-♦Frontier towards Denmark.♦
-
-The same may be said of _Denmark_. For a short time a German mark was
-formed north of the Eider. ♦The Danish Mark, 934-1027. | Boundary of
-the Eider, 1027-1806.♦ But, when the Danish kingdom had grown into
-the Northern Empire of Cnut, the German frontier fell back here also,
-and the _Eider_ remained the boundary of the Empire till its fall.
-♦Occasional homage of the Danish Kings.♦ As with Hungary, so with
-Denmark; more than one Danish king became the man of Cæsar; but here
-again the precarious acknowledgement of Imperial supremacy had no
-effect on geography.
-
-♦Slavonic frontier.♦
-
-It is in the intermediate lands, along the vast frontier where
-the Empire marched on the northern _Slavonic_ lands, that the real
-historical geography of Germany lies for some ages. ♦Fluctuation of
-territory.♦ Here the boundary was ever fluctuating. ♦Extent of the
-Slaves.♦ At the time of the division of 887, the Slaves held all east
-of the Elbe and a good deal to the west. How far they had during the
-Wandering of the Nations stepped into the place of earlier Teutonic
-inhabitants is a question which belongs to another field of inquiry.
-We must here start from the geographical fact that, at the time when
-the modern states of Europe began to form themselves, the Slaves were
-actually in possession of the great North-Eastern region of modern
-Germany. Their special mention will come in their special place; we
-must here mark that modern Germany has largely formed itself by the
-gradual conquest and colonization of lands which at the end of the
-ninth century were Slavonic. The German kingdom spread itself far to
-the North-East, and German settlements and German influences spread
-themselves far beyond the formal bounds of the German kingdom. Three
-special instruments worked together in bringing about this end. The
-Saxon Dukes came first. In after times came the great league of German
-cities, the famous _Hansa_ which, like some other bodies originally
-commercial, became a political power, and which spread German
-influences over the whole of the shores of the Baltic. Along with
-them, from the thirteenth century onwards, worked the great military
-order of the Teutonic knights. Out of their conquests came the first
-beginnings of the Prussian state, and the extension of German rule
-and the German speech over much which in modern geography has become
-Russian. In a history of the German nation all these causes would
-have to be dealt with together as joint instruments towards the same
-end. In a purely geographical view the case is different. Some of
-these influences concern the formation of the actual German kingdom;
-others have geographically more to do with the group of powers more
-to the north-east, the Slavonic states of Poland and Russia, and
-their Lithuanian and Finnish neighbours. The growth and fall of the
-military orders will therefore most naturally come in another section.
-We have here to trace out those changes only which helped to give the
-German kingdom the definite geographical extent which it held for some
-centuries before its final fall.
-
-♦The Saxon Mark.♦
-
-Beginning at the north, in the lands where German, Slave, and Dane came
-into close contact, in _Saxony beyond the Elbe_, the modern _Holstein_,
-the Slaves held the western coast, and the narrow _Saxon mark_ fenced
-off the German land. ♦Mark of the Billungs, 960-1106.♦ The Saxon dukes
-of the house of Billung formed a German mark, which took in the lands
-reaching from the Elbe to the strait which divides the isle of Rügen
-from the mainland. But this possession was altogether precarious.
-♦Its fluctuations.♦ It again became a Slavonic kingdom; then it was a
-possession of Denmark; it cannot be looked on as definitely becoming
-part of the German realm till the thirteenth century. ♦Slavonic princes
-continue in Mecklenburg.♦ The chief state in these lands which has
-lasted till later times is the duchy of _Mecklenburg_, the rulers of
-which, in its two modern divisions, are the only modern princes who
-directly represent an old Slavonic royal house. Meanwhile a way was
-opened for a vast extension of German influence through the whole
-North, by the growth of the city of _Lübeck_. ♦Foundation of Lübeck,
-1140-1158.♦ Twice founded, the second time by Henry the Lion Duke of
-Saxony, it gradually became the leading member of the great merchant
-League. ♦The Hanse Towns.♦ To the south of these lands come those
-Slavonic lands which have grown into the modern kingdom of Saxony and
-the central parts of the modern kingdom of Prussia. ♦Marchlands.♦
-These were specially marchlands, a name which some of them have kept
-down to our own day. ♦Brandenburg. | Lausitz. | Meissen.♦ The mark
-of _Brandenburg_ in its various divisions, the mark of _Lausitz_ or
-_Lusatia_, where a Slavonic remnant still lingers, and the mark of
-_Meissen_, long preserved the memory of the times when these lands,
-which afterwards came to play so great a part in the internal history
-of Germany, were still outlying and precarious possessions of the
-German realm.
-
-To the south-east lay the _Bohemian_ lands, whose history has been
-somewhat different. ♦Bohemia a fief, 928.♦ The duchy, afterwards
-kingdom, of _Bohemia_, became, early in the tenth century, a fief of
-the German kingdom. ♦Becomes a kingdom, 1198. | 1003.♦ From that time
-ever afterwards, save during one moment of passing Polish annexation,
-it remained one of its principal members, ruled, as long as the
-Empire lasted, by princes holding electoral rank. The boundaries of
-the kingdom itself have hardly varied at all. ♦Moravia. | 1019.♦ The
-dependent marchland of _Moravia_ to the east, the remnant of the great
-Moravian kingdom whose history will come more fittingly in another
-chapter, fluctuated for a long while between Hungarian, Polish, and
-Bohemian supremacy. But from the early part of the eleventh century it
-remained under Bohemian rule, and therefore under Imperial superiority.
-♦More distant Slavonic states.♦ To the east of this nearer zone of
-Slavonic dependencies, lay another range of Slavonic states, some
-of which were gradually incorporated with the German kingdom, while
-others remained distinct down to modern times. ♦Pomerania.♦ _Pomerania_
-on the Baltic coast is a name which has often changed both its
-geographical extent and its political allegiance. The eastern part of
-the land now so called lay open, as will be hereafter seen, to the
-occupation of the Pole, and its western part to that of the Dane.
-♦Native princes go on.♦ But in the end it took its place on the map in
-the form of two duchies, ruled, like Mecklenburg, by native princes
-under Imperial supremacy. ♦Polish frontier.♦ South of Pomerania, the
-German march bordered on the growing power of _Poland_, and between
-Poland and Hungary lay the northern _Croatia_ or _Chrobatia_. The
-German supremacy seems sometimes to have been extended as far as
-the Wartha, and, in the Chrobatian land, even beyond the Vistula.
-♦Occasional homage of the Polish kings.♦ But this occupation was quite
-momentary; Poland grew up, like Hungary, as a kingdom, some of whose
-dukes and kings admitted the Imperial supremacy, but which gradually
-became wholly independent. ♦Silesia Polish, 999.♦ The border province
-of _Silesia_, after some fluctuations between Bohemia and Poland,
-became definitely Polish at the end of the tenth century. ♦Bohemian,
-1289-1327.♦ Afterwards it was divided into several principalities,
-whose dukes passed under Bohemian vassalage, and so became members
-of the Empire. Thus in the course of some ages, a boundary was drawn
-between Germany and Poland which lasted down to modern times.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Extension of the Empire to the east.♦
-
-The result of this survey is to show how great, and at the same time
-how gradual, was the extension of the German power eastward. A Roman
-Empire with a long Baltic coast was something that had never been
-dreamed of in earlier days. If the extension of the German name was
-but the recovery of long lost Teutonic lands, the extension to them
-of the Imperial name which had become identified with Germany was at
-least wholly new. ♦The Slavonic lands Germanized.♦ In all the lands now
-annexed, save in a few exceptional districts, German annexation meant
-German colonization, and the assimilation of the surviving inhabitants
-to the speech and manners of Germany. Colonists were brought, specially
-from the Frisian lands, by whose means the Low-Dutch tongue was spread
-along the whole southern coast of the Baltic. German cities were
-founded. The marchlands grew into powerful German states. At last one
-of these marchlands, united with a German conquest still further cut
-off from the heart of the old German realm, has grown into a state
-which in our own days has become the Imperial power of Germany.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Internal geography of Germany.♦
-
-The internal geography of the German kingdom is the greatest difficulty
-of such a work as the present. To trace the boundaries of the kingdom
-as against other kingdoms is comparatively easy; but to trace out the
-endless shiftings, the unions and the divisions, of the countless
-small principalities and commonwealths which arose within the kingdom,
-would be a hopeless attempt. ♦Growth of the principalities.♦ Still
-the growth of the dukes, counts, and other princes of Germany into
-independent sovereigns is the great feature of German history, as the
-consequent wiping out of old divisions, and shifting to and fro of old
-names, is the special feature of German historical geography. ♦Changes
-in nomenclature.♦ The dying out of the old names has a historical
-interest, and the growth of the new powers which have supplanted them
-has both an historical and a political interest. ♦Origin of Prussia and
-Austria.♦ It is specially important to mark how the two powers which
-have stood at the head of Germany in modern times in no way represent
-any of the old divisions of the German name. They have grown out of
-the outlying _marks_ planted against the Slave and the Magyar. The
-mark of _Brandenburg_, the mark against the Slave, has grown into the
-kingdom of _Prussia_, the Imperial state of Germany in its latest form.
-The _Eastern_ mark, the mark against the Magyar, has grown into the
-archduchy which gave Germany so many kings, into the so-called Austrian
-‘empire,’ into the Austro-Hungarian monarchy of our own day. ♦Analogies
-between Brandenburg and other marchlands.♦ The growth of Brandenburg
-or Prussia again affords an instructive comparison with the growth of
-Wessex in England, of France in Gaul, and of Castile in Spain. In all
-these cases alike, it has been a marchland which has come to the front
-and has become the head of the united nation.
-
-♦The great Duchies under the Saxon and Frankish Kings, 919-1125.♦
-
-Starting from the division of 887, we shall find several important
-landmarks in the history of the German kingdom which may help us in
-this most difficult part of our work. Under the Saxon and Frankish
-kings we see the great duchies still forming the main divisions,
-while the kingdom is enlarged by Slavonic conquests to the east and
-by the definite adhesion of Lotharingia to the west. ♦Decline of the
-Duchies under the Swabian Kings, 1137-1254.♦ Under the Swabian kings
-we see the break-up of the great duchies. In the partition of Saxony
-the process which was everywhere silently and gradually at work
-was formally carried out in the greatest case of all by Imperial,
-and national authority. ♦End of the _Gauverfassung_. | Growth of
-territorial Principalities.♦ The _Gauverfassung_, the immemorial
-system of Teutonic communities, now finally changes into a system of
-territorial principalities, broken only by the many free cities and
-the few free districts which owned no lord but the King. ♦Growth
-of the march powers. 1254-1512.♦ During this period too we see the
-beginnings of some of the powers which became chief at a later day, the
-powers of the eastern marchland, _Brandenburg_, _Austria_, _Saxony_
-in the later sense. The time from the so-called _Interregnum_ to the
-legislation under Maximilian is marked by the further growth of these
-powers. ♦Growth of the House of Austria.♦ It is further marked by the
-beginning of that connexion of the Austrian duchy, and of the Imperial
-crown itself, with lands beyond the bounds of the Kingdom and the
-Empire which led in the end to the special and anomalous position of
-the House of Austria as an European power. ♦Separation of Switzerland,
-1495-1648. | Of the Netherlands, 1430-1648.♦ During the same period
-comes the practical separation of _Switzerland_ and the _Netherlands_
-from the German kingdom. In short it was during this age that Germany
-in its later aspect was formed. ♦Legislation under Maximilian,
-1495-1512.♦ The legislation of Maximilian’s reign, the attempts then
-made to bring the kingdom to a greater degree of unity, have left their
-mark on geography in the division of Germany into _circles_. ♦Division
-into circles, 1500-1512.♦ This division, though it was not perfectly
-complete, though it did not extend to every corner of the kingdom, was
-strictly an administrative division of the kingdom itself as such; but
-the mapping out of the circles, the difference of which in point of
-size is remarkable, was itself affected by the geographical extent of
-the dominions of the princes who held lands within them. ♦Thirty Years’
-War, 1618-1648.♦ The seventeenth century is marked by the results of
-the Thirty Years’ War and of other changes. ♦Powers holding lands
-within and without Germany.♦ Its most important geographical result
-was to carry on the process which had begun with the Austrian House,
-the formation of powers holding lands both within and without the
-Empire. ♦Austria. | Sweden. | Union of Brandenburg and Prussia.♦ Thus,
-beside the union of the Hungarian kingdom with the Austrian archduchy,
-the King of Sweden now held lands as a prince of the Empire, and
-the same result was brought about in another way by the union of the
-Electorate of Brandenburg with the Duchy of Prussia. ♦Rivalry of
-Prussia and Austria.♦ This, and other accessions of territory, now
-made Brandenburg as distinctly the first power of northern Germany as
-Austria was of southern Germany, and in the eighteenth century the
-rivalry of these two powers becomes the chief centre, not only of
-German but of European politics. ♦Hannover and Great Britain, 1715.♦
-The union of the Electorate of Hannover under the same sovereign with
-the kingdom of Great Britain further increased the number of princes
-ruling both within Germany and without it. ♦Dissolution of the Kingdom,
-1806.♦ Lastly, the wars of the latter years of the eighteenth and the
-beginning of the nineteenth century led to the dissolution alike of
-the German kingdom and of the Roman Empire. ♦The German Confederation,
-1815-1866.♦ Then, after a time of confusion and foreign occupation,
-comes the formation of a Confederation with boundaries nearly the same
-as the later boundaries of the kingdom. But the Confederation now
-appears as something quite subordinate to its two leading members.
-♦Austria and Prussia greater than the Confederation.♦ Germany, as such,
-no longer counts as a great European power, but Prussia and Austria,
-the two chief holders at once of German and of non-German lands, stand
-forth among the chief bearers of European rank. ♦The new Confederation
-and Empire, 1866-1870.♦ Lastly, the changes of our own day have given
-us an Imperial Germany with geographical boundaries altogether new,
-a Germany from which the south-eastern German lands are cut off,
-while the Polish and other non-German possessions of Prussia to the
-north-east have become an integral part of the new Empire. The task of
-the geographer is thereby greatly simplified. Down to the last changes,
-one of his greatest difficulties is to make his map show with any
-clearness what was the extent of the German Kingdom or Confederation,
-and at the same time what was the extent of the dominions of those
-princes who held lands both in Germany and out of it. By the last
-arrangements this difficulty at least is altogether taken away.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Germany under the Saxon and Frankish Empire.♦
-
-If we look at the map of Germany under the Saxon and Frankish Kings,
-we see that the old names, marking the great divisions of the German
-people, still keep their predominance. ♦The great Duchies.♦ The kingdom
-is still made up of the four great duchies, the Eastern _Francia_,
-_Saxony_, _Alemannia_, and _Bavaria_, together with the great
-border-land of _Lotharingia_. These are still the great duchies, to
-which all smaller divisions are subordinate. ♦Eastern Francia cut off
-from extension.♦ Among these, the kernel of the kingdom, the Eastern
-_Francia_, is the only one whose boundaries had little or no chance of
-being extended or lessened at the cost of foreign powers. It had the
-smallest possible frontier towards the Slave. ♦Frontier position of
-Saxony, Bavaria, and Alemannia.♦ On the other hand, _Saxony_ has an
-ever fluctuating boundary against the Slave and the Dane; _Bavaria_
-marches upon the Slave, the Magyar, and the Kingdom of Italy, while
-_Alemannia_ has a shifting frontier towards both Burgundy and Italy.
-♦Exposed position of Lotharingia and Burgundy.♦ Lotharingia, and
-Burgundy after its annexation, are the lands which lie exposed to
-aggression from the West. ♦Vanishing of Francia.♦ It is perhaps for
-this very reason that, of the four duchies which preserve the names
-of the four great divisions of the German nation, the Eastern Francia
-is the one which has most utterly vanished from the modern map and
-from modern memory. Another cause may have strengthened its tendency
-to vanish. The policy of the kings forbade that the Frankish duchy
-should become the abiding heritage of any princely family. ♦Its
-ecclesiastical Dukes.♦ The ducal title of the Eastern Francia was at
-two periods of its history borne by ecclesiastical princes in the
-persons of the Bishops of _Würzburg_; but it never gave its name, like
-Saxony and Bavaria, to any ruling house. ♦Analogy with Wessex.♦ The
-English student will notice the analogy by which, among all the ancient
-English kingdoms, Wessex, the cradle of the English monarchy, is the
-one whose name has most utterly vanished from modern memory.
-
-The only way to grasp the endless shiftings and divisions of the German
-principalities, so as to give anything like a clear general view,
-will be to take the great duchies, and to point out in a general way
-the steps by which they split asunder, and the chief states of any
-historical importance which rose out of their divisions. ♦Growth of
-new powers in the twelfth century.♦ Most of these new powers begin to
-be of importance in the twelfth century, a time which is specially
-marked as the æra when those two states which have had most to do
-with the making or unmaking of modern Germany begin to find their
-place in history. ♦Brandenburg and Austria.♦ It is then that the two
-great marchlands of Brandenburg and Austria begin to take their place
-among the leading powers of the German kingdom. ♦The Circles.♦ And,
-in making this survey, it will be well to bear in mind the much later
-division into circles. The circles, an attempt to create administrative
-divisions of the kingdom as such, were, in a faint way, a return to the
-ancient duchies, the names of which were to some extent retained. Thus
-we have the two _Saxon_ circles, _Upper_ and _Lower_, and the three of
-_Franconia_, _Swabia_, and _Bavaria_. All of these keep up the names
-of ancient duchies, and most of them keep up a stronger or fainter
-geographical connexion with the ancient lands whose names they bore.
-The other circles, the two _Rhenish_ circles, _Upper_ and _Lower_, and
-those of _Westfalia_, _Austria_, and _Burgundy_—the last name being
-used in a sense altogether new—arose out of changes which took place
-between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries, some of which we shall
-have to notice.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Saxony; its three divisions, Westfalia, Angria, Eastfalia.♦
-
-First then, the great duchy of _Saxony_ consisted of three main
-divisions, _Westfalia_, _Engern_ or _Angria_, and _Eastfalia_.
-_Thuringia_ to the south-east, and the _Frisian_ lands to the
-north-west, may be looked on as in some sort appendages to the Saxon
-duchy. ♦Growth of Saxony at the expense of the Slaves.♦ The duchy
-was also capable of any amount of extension towards the east, and
-the lands gradually won from the Wends on this side were all looked
-on as additions made to the Saxon territory. ♦Break-up of the Duchy,
-1182-1191.♦ But the great Saxon duchy was broken up at the fall of
-Henry the Lion. ♦Duchy of Westfalia.♦ The archiepiscopal Electors of
-_Köln_ received the title of Dukes of _Westfalia_ and _Engern_. But in
-the greater part of those districts the grant remained merely nominal,
-though the ducal title, with a small actual Westfalian duchy, remained
-to the electorate till the end. From these lands the Saxon name may
-be looked on as having altogether passed away. ♦New use of the name
-_Saxony_.♦ The name of _Saxony_, as a geographical expression, clave
-to the Eastfalian remnant of the old duchy, and to Thuringia and the
-Slavonic conquests to the east. ♦The Saxon Circles.♦ In the later
-division of Germany these lands formed the two circles of _Upper_ and
-_Lower Saxony_; and it was within their limits that the various states
-arose which have kept on the Saxon name to our own time.
-
-From the descendants of Henry the Lion himself, and from the allodial
-lands which they kept, the Saxon name passed away, except so far as
-they became part of the Lower-Saxon circle. ♦Duchy of Brunswick.♦
-They held their place as princes of the Empire, no longer as Dukes
-of Saxony, but as Dukes of _Brunswick_, a house which gave Rome one
-Emperor and England a dynasty of kings. ♦Its division, 1203. | Lüneburg
-and Wolfenbüttel.♦ After some of the usual divisions, two Brunswick
-principalities finally took their place on the map, those of _Lüneburg_
-and _Wolfenbüttel_, the latter having the town of Brunswick for its
-capital. The Lüneburg duchy grew. ♦Lüneburg acquires the bishoprics
-of Bremen and Verden, 1715-1719.♦ Late in the seventeenth century it
-was raised to the electoral rank, and early in the next century it was
-finally enlarged by the acquisition of the bishoprics of _Bremen_ and
-_Verden_. ♦Electorate of Hannover or Brunswick Lüneburg, 1692.♦ Thus
-was formed the Electorate, and afterwards Kingdom, of _Hannover_, while
-the simple ducal title remained with the Brunswick princes of the other
-line.
-
-♦The new Saxony.♦
-
-The Saxon name itself withdrew in the end from the old Saxony to the
-lands conquered from the Slave. ♦Bernhard duke of Saxony, 1180-1212.♦
-On the fall of Henry the Lion, the duchy of Saxony, cut short by
-the grant to the archbishops of Köln, was granted to Bernhard of
-Ballensted, the founder of the Ascanian House. ♦Sachsen-Lauenburg.♦ Of
-the older Saxon land his house kept only for a while the small district
-north of the Elbe which kept the name of _Sachsen-Lauenburg_, and which
-in the end became part of the Hannover electorate. ♦1423.♦ But it was
-in Thuringia and the conquered Slavonic lands to the east of Thuringia
-that a new Saxony arose, which kept on somewhat of the European
-position of the Saxon name down to modern times. This new Saxony, with
-Wittenberg for its capital, grew, through the addition of _Thuringia_
-and _Meissen_, into the Saxon Electorate which played so great a
-part during the three last centuries of the existence of the German
-kingdom. ♦Divisions and unions.♦ But in Saxony too the usual divisions
-took place. Lauenburg parted off; so did the smaller duchies which
-still keep the Saxon name. ♦1547.♦ The ducal and electoral dignities
-were divided, till the two, united under the famous Maurice, formed
-the Saxon electorate as it stood at the dissolution of the kingdom.
-It was in short a new state, one which had succeeded to the name, but
-which could in no other way be thought to represent, the Saxony whose
-conquest cost so many campaigns to Charles the Great.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Mark of Brandenburg.♦
-
-Another power which arose in the marchland of Saxon and Slave, to the
-north of Saxony in the later sense, was the land known specially as
-the _Mark_, the groundwork of the power which has in our own day risen
-to the head of Germany. The _North Mark_ of Saxony became the _Mark of
-Brandenburg_. ♦Reign of Albert the Bear, 1134-1170.♦ In the twelfth
-and thirteenth centuries, under Albert the Bear and his house, the
-Mark greatly extended itself at the expense of the Slaves. ♦Union with
-Bohemia, 1373-1415. | House of Hohenzollern, 1415.♦ United for a time
-with the kingdom of Bohemia, it passed into the house of the Burgraves
-of _Nürnberg_, that House of Hohenzollern which has grown step by
-step till it has reached Imperial rank in our own day. The power thus
-formed presently acquired a special character by the acquisition of
-what may be called a German land out of Germany, a land which gave them
-in the end a higher title, and which by its geographical position led
-irresistibly to a further increase of territory. ♦Union of Brandenburg
-and Prussia, 1611-1618.♦ Early in the seventeenth century the Electors
-of Brandenburg acquired by inheritance the _Duchy of Prussia_, that is
-merely Eastern Prussia, a fief, not of the Empire but of the crown of
-Poland, and which lay geographically apart from their strictly German
-dominions. ♦Prussia independent of Poland, 1656; becomes kingdom,
-1701.♦ The common sovereign of Brandenburg and Prussia was thus the
-man of two lords; but the Great Elector Frederick William became a
-wholly independent sovereign in his duchy, and his son Frederick took
-on himself the kingly title for the land which was thus freed from all
-homage. Both before and after the union with Prussia, the Electors
-of Brandenburg continued largely to increase their German dominions.
-♦1523-1623.♦ A temporary possession of the principality of _Jägerndorf_
-in Silesia, unimportant in itself, led to great events in later times.
-♦Westfalian possessions of Brandenburg, 1614-1666. | 1702-1744.♦ The
-acquisition, at various times in the seventeenth century, of _Cleve_
-and other outlying Westfalian lands, which were further increased
-in the next century, led in the same way to the modern dominion of
-Prussia in western Germany. ♦Acquisitions in Pomerania, 1638-1648.
-| 1713-1719.♦ But the most solid acquisition of Brandenburg in this
-age was that of _Eastern Pomerania_, to which the town of Stettin,
-with a further increase of territory, was added after the wars of
-Charles the Twelfth of Sweden. The events of the Thirty Years’ War also
-increased the dominions both of Brandenburg and Saxony at the expense
-of the neighbouring ecclesiastical princes. ♦Later acquisitions of
-Prussia.♦ The later acquisitions of the House of Hohenzollern, after
-the Electors of Brandenburg had taken the kingly title from their
-Prussian duchy, concern Prussia as an European power at least as much
-as they concern Brandenburg as a German power. ♦German character of
-the Prussian Monarchy.♦ Yet their proper place comes in the history of
-Germany. Unlike the other princes who held lands within and without the
-German kingdom, the Kings of Prussia and Electors of Brandenburg have
-remained essentially German princes. Their acquisitions of territory
-out of Germany have all been in fact enlargements, if not of the soil
-of Germany, at least of the sphere of German influence. And, at last,
-in marked contrast to the fate of the rival House of Austria, the whole
-Prussian dominions have been incorporated with the new German Empire,
-and form the immediate dominion of its Imperial head. ♦Spread of the
-name of _Prussia_.♦ The outward sign of this change, the outward sign
-of the special position of Brandenburg, as compared with Holstein or
-Austria, is the strange spread of the name of _Prussia_ over the German
-dominions of the King of Prussia. No such spread has taken place with
-the name of Denmark or of Hungary.
-
-♦Conquest of Silesia, 1741.♦
-
-Within Germany the greatest enlargement of the dominion of Prussia—as
-we may now begin to call it instead of Brandenburg—was the acquisition
-of by far the greater part of _Schlesien_ or _Silesia_, hitherto part
-of the Bohemian lands, and then held by the House of Austria. This,
-it should be noted, was an acquisition which could hardly fail to
-lead to further acquisitions. ♦Geographical character of the Prussian
-dominions.♦ The geographical characteristic of the Prussian dominions
-was the way in which they lay in detached pieces, and the enormous
-extent of frontier as compared with the area of the country. The
-kingdom itself lay detached, hemmed in and intersected by the territory
-of Poland. The electorate, with the Pomeranian territory, formed a
-somewhat more compact mass; but even this had a very large frontier
-compared with its area. The Westfalian possessions, the district of
-_Cottbus_, and other outlying dominions, lay quite apart. The addition
-of Silesia increased this characteristic yet further. ♦Position of
-Silesia.♦ The newly won duchy, barely joining the electorate, ran out
-as a kind of peninsula between Saxony, Bohemia, and Poland. Silesia,
-first as a Polish and then as a Bohemian fief, had formed part of a
-fairly compact geographical mass; as part of the same dominion with
-Prussia and Brandenburg, it was an all but isolated land with an
-enormous frontier. ♦Acquisitions from Poland, 1772-1795.♦ The details
-of the Polish acquisitions of Prussia will be best given in our survey
-of Poland. ♦Their geographical character.♦ But it should be noted that
-each of the portions of territory which were added to Prussia by the
-several partitions has a geographical character of its own. ♦1772.♦
-The addition of _West-Prussia_—that is the geographical union of the
-kingdom and the electorate—was something which could not fail in the
-nature of things to come sooner or later. ♦1793.♦ The second addition
-of _South-Prussia_ might seem geographically needed in order to leave
-Silesia no longer peninsular. ♦1795.♦ The last, and most short-lived
-addition of _New-East-Prussia_ had no such geographical necessity as
-the other two. Still it helped to give greater compactness to the
-kingdom, and to lessen its frontier in comparison with its area.
-
-Another acquisition of the House of Hohenzollern during the eighteenth
-century, though temporary, deserves a passing notice. ♦East-Friesland,
-1744.♦ Among its Westfalian annexations was _East-Friesland_. The King
-of Prussia thus became, during the last half of the eighteenth century,
-an oceanic potentate, a character which he presently lost, and which,
-save for a moment in the days of confusion, he obtained again only in
-our own day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Parts of Saxony held by foreign kings.♦
-
-A large part of Saxony, both in the older and in the later sense, thus
-came to form part of a dominion containing both German and non-German
-lands, but in which the German character was in every way predominant.
-Other parts of Saxony in the same extended sense also came to form part
-of the dominions of princes who ruled both in and out of Germany, but
-in whom the non-German character was yet more predominant. ♦Holstein:♦
-The old _Saxony beyond the Elbe_, the modern _Holstein_, passed into
-the hands of the Danish Kings. ♦its relation to Sleswick.♦ Its shifting
-relations towards Denmark and Germany and towards the neighbouring land
-of _Sleswick_, as having become matter of international dispute between
-Denmark and Germany, will be best spoken of when we come to deal with
-Denmark. The events of the Thirty Years’ War also made the Swedish
-kings for a while considerable potentates in northern Germany. ♦German
-territories of Sweden, 1648-1815.♦ The Peace of Westfalia confirmed
-to them _Western Pomerania_ and the town of _Wismar_ on the Baltic,
-and the bishoprics of _Bremen_ and _Verden_ which gave them an oceanic
-coast. ♦1720.♦ But these last lands were, as we have seen afterwards,
-ceded to Hannover, and the Pomeranian possessions of Sweden were also
-cut short by cession to Brandenburg. But the possession of Wismar and
-a part of Pomerania still gave the Swedish kings a position as German
-princes down to the dissolution of the Empire.
-
-These are the chief powers which rose to historical importance within
-the bounds of Saxony, in the widest sense of that word. To trace every
-division and union which created or extinguished any of the smaller
-principalities, or even to mark every minute change of frontier among
-the greater powers, would be impossible. ♦Free cities of Saxony. | The
-Hanse Towns.♦ But it must be further remembered that the Saxon circles
-were the seats of some of the greatest of the free cities of Germany,
-the leading members of the Hanseatic League. In the growth of German
-commerce the Rhenish lands took the lead, and, in the earliest days
-of the Hansa, _Köln_ held the first place among its cities. ♦Lübeck,
-Bremen, Hamburg.♦ The pre-eminence afterwards passed to havens nearer
-to the Ocean and the Baltic, where, among a crowd of others, the
-Imperial cities of _Lübeck_ and _Bremen_ stand out foremost, and with
-them _Hamburg_, a rival which has in later times outstripped them.
-And at this point it may be noticed that Lübeck and Bremen specially
-illustrate a law which extended to many other of the episcopal cities
-of Germany. ♦The cities and the bishoprics.♦ The Bishop became a
-prince, and held a greater or smaller extent of territory in temporal
-sovereignty. But the city which contained his see remained independent
-of him in temporal things, and knew him only as its spiritual shepherd.
-Such were the archbishopric of Bremen and the bishopric of Lübeck,
-principalities which, after the change of religion, passed into secular
-hands. Thus we have seen the archbishopric of Bremen pass, first to
-Sweden, and then to Hannover. But the two cities always remained
-independent commonwealths, owning no superior but the Emperor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Franconia.♦
-
-The next among the great duchies, that of _Eastern Francia_, _Franken_,
-or _Franconia_, is of much less importance in European history than
-that of Saxony. ♦Bishops of Würzburg Dukes.♦ It gave the ducal title
-to the Bishops of Würzburg; but it cannot be said to be in any sense
-continued in any modern state. ♦Extent of the Circle.♦ Its name
-gradually retreated, and the circle of _Franken_ or _Franconia_ took in
-only the most eastern part of the ancient duchy. ♦The Rhenish Circles.♦
-The western and northern part of the duchy, together with a good deal
-of territory which was strictly Lotharingian, became part of the two
-Rhenish circles. Thus _Fulda_, the greatest of German abbeys, passed
-away from the Frankish name. In north-eastern Francia, the _Hessian_
-principalities grew up to the north-west. Within the Franconian circle
-lay _Würzburg_, the see of the bishops who bore the ducal title,
-the other great bishopric of _Bamberg_, together with the free city
-of _Nürnberg_, and various smaller principalities. ♦Ecclesiastical
-States on the Rhine.♦ In the Rhenish lands, both within and without
-the old Francia, one chief characteristic is the predominance of the
-ecclesiastical principalities, _Mainz_, _Köln_, _Worms_, _Speyer_,
-and _Strassburg_. The chief temporal power which arose in this region
-was the _Palatinate of the Rhine_, a power which, like others, went
-through many unions and divisions, and spread into four circles, those
-of Upper and Lower Rhine, Westfalia, and Bavaria. ♦Bavaria.♦ This last
-district, though united with the Palatine Electorate, was, from the
-early part of the fourteenth century, distinguished from the Palatinate
-of the Rhine as the _Oberpfalz_ or _Upper Palatinate_. To the south
-of it lay the _Bavarian_ principalities. These, united into a single
-duchy, formed the power which grew into the modern kingdom. But neither
-this duchy nor the whole Bavarian circle at all reached to the extent
-of the ancient Bavaria which bordered on Italy. ♦Shiftings between
-Bavaria and the Palatinate, 1623. | Electorate of Bavaria, 1648.♦ The
-early stages of the Thirty Years’ War gave the Rhenish Palatinate,
-with its electoral rights, to Bavaria; the Peace of Westfalia restored
-the Palatinate, leaving Bavaria as a new electorate. ♦Union of the
-two, 1777.♦ Late in the eighteenth century, Bavaria itself passed to
-the Elector Palatine, thus forming what may be called modern Bavaria
-with its outlying Rhenish lands. ♦Cession to Austria, 1778.♦ This
-acquisition was at the same time partly balanced by the cession to
-Austria of the lands east of the Inn, known as the _Innviertel_.
-♦Archbishopric of Salzburg.♦ The other chief state within the Bavarian
-circle was the great ecclesiastical principality of the archbishops of
-_Salzburg_ in the extreme south-east.
-
-♦Lotharingia.♦
-
-The old _Lotharingian_ divisions, as we see them in the time of the
-great duchies, utterly died out. ♦Lower Lotharingia.♦ The states which
-arose in the _Lower Lotharingia_ are among those which silently fell
-off from the German Kingdom to take a special position under the name
-of the _Netherlands_. ♦Duchy of Lothringen or Lorraine.♦ The special
-duchy of _Lothringen_ or _Lorraine_ was held to belong to the circle of
-Upper Rhine. ♦Elsass.♦ _Elsass_ also formed part of the same circle,
-the circle which was specially cut short by the encroachments of
-France. ♦Circle of Swabia.♦ The _Swabian_ circle answered more nearly
-than most of the new divisions to the old Swabian duchy, as that duchy
-stood without counting the marchland of Elsass. No part of Germany was
-more cut up into small states than the old land of the Hohenstaufen.
-A crowd of principalities, secular and ecclesiastical, among them the
-lesser principalities of the Hohenzollern House, of free cities, and
-of outlying possessions of the houses of Austria made up the main
-part of the circle. ♦Ecclesiastical towns of Swabia.♦ _Strassburg_,
-_Augsburg_, _Constanz_, _St. Gallen_, _Chur_, _Zürich_, are among
-the great bishoprics and other ecclesiastical foundations of the old
-Swabia. ♦Part of Swabia becomes Switzerland.♦ But, as I shall show
-more fully in another section, large districts in the south-east,
-those which formed the _Old League of High Germany_, had practically
-fallen away from the kingdom before the new division was made, and
-were therefore never reckoned in any circle. ♦Baden. | Württemberg.♦
-Two Swabian principalities, the mark of _Baden_, and _Württemberg_,
-first county and then duchy, came gradually to the first place in this
-region. As such they still remain, preserving in some sort a divided
-representation of the old Swabia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two important parts of the old kingdom, two circles of the division of
-Maximilian, still remain. These are the lands which form the circles
-of _Burgundy_ and _Austria_. These are lands which have, in earlier
-or later times, wholly fallen off from the German Kingdom. ♦Circle of
-_Austria_.♦ The _Austrian_ circle was formed of the lands in southern
-Germany which gradually gathered in the hands of the second Austrian
-dynasty, the House of Habsburg. ♦Growth of the House of Austria.♦
-Starting from the original mark on the Hungarian frontier, those lands
-grew, first into a great German, and then into a great European, power,
-and the latest changes have made even their German lands politically
-non-German. The growth of the Austrian House will therefore be properly
-dealt with in a separate section. ♦Extent of its German lands.♦ It is
-enough to say here that the Austrian dominion in Germany gradually
-took in, besides the original duchy, the south-eastern duchies of
-_Steiermark_ or _Styria_, _Kärnthen_ or _Carinthia_, and _Krain_ or
-_Carniola_, with the Italian borderlands of _Görz_, _Aquileia_, and
-part of _Istria_. ♦Tyrol.♦ Joined to these by a kind of geographical
-isthmus, like that which joins Silesia and Brandenburg, lay the western
-possessions of the house, the Bavarian county of _Tyrol_ and various
-outlying strips and points of lands in _Swabia_ and _Elsass_. ♦Loss of
-Swabian lands.♦ The growth of the Confederates cut short the Swabian
-possessions of Austria, as the later cession to France cut short its
-Alsatian possessions. Still a Swabian remnant remained down to the
-dissolution of the Kingdom. ♦Bohemia and its dependencies.♦ The kingdom
-of _Bohemia_, with the dependent lands of Moravia and _Silesia_, though
-held by the Archdukes of Austria and giving them electoral rank, was
-not included in any German circle. ♦Trent and Brixen.♦ The Austrian
-circle moreover was not wholly made up of the dominions of the Austrian
-house; besides some smaller territories it also took in the bishoprics
-of _Trent_ and _Brixen_ on the debateable frontier of Italy and old
-Bavaria.
-
-♦Circle of Burgundy.♦
-
-The _Burgundian_ circle was the last and the strangest use of the
-Burgundian name. ♦Dominion of the Valois Dukes within the Empire.♦ It
-consisted of those parts of the dominions of the Dukes of Burgundy of
-the House of Valois which remained to their descendants of the House
-of Austria at the time of the division into circles. These did not all
-lie strictly within the boundaries of the German kingdom. ♦The Imperial
-Netherlands.♦ Within that kingdom indeed lay the Northern Netherlands,
-the Frisian lands of _Holland_, _Zealand_, and _West-Friesland_, as
-also _Brabant_ and other Lotharingian lands. ♦County of Burgundy.♦ But
-the circle also took in the _County of Burgundy or Franche Comté_, part
-of the old kingdom of Burgundy, and lastly _Flanders_ and _Artois_,
-lands beyond the bounds of the Empire. ♦Flanders and Artois released
-from homage to France, 1526.♦ These were fiefs of France which were
-released from their homage to that crown by the treaty between Charles
-the Fifth and Francis the First of France. The Burgundian circle thus
-took in all the Imperial fiefs of the Valois dukes, together with a
-small part of their French fiefs. As all, or nearly all, of these
-lands altogether fell away from the German kingdom, and as those parts
-of them which now form the two kingdoms of the Low Countries have a
-certain historical being of their own, it will be well to keep their
-more detailed mention also for a special section.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Confederation and Empire of Germany._
-
-♦Germany changed from a kingdom to a confederation.♦
-
-
-Our survey in the last section has carried us down to the beginning
-of the changes which led to the break-up of the old German Kingdom.
-Germany is the only land in history which has changed from a kingdom
-to a confederation. ♦Sketch of the process, 1806-1815.♦ The tie
-which bound the vassal princes to the king became so lax that it was
-at last thrown off altogether. In this process foreign invasion
-largely helped. Between the two processes of foreign war and domestic
-disintegration, a chaotic time followed, in which boundaries were ever
-shifting and new states were ever rising and falling. ♦The German
-_Bund_, 1815.♦ In the end, nearly all the lands which had formed the
-old kingdom came together again, with new names and boundaries, as
-members of a lax Confederation. ♦The new Confederation and Empire,
-1866-1871.♦ The latest events of all have driven the former chief of
-the Confederation beyond its boundaries; they have joined its other
-members together by a much closer tie; they have raised the second
-member of the former Confederation to the post of perpetual chief
-of the new Confederation, and they have further clothed him with
-the Imperial title. ♦The new Empire still federal.♦ But it must be
-remembered that the modern Empire of Germany is still a Federal state.
-Its chief bears the title of Emperor; still the relation is federal and
-not feudal. The lesser members of the Empire are not vassals of the
-Emperor, as they were in the days of the old kingdom. They are states
-bound to him and to one another by a tie which is purely federal.
-That the state whose prince holds Imperial rank far surpasses any of
-its other members in extent and power is an important political fact;
-but it does not touch the federal position of all the states of the
-Empire, great and small. Reuss-Schleiz is not a vassal of Prussia;
-it is a member of a league in which the voice of Prussia naturally
-goes for more than the voice of Reuss-Schleiz. ♦Wars of the French
-Revolution, 1793-1814.♦ The dissolution of the German kingdom, and with
-it the wiping out of the last tradition of the Roman Empire, cannot
-be separated from the history of wars of the French Revolution which
-went before it, and which indeed led to it. For our purely geographical
-purpose, we must distinguish the changes which directly affected the
-German kingdom from those which affected the Austrian states, the
-Netherlands, and Switzerland, lands which have now a separate historic
-being from Germany. ♦War between France and the Empire, 1793-1801.♦
-The last war which the Empire as such waged with France was the eight
-years’ war which was ended by the Peace of Luneville. ♦The left bank
-of the Rhine ceded by the Peace of Luneville, 1801.♦ By that peace,
-all Germany on the left bank on the Rhine was ceded to France. What
-a sacrifice this was we at once see, when we bear in mind that it
-took in the three metropolitan cities of Köln, Mainz, and Trier, the
-royal city of Aachen, and the famous bishoprics of Worms and Speyer.
-♦The _Reichsdeputationshauptschluss_, 1803.♦ A number of princes thus
-lost all or part of their dominions, and it was presently agreed that
-they should compensate themselves within the lands which remained to
-the kingdom at the expense of the free cities and the ecclesiastical
-princes. ♦End of the Ecclesiastical principalities.♦ The great German
-hierarchy of princely bishops and abbots now came to an end, with a
-solitary exception. ♦The Prince-Primate of Regensburg.♦ As the ancient
-metropolis of Mainz had passed to France, the see of its archbishop was
-removed to _Regensburg_, where, under the title of _Prince-Primate_,
-he remained an Elector and Arch-Chancellor of the Empire. ♦Salzburg
-a secular electorate.♦ _Salzburg_ became a secular electorate. ♦The
-Free Cities.♦ The other ecclesiastical states were annexed by the
-neighbouring princes, and of the free cities six only were left.
-These were the Hanseatic towns of _Lübeck_, _Bremen_, and _Hamburg_,
-and the inland towns of _Frankfurt_, _Nürnberg_, and _Augsburg_.
-♦New Electorates.♦ Besides Salzburg, three new Electorates arose,
-_Württemberg_, _Baden_, and _Hessen-Cassel_. None of these new Electors
-ever chose any King or Emperor. ♦Peace of Pressburg, 1805. | Kingdom of
-Württemberg and Bavaria.♦ The next war led to the Peace of Pressburg,
-in which the Electors of Bavaria, Württemberg, and Baden appear as
-allies of France, and by which those of Bavaria and Württemberg are
-acknowledged as Kings. ♦They divide the western lands of Austria.♦
-Austria was now wholly cut off from south-western Germany. Württemberg
-and Baden divided her Swabian possessions, while Tyrol, Trent, Brixen,
-together with the free city of Augsburg, fell to the lot of Bavaria.
-♦Grand Duchy of Würzburg.♦ Austria received Salzburg; its prince
-removed himself and his electorate to Würzburg, and a _Grand Duchy of
-Würzburg_ was formed to compensate its Elector.
-
-These were the last changes which took place while any shadow of the
-old Kingdom and Empire lasted. ♦Title of ‘Emperor of Austria.’♦ The
-reigning King of Germany and Emperor-elect, Francis King of Hungary
-and Bohemia and Archduke of Austria, had already begun to call himself
-‘_Hereditary Emperor of Austria_.’ In the treaty of Pressburg he
-is described by the strange title, unheard of before or after, of
-‘Emperor of Germany and Austria,’ and the Empire itself is spoken of
-as a ‘Germanic Confederation.’ These formulæ were prophetic. ♦The
-Confederation of the Rhine, July 12, 1806.♦ The next year a crowd
-of princes renounced their allegiance, and formed themselves into
-the _Confederation of the Rhine_ under the protectorate of France.
-♦Dissolution of the Empire, August 6, 1806.♦ The formal dissolution
-of the Empire followed at once. The succession which had gone on from
-Augustus ended; the work of Charles the Great was undone. Instead of
-the Frank ruling over Gaul, the Frenchman ruled over Germany. ♦Repeated
-changes, 1806-1811.♦ A time of confusion followed, in which boundaries
-were constantly shifting, states were constantly rising and falling,
-and new portions of German ground were being constantly added to
-France. ♦Germany in 1811-1813.♦ At the time of the greatest extent
-of French dominion, the political state of Germany was on this wise.
-♦Territories of Denmark and Sweden.♦ The dissolution of the Empire
-had released all its members from their allegiance, and the German
-possessions of the Kings of Denmark and Sweden had been incorporated
-with their several kingdoms. ♦Losses of Prussia and Austria.♦ Hannover
-was wholly lost to its island sovereign; seized and lost again more
-than once by Prussia and by France, it passed at last wholly into the
-hands of the foreign power. Prussia had lost, not only its momentary
-possession of Hannover, but also everything west of the Elbe. Austria
-had yielded _Salzburg_ to Bavaria, and part of her own south-western
-territory in Krain and Kärnthen had passed to France under the name of
-the _Illyrian Provinces_. ♦Annexations to France.♦ France too, beside
-all the lands west of the Rhine, had incorporated _East Friesland_,
-_Oldenburg_, part of _Hannover_, and the three _Hanseatic_ cities.
-♦Confederation of the Rhine.♦ The remaining states of Germany formed
-the _Confederation of the Rhine_. The chief among these were the four
-Kingdoms of _Bavaria_, _Württemberg_, _Saxony_, and _Westfalia_.
-♦Kingdoms of Saxony and Westfalia.♦ Saxony had become a kingdom under
-its own Elector presently after the dissolution of the Empire: the
-new-made kingdom of Westfalia had a French king in Jerome Buonaparte.
-♦Grand Duchy of Frankfurt.♦ Besides _Mecklenburg_, _Baden_—now a Grand
-Duchy—_Berg_, _Nassau_, _Hessen_, and other smaller states, there were
-now among its members the Grand Duchy of _Würzburg_, and also a Grand
-Duchy of _Frankfurt_, the possession of the Prince Primate, once of
-Mainz, afterwards of Regensburg. ♦Germany wiped out.♦ We may say with
-truth that during this time Germany had ceased to exist; its very name
-had vanished from the map of Europe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Prussia was a power so thoroughly German that the fate even of its
-non-German possessions cannot well be separated from German geography.
-♦The Kingdom of Prussia cut short, 1807.♦ The same blow which cut
-short the old electorate of Brandenburg no less cut short the kingdom
-of Prussia in its Polish acquisitions. ♦Commonwealth of Danzig.♦
-_West-Prussia_ only was left, and even here _Danzig_ was cut off to
-form a separate republic. ♦Duchy of Warsaw, 1806-1814.♦ The other
-Polish territories of Prussia formed the _Duchy of Warsaw_, which was
-held by the new King of Saxony. ♦Position of Silesia.♦ Silesia thus
-fell back again on its half-isolated position, all the more so as it
-lay between the German and the Polish possessions of the Saxon king.
-The territory left to Prussia was now wholly continuous, without any
-outlying possessions; but the length of its frontier and the strange
-irregularity of its shape on the map were now more striking than ever.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The liberation of Germany and the fall of Buonaparte brought with
-it a complete reconstruction of the German territory. ♦The German
-Confederation, 1815.♦ Germany again arose, no longer as an Empire or
-Kingdom, but as a lax Confederation. Austria, the duchy whose princes
-had been so often chosen Emperors, became its presiding state. The
-boundaries of the new Confederation differed but slightly from those
-of the old Kingdom; but the internal divisions had greatly changed.
-♦Princes holding lands both within the Confederation and out of it.♦
-Once more a number of princes held lands both in Germany and out of
-it. The so-called ‘Emperor’ of Austria, the Kings of Prussia, Denmark,
-and the Netherlands, became members of the Confederation for those
-parts of their dominions which had formerly been states of the Empire.
-In the like sort, the King of Great Britain and Ireland, having
-recovered his continental dominions, entered the Confederation by the
-title of _King of Hannover_. ♦Kingdom of Hannover, 1815-1866.♦ This
-new kingdom was made up of the former electorate with some additions,
-including _East-Friesland_. ♦Increase of the Prussian territory. |
-Dismemberment of Saxony.♦ In other parts the Prussian territories were
-largely increased. _Magdeburg_ and _Halberstadt_ were recovered.
-_Swedish Pomerania_ was added to the rest of the ancient duchy; and,
-more important than this, a large part of the kingdom of _Saxony_,
-including the greater part of _Lausitz_ and the formerly outlying-land
-of _Cottbus_, was incorporated with Prussia. This change, which made
-the Saxon kingdom far smaller than the old electorate, altogether put
-an end to the peninsular position of Silesia, even as regarded the
-strictly German possessions of Prussia. ♦Posen.♦ The kingdom was at
-the same time rendered more compact by the recovery of part of its
-Polish possessions under the name of the Grand Duchy of _Posen_. In
-western Germany again Prussia now made great acquisitions. ♦Rhenish
-and Westfalian territory.♦ Its old outlying Rhenish and Westfalian
-possessions grew into a large and tolerably compact territory, though
-lying isolated from the great body of the monarchy. The greater part
-of the territory west of the Rhine which had been ceded to France
-now became Prussian, including the cities of _Köln_, no longer a
-metropolitan see, _Trier_, _Münster_, and _Paderborn_. The main part
-of the Prussian possessions thus consisted of two detached masses, of
-very unequal size, but which seemed to crave for a closer geographical
-union. ♦Neufchâtel.♦ The Principality of _Neufchâtel_, which made the
-Prussian king a member of the Swiss Confederation, will be mentioned
-elsewhere.
-
-♦Territory recovered by Austria.♦
-
-Of the other powers which entered the Confederation for the German
-parts of their dominions, but which also had territories beyond the
-Confederation, _Austria_ recovered _Salzburg_, _Tyrol_, _Trent_, and
-_Brixen_, together with the south-eastern lands which had passed to
-France. Thus the territory of the Confederation, like that of the
-old Kingdom, again reached to the Hadriatic. ♦Possession of Denmark.
-| Holstein and Lauenburg.♦ _Denmark_ entered the Confederation for
-_Holstein_, and for a new possession, that of _Lauenburg_, the duchy
-which in a manner represented ancient Saxony. ♦Luxemburg.♦ The King
-of the _Netherlands_ entered the Confederation for the Grand Duchy
-of _Luxemburg_, part of which however was cut off to be added to the
-Rhenish possessions of Prussia. ♦Sweden gives up Pomerania.♦ Sweden, by
-the cession of its last remnant of _Pomerania_, ceased altogether to be
-a German power.
-
-There were thus five powers whose dominions lay partly within the
-Confederation, partly out of it. ♦Prussia the greatest German Power.♦
-In the case of one of these, that of Prussia, the division of German
-and non-German territory was purely formal. Prussia was practically
-a purely German power, and the greatest of purely German powers.
-♦Austria.♦ Her rival Austria stood higher in formal rank in the
-Confederation, and ruled over a much greater continuous territory; but
-here the distinction between German and non-German lands was really
-practical, as later events have shown. ♦Comparison of the position of
-Austria and Prussia.♦ It has been found possible to shut out Austria
-from Germany. To shut out Prussia would have been to abolish Germany
-altogether. ♦Hannover.♦ Hannover, though under a common sovereign with
-Great Britain, was so completely cut off from Great Britain, and had so
-little influence on British politics, that it was practically as much a
-purely German state before its separation from Great Britain as it was
-afterwards. ♦Holstein and Luxemburg.♦ In the cases of Denmark and the
-Netherlands, princes the greater part of whose territories lay out of
-Germany held adjoining territories in Germany. Here then were materials
-for political questions and difficulties; and in the case of Denmark,
-these questions and difficulties became of the highest importance.
-
-♦Kingdom of Bavaria.♦
-
-Among those members of the Confederation, whose territory lay wholly
-within Germany, the Kingdom of _Bavaria_ stood first. Its newly
-acquired lands to the south were given back to Austria; but it made
-large acquisitions to the north-east. Modern Bavaria consists of a
-large mass of territory, Bavarian, Swabian, and Frankish, counting
-within its boundaries the famous cities of _Augsburg_ and _Nürnberg_
-and the great bishoprics of _Bamberg_ and _Würzburg_. ♦Her Rhenish
-territory.♦ Besides this, Bavaria recovered a considerable part of the
-ancient Palatinate west of the Rhine, which adds _Speyer_ to the list
-of Bavarian cities. ♦Württemberg. | Saxony.♦ The other states which
-bore the kingly title, _Württemberg_ and the remnant of _Saxony_, were
-of much smaller extent. Saxony however kept a position in many ways out
-of all proportion to the narrowed extent of its geographical limits.
-Württemberg, increased by various additions from the _Swabian_ lands
-of _Austria_ and from other smaller principalities, had, though the
-smallest of kingdoms, won for itself a much higher position than had
-been held by its former Counts and Dukes. ♦Baden.♦ Along with them
-might be ranked the Grand Duchy of _Baden_, with its strange irregular
-frontier, taking in Heidelberg and Constanz. ♦Hessen.♦ Among a crowd
-of smaller states stand out the two Hessian principalities, the
-Grand Duchy of _Hessen-Darmstadt_, and _Hessen-Cassel_, whose prince
-still kept the title of Elector, and the Grand Duchy of _Nassau_.
-♦Oldenburg.♦ The Grand Duchy of _Oldenburg_ nearly divided the Kingdom
-of Hannover into two parts. ♦Anhalt.♦ The principalities of _Anhalt_
-stretched into the Prussian territory between Halberstadt and the
-newly-won Saxon lands. ♦Brunswick.♦ The Duchy of _Brunswick_ helped
-to divide the two great masses of Prussian territory. ♦Mecklenburg.♦
-In the north _Mecklenburg_ remained, as before, unequally divided
-between the Grand Dukes of _Schwerin_ and _Strelitz_. Germany was thus
-thoroughly mapped out afresh. Some of the old names had vanished; some
-had got new meanings. The greater states, with the exception of Saxony,
-became greater. A crowd of insignificant principalities passed away.
-Another crowd of them remained, especially the smaller Saxon duchies
-in the land which had once been Thuringian. But, if we look to two of
-the most characteristic features of the old Empire, we shall find that
-one has passed away for ever, while the other was sadly weakened. ♦No
-ecclesiastical principality.♦ No ecclesiastical principality revived
-in the new state of things. ♦Lüttich added to Belgium.♦ The territory
-of one of the old bishoprics, that of _Lüttich_, formerly absorbed by
-France, now passed wholly away from Germany, and became part of the new
-kingdom of Belgium. ♦The four Free Cities.♦ Of the free cities four did
-revive, but four only. The three _Hanse Towns_, no longer included in
-French departments, and Frankfurt, no longer a Grand Duchy, entered the
-Confederation as independent commonwealths. ♦Revival of German national
-life.♦ Germany, for a while utterly crushed, had come to life again;
-she had again reached a certain measure of national unity, which could
-hardly fail to become closer.[14]
-
-The Confederation thus formed lasted, with hardly any change that
-concerns geography, till the war of 1866. ♦Division of Luxemburg,
-1831.♦ The Grand Duchy of _Luxemburg_, which had, by the arrangements
-of 1815, been held by the King of the Netherlands as a member of
-the German Confederation, was, on the separation of Belgium and the
-Netherlands, cut into two parts. Part was added to Belgium; another
-part, though quite detached from the kingdom of the Netherlands, was
-held by its king as a member of the Confederation. In 1839 he also
-entered it for the Duchy of Limburg. ♦War in Sleswick and Holstein,
-1848-1851.♦ The internal movements which began in 1848, and the war
-in _Sleswick_ and _Holstein_ which began in the same time, led to no
-lasting geographical changes. In 1849 the Swabian principalities of
-Hohenzollern were joined to the Prussian crown. ♦Cession of the Duchies
-to Austria and Prussia, 1864.♦ The last Danish war ended by the cession
-of Sleswick and Holstein, together with Lauenburg, to Prussia and
-Austria jointly, an arrangement in its own nature provisional. Austria
-ceded her right in Lauenburg to Prussia in the next year, and in the
-next year again came the Seven Weeks’ War, and the great geographical
-changes which followed it. ♦Abolition of the Confederation. | Exclusion
-of Austria. | North-German Confederation. | Cession of Sleswick and
-Holstein to Prussia, 1866.♦ The German Confederation was abolished;
-Austria was shut out from all share in German affairs, and she ceded
-her joint right in Sleswick and Holstein to Prussia. ♦Prussian
-annexations.♦ The Northern states of Germany became a distinct
-Confederation under the presidency of Prussia, whose immediate dominion
-was increased by the annexation of the kingdom of _Hannover_, the duchy
-of _Nassau_, the electorate of _Hessen_, and the city of _Frankfurt_.
-The States south of the Main, Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden, and the
-southern part of Hessen-Darmstadt, remained for a while outside of the
-new League. ♦All the Prussian lands admitted to the Confederation.♦
-The non-German dominions of Prussia, Prussia strictly so called with
-the Polish duchy of Posen and the newly acquired land of Sleswick,
-were now incorporated with the Confederation; on the other hand,
-all that Austria had held within the Confederation was now shut out
-of it. ♦Settlement of Luxemburg, 1867.♦ _Luxemburg_ also was not
-included in the new League, and, after some disputes, it was in the
-next year recognized as a neutral territory under its own duke the
-King of the Netherlands. ♦Liechtenstein.♦ The little principality of
-_Liechtenstein_ was perhaps forgotten altogether; but, as not being
-included in the Confederation, nor yet incorporated with anything else,
-it must be looked on as becoming an absolutely independent state.
-♦Great geographical changes, 1866.♦ Thus the geographical frontiers
-of Germany underwent, at a single blow, changes as great as they had
-undergone in the wars of the French Revolution. The geography of the
-presiding power of the new League was no less changed.
-
-That extraordinary extent of frontier which had hitherto been
-characteristic of Prussia was not wholly taken away by the new
-annexations, but it was greatly lessened. The kingdom, as a kingdom,
-is made far more compact, and the two great detached masses in which
-it formerly lay are now joined together. Moreover, the geographical
-character of Prussia becomes of much less political importance, now
-that her frontier marches to so great an extent on the smaller members
-of the League of which she is herself President. ♦War with France,
-1870-1871. | The German Empire. | Incorporation of the Southern
-states.♦ Next came the war with France, the first effect of which
-was the incorporation of the southern states of Germany with the new
-League, which presently took the name of an Empire, with the Prussian
-King as hereditary Emperor. ♦Recovery of Elsass-Lothringen, 1871.♦ Then
-by the peace with France, nearly the whole of _Elsass_ and part of
-_Lotharingia_, including the cities of _Strassburg_ and _Metz_, were
-restored to Germany. They have, under the name of _Elsass-Lothringen_,
-become an Imperial territory, forming part of the Empire and owning
-the sovereignty of the Emperor, but not becoming part of the kingdom
-of Prussia or of any other German state. ♦The Imperial title.♦
-The assumption of the Imperial title could hardly be avoided in a
-confederation whose constitution was monarchic, and which numbered
-kings among its members. No title but Emperor could have been found
-to express the relation between the presiding chief and the lesser
-sovereigns.
-
-♦The new Empire a revival of the German Kingdom, but not of the Roman
-Empire. | Comparison of the old Kingdom and the new Empire.♦
-
-Still it must be borne in mind that the new German Empire is in no
-sense a continuation or restoration of the Holy Roman Empire which
-fell sixty-four years before its creation. But it may be fairly
-looked on as a restoration of the old German Kingdom, the Kingdom of
-the East-Franks. Still, as far as geography is concerned, no change
-can be stranger than the change in the boundaries of Germany between
-the ninth century and the nineteenth. The new Empire, cut short to
-the north-west, south-west, and south-east, has grown somewhat to
-the north, and it has grown prodigiously to the north-east. ♦Name of
-_Prussia_.♦ Its ruling state, a state which contains such illustrious
-cities as Köln, Trier, and Frankfurt, is content to call itself after
-an extinct heathen people whose name had most likely never reached
-the ears of Charles the Great. ♦Position of Berlin.♦ The capital of
-the new Empire, placed far away from any of the antient seats of
-German kingship, stands in what in his day, and long after, was a
-Slavonic land. ♦Formation of the new Empire.♦ Germany, with its chief
-state bearing the name of _Prussia_, with the place of its national
-assemblies transferred from Frankfurt to Berlin, presents one of the
-strangest changes that historical geography can show us. But, strange
-as is the geographical change, it has come about gradually, by the
-natural working of historical causes. The Slavonic and Prussian lands
-have been Germanized, while the western parts of the old kingdom
-which have fallen away have mostly lost their German character. Those
-German lands which have formed the kernel of the Swiss Confederation
-have risen to a higher political state than that of any kingdom or
-Empire. But the German lands which still remain so strangely united
-to the lands of the Magyar and the southern Slave await, at however
-distant a time, their natural and inevitable reunion. So does a Danish
-population in the extreme north await, with less hope, its no less
-natural separation from the German body. Posen, still mainly Slavonic,
-remains unnaturally united to a Teutonic body, but it is not likely to
-gain by a transfer to any other ruler. The reconstruction of the German
-realm in its present shape, a shape so novel to the eye, but preserving
-so much of ancient life and ancient history, has been the greatest
-historical and geographical change of our times.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Kingdom of Italy._
-
-♦Small geographical importance of the kingdom as such.♦
-
-We parted from the Italian kingdom at the moment of its separation
-from the Eastern and Western kingdoms of the Franks. Its history,
-as a kingdom, consists in little more than its reunion with the
-East-Frankish crown, and in the way in which the royal power gradually
-died out within its limits. There is but little to say as to any
-changes of frontier of the kingdom as such. As long as Germany, Italy,
-and Burgundy acknowledged a single king, any shiftings of the frontiers
-of his three kingdoms were of secondary importance. When the power
-of the Emperors in Italy had died out, the land became a system of
-independent commonwealths and principalities, which had hardly that
-degree of unity which could enable us to say that a certain territory
-was added to Italy or taken from it. Even if a certain territory
-passed from an Italian to a German or Burgundian lord, the change was
-rather a change in the frontier of this or that Italian state than
-in the frontier of Italy itself. ♦Changes on the Alpine frontier.♦
-The shiftings of frontier along the whole Alpine border have been
-considerable; but it is only in our own day that we can say that Italy
-as such has become capable of extending or lessening her borders. ♦Case
-of Verona.♦ When, in 1866, Venice and Verona were added to the Italian
-kingdom, that was a distinct change in the frontier of Italy. We can
-hardly give that name to endless earlier changes on the same marchland.
-♦Case of Trieste, 1380.♦ In the fourteenth century, for instance, the
-town of _Trieste_, disputed between the patriarchs of Aquileia and
-the commonwealth of Venice, was acknowledged as an independent state,
-and it presently gave up its independence by commendation to the Duke
-of Austria. It is not likely that the question entered into any man’s
-mind whether the frontiers of the German and Italian kingdoms were
-affected by such a change. Whether as a free city or as an Austrian
-lordship, Trieste remained under the superiority, formally undoubted
-but practically nominal, of the common sovereign of Germany and Italy,
-the Roman Emperor or King. Whether the nominal allegiance of the city
-was due to him in his German or in his Italian character most likely no
-one stopped to think. ♦No eastern or western frontiers.♦ East and west,
-the Italian kingdom had no frontiers; the only question which could
-arise was as to the relation of the islands of Corsica and Sardinia
-to the kingdom itself or to any of the states which arose within it.
-To the south lay the independent Lombard duchies, and the possessions
-which still remained to the Eastern Empire. ♦The Norman kingdom of
-Sicily not an Imperial fief.♦ These changed in time into the Norman
-duchy of _Apulia_ and kingdom of _Sicily_; but that kingdom, held as
-it was as a fief of the see of Rome, was never incorporated with the
-Italian kingdom of the Emperors, nor did its kings ever become the
-men of the Emperor. Particular Emperors in the thirteenth century, in
-the sixteenth, and in the eighteenth, were also kings of one or both
-the Sicilian kingdoms; but at no time before our own day were Sicily
-and southern Italy ever incorporated with a Kingdom of Italy. When we
-remember that it was to the southern part of the peninsula that the
-name of Italy was first given, we see here a curiosity of nomenclature
-as remarkable as the shiftings of meaning in the names of Saxony and
-Burgundy.
-
-Naples and Sicily then, the Two Sicilies of later political
-nomenclature, lie outside our present subject. ♦Venice no part of
-Italy.♦ So does the commonwealth of _Venice_, except so far as Venice
-afterwards won a large subject territory on the Italian mainland.
-♦Her Italian dominions.♦ Both these states have to do with Italy as
-a geographical expression, but neither the Venetian commonwealth nor
-the Sicilian kingdom is Italian within the meaning of the present
-section. They formed no part of the Carolingian dominion. ♦Venice
-and the Sicilies part of the Eastern Empire.♦ They were parts of the
-Eastern Empire, not of the Western. They remained attached to the New
-Rome after an Imperial throne had again been set up in the Old. They
-gradually fell away from their allegiance to the Eastern Empire, but
-they were never incorporated with the Empire of the West. I shall deal
-with them here only in their relations to the Imperial Kingdom of
-Italy, and treat of their special history elsewhere among the states
-which arose out of the break-up of the Eastern Empire. Again, on the
-north-western march of Italy a power gradually arose, partly Italian,
-but for a long time mainly Burgundian, which has in the end, by a
-strange fate, grown into a new Italian Kingdom. ♦The House of Savoy.♦
-This is the House of _Savoy_. The growth of the dominions of that
-house, the process by which it gradually lost territory in Burgundy
-and gained it in _Italy_, form another distinct subject. ♦Its special
-history.♦ It will be dealt with here only in its relations to the
-kingdom of Italy.
-
-♦The Kingdom of Italy continues the Lombard kingdom.♦
-
-The Italian Kingdom of the Karlings, the kingdom which was reunited
-to Germany under Otto the Great, was, as has been already said, a
-continuation of the old Lombard kingdom. It consisted of that kingdom,
-enlarged by the Italian lands which fell off from the Eastern Empire
-in the eighth century; that is by the _Exarchate_ and the adjoining
-_Pentapolis_, and the immediate territory of _Rome_ itself. ♦Austria
-and Neustria.♦ The Lombard kingdom, in the strictest sense, took in
-the two provinces north of the Po, in which we again find, as in
-other lands, an _Austria_ to the east and a _Neustria_ to the west.
-♦Æmilia. | Tuscany.♦ It took in _Æmilia_ south of the Po—the district
-of Piacenza, Parma, Reggio, and Modena—also _Tuscany_, a name, which,
-as it no longer reaches to the Tiber, answers pretty nearly to its
-modern use. ♦Romagna.♦ The Tuscan name has lived on; the Exarchate and
-Pentapolis, as having been the chief seat of the later Imperial power
-in Italy, got the name of _Romania_, _Romandiola_, or _Romagna_. This
-name also lives on; but the Lombard Neustria and Austria soon vanish
-from the map. Their disappearance was perhaps lucky, as one knows not
-what arguments might otherwise have been built on the presence of an
-Austria south of the Alps. ♦Lombardy proper. | Venetia.♦ The Lombard
-Neustria together with Æmilia got the special name of _Lombardy_, while
-the Lombard Austria, after various shiftings of names taken from the
-principalities which rose and fell within it, came back in the end to
-its oldest name, that of _Venetia_. ♦Mark of Ivrea. | Duchy of Friuli.♦
-In the north-west corner _Iporedia_ or _Ivrea_ appears as a distinct
-march; but the Venetian march at the other corner, known at this stage
-as the duchy of _Friuli_, is of more importance. It takes in the county
-of _Trent_, the special march of _Friuli_, and the march of _Istria_.
-♦Fluctuation of boundary at the north-west corner.♦ This is the corner
-in which the German and Italian frontier has so often fluctuated. We
-have seen that, after the union of the Italian and German crowns, even
-Verona itself was sometimes counted as German ground.
-
-♦Comparison of Italy and Germany.♦
-
-Under the German kings Italy came under the same influences as the
-other two Imperial kingdoms. Principalities grew up; free cities
-grew up; but, while in Germany the principalities were the rule and
-the cities the exception, in Italy it was the other way. ♦Growth
-of a system of commonwealths in Italy.♦ The land gradually became
-a system of practically independent commonwealths. Feudal princes,
-ecclesiastical or temporal, flourished only in the north-western and
-north-eastern corners of the kingdom. But, if the range of the German
-cities was less wide, and their career less brilliant, than those of
-Italy, their freedom was more lasting. ♦Tyrants grow into princes.♦ The
-Italian cities gradually fell under tyrants, and the tyrants gradually
-grew into acknowledged princes. ♦Growth of the dominion of the Popes.♦
-The Bishops of Rome too, by a series of claims dexterously pressed
-at various times, contrived to form the greatest of ecclesiastical
-principalities, one which stretched across the peninsula from sea to
-sea. ♦Four stages of Italian history.♦ The geographical history of
-Italy consists of four stages. In the first the kingdom fell asunder
-into principalities. In the second the principalities vanished before
-the growth of the free cities. In the third the cities were again
-massed into principalities, till in the fourth the principalities were
-at last merged in a kingdom of united Italy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Under the Saxon and Frankish Emperors the old Lombard names of Neustria
-and Æmilia pass away. Several small marches lie along the Burgundian
-frontier, as _Savona_ on the coast, _Ivrea_ among the mountains to
-the north-west, between them _Montferrat_, _Vasto_, and _Susa_,
-whose princes, as special guardians of the passage between the two
-kingdoms, bore the title of Marquess in Italy. It was in this region
-that the feudal princes were strongest, and that the system of free
-cities had the smallest developement. ♦The Marquesses of Montferrat,
-938-1533.♦ The Savoyard power was already beginning to grow up in
-the extreme north-west corner; but at this time a greater part in
-strictly Italian history is played by the Marquesses of Montferrat,
-who for many centuries kept their position as important feudal princes
-quite apart from the lords of the cities. In the north-east corner
-of the kingdom the place of the old Austria is taken by the border
-principalities where the Italian, the German, and the Slave all come
-in contact, and which fluctuated more than once between the Italian
-and the German crowns. We have here the great march of Verona, beyond
-it that of Friuli, Trent, the marchland of the marchland, between
-Verona and Bavaria, and the Istrian peninsula on the Slavonic side
-of the Hadriatic. Between the border districts on either side lay
-the central land, Lombardy, in the narrower sense, the chosen home
-of the free cities. ♦Growth of the Lombard cities.♦ Here, by the
-middle of the twelfth century, every city had practically become a
-separate commonwealth, owning only the most nominal superiority in
-the Emperor. Guelfic cities withstood the Emperor; Ghibelin cities
-welcomed him; but both were practically independent commonwealths.
-♦Wars of the Swabian Emperors.♦ Hence came those long wars between
-the Swabian Emperors and the Italian cities which form the chief
-feature of Italian history in the second half of the twelfth century
-and the first half of the thirteenth. ♦Milan and Pavia. | The other
-Lombard cities. | Alessandria, 1168.♦ Round the younger and the elder
-capital, round Guelfic Milan and Ghibelin Pavia, gathered a crowd of
-famous names, _Como_, _Bergamo_, and _Brescia_, _Lodi_, _Crema_, and
-_Cremona_, _Tortona_, _Piacenza_, and _Parma_, and _Alessandria_, the
-trophy of republican and papal victory over Imperial power. ♦Verona
-and Padua.♦ The Veronese march was less rich in cities of the same
-historical importance; but both _Verona_ itself and _Padua_ played
-a great part, as the seats first of commonwealths, then of tyrants.
-Further north and east, the civic element was weaker again. ♦Trent.
-| Aquileia.♦ _Trent_ gradually parted off from Italy to become an
-ecclesiastical principality of the German kingdom; and the Patriarchs
-of _Aquileia_ grew into powerful princes at the north-eastern corner
-of the Hadriatic. ♦The lords of Romano and Este.♦ Within the Veronese
-or Trevisan march itself, the lords of _Romano_ and the more important
-marquesses of _Este_ also demand notice. Romano gave the Trevisan march
-its famous tyrant Eccelino in the days of Frederick the Second, and the
-Marquesses of Este, kinsmen of the great Saxon dukes, came in time to
-rank among the chief Italian princes. ♦The north-eastern march falls
-off from Italy.♦ The extreme north-eastern march so completely fell off
-from Italy that it will be better treated in tracing the growth of the
-powers of Venice and Austria.
-
-♦Tuscany, Romagna, and the March of Ancona.♦
-
-In the more central lands of the kingdom, in the old exarchate,
-now known as _Romagna_, in the march variously called by the names
-of _Camerino_, _Fermo_, or _Ancona_, and above all in the march of
-_Tuscany_ on the southern sea, the same developement of city life also
-took place, but somewhat later. North of the Apennines, along the
-Hadriatic coast, arose a crowd of small commonwealths which gradually
-passed into small tyrannies. ♦The Tuscan commonwealths.♦ Tuscany, on
-the other hand, was parted off into a few commonwealths of illustrious
-name. For a while one of these ran a course which stood rather apart
-from the common run of Italian history. ♦Pisa; | her wars with the
-Saracens 1005-1115.♦ _Pisa_, then one of the great maritime and
-commercial states of Europe, became, early in the eleventh century,
-a power which forestalled the crusades and won back lands from the
-Saracen. Though she was in every sense a city of the Italian kingdom,
-Pisa at this time held a position not unlike that which was afterwards
-held by Venice. Like her, she was a power which colonized and conquered
-beyond the seas, but which came only gradually to take a share in the
-main course of Italian affairs. ♦Genoa.♦ Beyond the borders of Tuscany,
-the same position was held by _Genoa_ on the Ligurian gulf. ♦Occupation
-of the island of Sardinia by Pisa, and of Corsica by Genoa.♦ Pisa won
-_Sardinia_ from the Saracen; Genoa, after long disputes with Pisa,
-obtained a more lasting possession of _Corsica_. Returning to Tuscany,
-three great commonwealths here grew up, which gradually divided the
-land between them. ♦Lucca, Siena, Florence.♦ These were _Lucca_
-and _Siena_, and _Florence_, the last of Italian cities to rise to
-greatness, but the one which became in many ways the greatest among
-her fellows. ♦Perugia.♦ In the centre of Italy, within the bounds of
-old Etruria but not within those of modern Tuscany, _Perugia_, both as
-commonwealth and as tyranny, held a high place among Italian cities.
-♦Rome.♦ Of Rome herself it is almost impossible to speak. She has much
-history, but she has little geography. Emperors were crowned there;
-Popes sometimes lived there; sometimes Rome appears once more as a
-single Latin city, waging war against Tusculum or some other of her
-earliest fellows. ♦Claims of the Popes.♦ The claims of her Bishops
-to independent temporal power, founded on a succession of real or
-pretended Imperial and royal grants, lay still in the background; but
-they were ready to grow into reality as occasion served.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Second stage, c. 1250-1530.♦
-
-The next stage of Italian political geography may be dated from
-the death of Frederick the Second, when all practical power of an
-Imperial kingdom in Italy may be said to have passed away. ♦Growth of
-tyrannies.♦ Presently begins the gradual change of the commonwealths
-into tyrannies, and the grouping together of many of them into larger
-states. We also see the beginning of more definite claims of temporal
-dominion on behalf of the Popes. ♦Dominion of Spain, 1555-1701.♦ In
-the course of the three hundred years between Frederick the Second and
-Charles the Fifth, these processes gradually changed the face of the
-Italian kingdom. It became in the end a collection of principalities,
-broken only by the survival of a few oligarchic commonwealths and by
-the anomalous dominion of Venice on the mainland. Between Frederick
-the Second and Charles the Fifth, we may look on the Empire as
-practically in abeyance in Italy. The coming of an Emperor always
-caused a great stir for the time, but it was only for the time. ♦Grant
-of Rudolf, 1278.♦ After the grant of Rudolf of Habsburg to the Popes,
-a distinction was drawn between Imperial and papal territory in Italy.
-♦Imperial and papal fiefs.♦ While certain princes and commonwealths
-still acknowledged at least the nominal superiority of the Emperor,
-others were now held to stand in the same relation of vassalage to the
-Pope.
-
-We must now trace out the growth of the chief states which were formed
-by these several processes. Beginning again in the north, it must be
-remembered that all this while the power of Savoy was advancing in
-those north-western lands in which the influences which mainly ruled
-this period had less force than elsewhere. Montferrat too kept its old
-character of a feudal principality, a state whose rulers had in various
-ways a singular connexion with the East. ♦Palaiologoi at Montferrat,
-1306.♦ As Marquesses of Montferrat had claimed the crown of Jerusalem
-and had worn the crown of Thessalonica, so, as if to keep even the
-balance between East and West, in return a branch of the Imperial house
-of Palaiologos came to reign at Montferrat. To the east of these more
-ancient principalities, two great powers of quite different kinds grew
-up in the old Neustria and Austria. ♦Duchy of Milan. Venice.♦ These
-were the _Duchy of Milan_ and the land power of _Venice_. Milan, like
-most other Italian cities, came under the influence of party leaders,
-who grew first into tyrants and then into acknowledged sovereigns.
-♦The Visconti at Milan, 1310-1447.♦ These at Milan, after the shorter
-domination of the Della Torre, were the more abiding house of the
-Visconti. Their dominion, after various fluctuations and revolutions,
-was finally established when the coming of the Emperor Henry the
-Seventh generally strengthened the rule of the Lords of the cities
-throughout Italy.
-
-♦Grant of the Duchy by King Wenceslaus, 1395.♦
-
-At the end of the fourteenth century their informal lordship passed by
-a royal grant into an acknowledged duchy of the Empire. The dominion
-which they had gradually gained, and which was thus in a manner
-legalized, took in all the great cities of Lombardy, those especially
-which had formed the Lombard League against the Swabian Emperors.
-♦County of Pavia.♦ Pavia indeed, the ancient rival of Milan, kept a
-kind of separate being, and was formed into a distinct county. ♦Extent
-of the duchy.♦ But the duchy granted by Wenceslaus to Gian-Galeazzo
-stretched far on both sides of the lake of Garda. _Belluno_ at one end
-and _Vercelli_ at the other formed part of it. It took in the mountain
-lands which afterwards passed to the two Alpine Confederations; it took
-in _Parma_, _Piacenza_, and _Reggio_ south of the Po, and _Verona_
-and _Vicenza_ in the old Austrian or Venetian land. Besides all this,
-_Padua_, _Bologna_, even _Genoa_ and _Pisa_, passed at various times
-under the lordship of the Visconti. But this great power was not
-lasting. The Duchy of Milan, under various lords, native and foreign,
-lasted till the wars of the French Revolution; but, long before that
-time, it had been cut short on every side. ♦Decrease on the death of
-Gian Galeazzo, 1402.♦ The death of the first Duke was followed by a
-separation of the duchy of Milan and the county of Pavia between his
-sons, and the restored duchy never rose again to its former power.
-♦The eastern cities won by Venice, 1406-1447.♦ The eastern parts,
-Padua, Verona, Brescia, Bergamo, were gradually added to the dominion
-of Venice. By the middle of the fifteenth century, that republic
-had become the greatest power in northern Italy. ♦House of Sforza,
-1450-1535. | Claims of the Kings of France, 1499-1525.♦ In the duchy of
-Milan the house of Sforza succeeded that of Visconti; but the opposing
-claims of the Kings of France were one chief cause of the long wars
-which laid Italy waste in the latter years of the fifteenth century
-and the early years of the sixteenth. The duchy was tossed to and fro
-between the Emperor, the French King, and its own dukes. Meanwhile the
-dominion which was thus struggled for was cut short at the two ends.
-♦Cession to the Alpine Leagues, 1512-1513.♦ It was dismembered to the
-north in favour of the two Alpine Leagues, as will be hereafter shown
-more in detail. ♦The Popes obtain Parma and Piacenza, 1515. | Duchy
-of Parma and Piacenza, 1545.♦ South of the Po, the Popes obtained
-_Parma_ and _Piacenza_, which were afterwards granted as papal fiefs to
-form a duchy for the house of Farnese. Thus the Duchy of Milan which
-became in the end a possession of Charles the Fifth, and afterwards
-of his Spanish and Austrian successors, was but a remnant of the
-great dominion of the first Duke. The duchy underwent still further
-dismemberments in later times.
-
-♦Land power of Venice only.♦
-
-With Venice we have here to deal in her somewhat unnatural position
-as an Italian land power. ♦War of the League of Cambray, 1508-1517.♦
-This position she took on herself in the fifteenth century; in the
-sixteenth it led to the momentary overthrow and wonderful recovery of
-her dominion in the war of the League of Cambray. This land power of
-Venice stands quite distinct from the Venetian possessions east of
-the Hadriatic. ♦Istria.♦ With this last her possession of the coast
-of the _Istrian_ peninsula must be reckoned, rather than with her
-Italian dominions. Between these lay Aquileia, Trieste, and the other
-lands in this quarter which gradually came under the power of Austria.
-♦Extent of Venetian dominion. | Ravenna, 1441-1530.♦ The continuous
-Italian dominion of Venice took in _Udine_ at one end and _Bergamo_
-at the other, besides _Crema_, and for a while _Ravenna_, as outlying
-possessions. Thus the Byzantine city which lay anchored off the shore
-of the Western Empire could for a season call the ancient seat of the
-Exarchate its own. ♦Two parts of the Venetian territory.♦ But even the
-continuous land territory of Venice lay in two portions. Brescia and
-Bergamo were almost cut off from Verona and the other possessions to
-the east by the Lake of Garda, the bishopric of Trent to the north, and
-the principality of _Mantua_ to the south.
-
-The mention of this last state leads us back again to the commonwealths
-which, like Milan, changed, first into tyrannies, and then into
-acknowledged principalities. It is impossible to mention all of them,
-and some of those which played for a while the most brilliant part in
-Italian history had no lasting effect on Italian geography. ♦Rule of
-the Scala at Verona, 1260-1387; | of the Carrara at Padua, 1318-1405;♦
-The rule of the house of Scala at Verona, the rule of the house of
-Carrara at Padua, left no lasting trace on the map. It was otherwise
-with the two states which bordered on the Venetian possessions to the
-south. ♦of the Gonzaga at Mantua, 1328-1708. | Marquesses, 1433;
-| Dukes, 1530.♦ The house of Gonzaga held sovereign power at _Mantua_,
-first as captains, then as marquesses, then as dukes, for nearly four
-hundred years. ♦House of Este.♦ Of greater fame was the power that
-grew up in the house of _Este_, the Italian branch of the house of
-Welf. Their position is one specially instructive, as illustrating the
-various tenures by which dominion was held. ♦The lords of Ferrara and
-Modena, 1264-1288.♦ The marquesses of Este, feudal lords of that small
-principality, became, after some of the usual fluctuations, permanent
-lords of the cities of _Ferrara_ and _Modena_. About the same time
-they lost their original holding of Este, which passed to Padua, and
-with Padua to Venice. Thus the nominal marquess of Este and real lord
-of Ferrara was not uncommonly spoken of as Marquess of Ferrara. In the
-fifteenth century these princes rose to ducal rank; but by that time
-the new doctrine of the temporal dominion of the Popes had made great
-advances. Modena, no man doubted, was a city of the Empire; but Ferrara
-was now held to be under the supremacy of the Pope. The Marquess Borso
-had thus to seek his elevation to ducal rank from two separate lords.
-♦Duchy of Modena, 1453. | Duchy of Ferrara, 1471.♦ He was created Duke
-of Modena and Reggio by the Emperor, and afterwards Duke of Ferrara
-by the Pope. This difference of holding, as we shall presently see,
-led to the destruction of the power of the house of Este. In the times
-in which we are now concerned, their dominions lay in two masses. To
-the west lay the duchy of Modena and Reggio; apart from it to the
-east lay the duchy of Ferrara. ♦Loss of Rovigo, 1484.♦ Not long after
-its creation, this last duchy was cut short by the surrender of the
-border-district of _Rovigo_ to Venice.
-
-♦Cities of Romagna.♦
-
-Between the two great duchies of the house of Este lay _Bologna_,
-gradually changed from _Romania_ in one sense into _Romagna_ in
-another. Like most other Italian cities, the commonwealths of the
-Exarchate and the Pentapolis changed into tyrannies, and their petty
-princes were one by one overthrown by the advancing power of the
-Popes. ♦Bologna, Perugia, Rimini.♦ Every city had its dynasty; but
-it was only a few, like the houses of _Bentevoglio_ at _Bologna_, of
-_Baglioni_ at _Perugia_, and _Malatesta_ at _Rimini_, that rose to
-any historical importance. One only combined historical importance
-with acknowledged princely rank. ♦The Duchy of Urbino, 1478-1631.♦ The
-house of _Montefeltro_, lords of _Urbino_, became acknowledged dukes by
-papal grants. From them the duchy passed to the house of La Rovere, and
-it flourished under five princes of the two dynasties. ♦Expansion of
-the papal dominions.♦ Gradually, by successive annexations, the papal
-dominions, before the middle of the sixteenth century, stretched from
-the Po to Tarracina. Ferrara and Urbino still remained distinct states,
-but states which were confessedly held as fiefs of the Holy See.
-
-♦Creation of the Tuscan cities.♦
-
-To the west, in Tuscany, the phænomena are somewhat different. The
-characteristic of this part of Italy was the grouping together of the
-smaller cities under the power of the larger. Nearly all the land
-came in the end under princely rule; but both acknowledged princely
-rule and the tyrannies out of which it sprang came into importance in
-Tuscany later than anywhere else. ♦Lucca under Castruccio Castracani,
-1320-1338.♦ _Lucca_ had in the fourteenth century a short time of
-greatness under her illustrious tyrant Castruccio; but, before and
-after his day, she plays, as a commonwealth, only a secondary part in
-Italy. Still she remained a commonwealth, though latterly an oligarchic
-one, through all changes down to the general crash of the French
-Revolution. ♦Pisa.♦ _Pisa_ kept for a while her maritime greatness,
-and her rivalry with the Ligurian commonwealth of _Genoa_. ♦Genoa.♦
-Genoa, less famous in the earliest times, proved a far more lasting
-power. ♦Her rule in Corsica.♦ She established her dominion over the
-coast on both sides of her, and kept her island of Corsica down to
-modern times. ♦Sardinia ceded to Aragon, 1428. | Pisa subject to
-Florence, 1416.♦ Physical causes caused the fall of the maritime power
-of Pisa; Sardinia passed from her to become a kingdom of the House
-of Aragon, and she herself passed under the dominion of _Florence_.
-♦Greatness of Florence.♦ This last illustrious city, the greatest of
-Tuscan and even of Italian commonwealths, begins to stand forth as
-the foremost of republican states about the time when her forerunner
-Milan came under the rule of tyrants. She extended her dominion over
-_Volterra_, _Arezzo_, and many smaller places, till she became mistress
-of all northern Tuscany. ♦Siena.♦ To the south the commonwealth of
-_Siena_ also formed a large dominion. ♦Rule of the Medici. 1434-1494.
-| 1512-1527.♦ In Florence the rule of the Medici grew step by step into
-a hereditary tyranny; but it was an intermittent tyranny, one which was
-supported only by foreign force, and which was overturned whenever
-Florence had strength to act for herself. ♦Alexander, Duke of Florence,
-1530.♦ It was only after her last overthrow by the combined powers of
-Pope and Cæsar that she became, under Alexander, the first duke of the
-house of Medici, an acknowledged principality. ♦Cosmo annexes Siena,
-1557. | Elba, &c.♦ Cosmo the First, the second duke, annexed Siena,
-and all the territory of that commonwealth, except the lands known as
-_Stati degli Presidi_, that is the isle of _Elba_ and some points on
-the coast. These became parts of the kingdom of Naples; that is, at
-that time, parts of the dominion of Spain. The state thus formed by
-Cosmo was one of the most considerable in Italy, taking in the whole
-of Tuscany except the territory of Lucca and the lands which became
-Spanish. ♦Cosmo Grand Duke of Tuscany, 1567.♦ Its ruler presently
-exchanged by papal authority the title of Duke of Florence for that of
-Grand Duke of Tuscany.
-
-
-§ 4. _The Later Geography of Italy._
-
-♦Abeyance of the kingdom of Italy, 1530-1805.♦
-
-Under Charles the Fifth it might have seemed that both the Roman Empire
-and the kingdom of Italy had come to life again. A prince who wore
-both crowns was practically master of Italy. But though the power of
-the Emperor was restored, the power of the Empire was not. In truth
-we may look on all notion of a kingdom of Italy in the elder sense as
-having passed away with the coronation of Charles himself. The thing
-had passed away long before; after the pageant at Bologna the name was
-not heard for more than two centuries and a half. ♦Italy a geographical
-expression.♦ Italy became truly a ‘geographical expression;’ the land
-consisted of a number of principalities and a few commonwealths, all
-nominally independent, some more or less practically so, but the more
-part of which were under foreign influence, and some of them were
-actually ruled by foreign princes. ♦Changes among the Italian states.♦
-The states of Italy were united, divided, handed over from one ruler to
-another, according to the fluctuations of war and diplomacy, without
-any regard either to the will of the inhabitants or to the authority of
-any central power. A practically dominant power there was during the
-greater part of this period; but it was not the power of even a nominal
-King of Italy. For a long time that dominant power was held by the
-House of Austria in its two branches. The supremacy of Charles in Italy
-passed, not to his Imperial brother, but to his Spanish son. ♦Dominion
-of Spain, 1555-1701;♦ Then followed the long dominion of the Spanish
-branch of the Austrian house; then came the less thorough dominion of
-the German branch. ♦of Austria, 1713-1793.♦ This last was a dominion
-strictly of the House of Austria as such, not of the Empire or of
-either of the Imperial kingdoms. And now that the name of Italy means
-merely a certain surface on the map, we must take some notice, so far
-as they regard Italian history, at once of Savoy at one end and of the
-Sicilian kingdoms at the other. From this time both of them have a more
-direct bearing on Italian history.
-
-♦Massing of Italy into larger states.♦
-
-By the time of the coronation of Charles the Fifth, or at least within
-the generation which could remember his coronation, the greater part
-of Italy had been massed into a few states, which, as compared with
-the earlier state of things, were of considerable size. ♦Monaco♦ A few
-smaller principalities and lordships still kept their place, of which
-one of the smallest, that of _Monaco_ in the extreme south-west, has
-lived on to our own time. ♦San Marino♦ So has the small commonwealth of
-_San Marino_, surrounded, first by the dominions of the Popes and now
-by the modern kingdom. But such states as these were mere survivals.
-♦Dominion of Venice on the mainland, 1406-1797.♦ In the north-east,
-Venice kept her power on the mainland untouched, from the recovery
-of her dominions after the league of Cambray down to her final fall.
-♦She loses her outlying Italian possessions, 1530.♦ By the treaty of
-Bologna she lost _Ravenna_; she lost too the towns of _Brindisi_ and
-_Monopoli_ which she had gained during the wars of Naples; but her
-continuous dominion, both properly Venetian and Lombard, remained.
-♦Duchy of Milan: | Spanish, 1540-1706; | Austrian, 1706-1796.♦ The
-duchy of _Milan_ to the west of her was held in succession by the
-two branches of the House of Austria, first the Spanish and then
-the German. ♦Advance of Savoy towards Milan.♦ But the duchy, as an
-Austrian possession, was being constantly cut short towards the west
-by the growing power of Savoy. For a while the Milanese and Savoyard
-states were conterminous only during a small part of their frontier.
-♦Montferrat.♦ The marquisate of _Montferrat_, as long as it remained
-a separate principality, lay between the southern parts of the two
-states. On the failure of the old line of marquesses, Montferrat was
-disputed between the Dukes of Savoy and Mantua. ♦United to Mantua
-1536, but claimed by Savoy, 1613-1631.♦ Adjudged to Mantua, and raised
-into a duchy by Imperial authority, it was still claimed, and partly
-conquered by, Savoy. ♦Mantua forfeited to the Empire, and Montferrat
-joined to Savoy, 1708-1713.♦ At last, by one of the last exercises of
-Imperial authority in Italy, the duchy of Mantua itself was held to be
-forfeited to the Empire; that is, it became an Austrian possession. At
-the same time the Imperial authority confirmed Montferrat to Savoy. The
-Austrian dominions in Italy were thus extended to the south-east by
-the accession of the Mantuan territory; but the whole western frontier
-of the Milanese now lay open to Savoyard advance. ♦First dismemberment
-of Milan in favour of Savoy, 1713.♦ The same treaties which confirmed
-Montferrat to Savoy and Milan to Austria also dismembered Milan
-in favour of Savoy. A corner of the duchy to the south-west,
-_Alessandria_ and the neighbouring districts, were now given to Savoy;
-the Peace of Vienna further cut off _Novara_ to the north and _Tortona_
-to the south. ♦Further cessions, 1738.♦ The next peace, that of
-Aix-la-Chapelle, gave up all west of the Ticino, which river became a
-permanent frontier.
-
-♦Parma and Piacenza given to the Spanish Bourbons, 1731-1749.♦
-
-Among the other states, the duchy of _Parma_ and _Piacenza_ was,
-on the extinction of the house of Farnese, handed over to princes
-of the Spanish branch of the Bourbons. ♦Ferrara confiscated to the
-Popes, 1598.♦ _Modena_ and _Ferrara_ remained united, till Ferrara
-was annexed as an escheated fief to the dominions of its spiritual
-overlord. ♦1718.♦ But the house of Este still reigned over Modena with
-_Reggio_ and _Mirandola_, while its dominions were extended to the
-sea by the addition of _Massa_ and other small possessions between
-Lucca and Genoa. ♦1771-1803.♦ The duchy in the end passed by female
-succession to the House of Austria. ♦Corsica ceded to France, 1768.♦
-_Genoa_ and _Lucca_ remained aristocratic commonwealths; but Genoa
-lost its island possession of _Corsica_, which passed to France.
-♦Extinction of the Medici, 1737. | Francis of Lorraine Grand Duke of
-Tuscany.♦ The Grand Duchy of _Tuscany_ remained in the house of Medici,
-till it was assigned to Duke Francis of Lorraine, afterwards the
-Emperor Francis the First, and after that it remained in the House of
-Habsburg-Lorraine. ♦Urbino annexed by the Popes, 1631.♦ The States of
-the Church, after the annexation of Ferrara, were in the next century
-further enlarged by the annexation of the duchy of Urbino.
-
-♦1530-1797. | Comparatively little geographical change.♦
-
-Thus, except on the frontier of Piedmont and Milan, the whole time
-from Charles the Fifth to the French Revolution was, within the old
-kingdom of Italy, much less remarkable for changes in the geographical
-frontiers of the several states than for the way in which they are
-passed to and fro from one master to another. ♦Kingdom of the Two
-Sicilies♦ This is yet more remarkable, if we look to the southern
-part of the peninsula, and to the two great islands which in modern
-geography we have learned to look on as attached to Italy. ♦The Norman
-kingdom of Sicily.♦ The Norman kingdom which, by steps which will
-be told elsewhere, grew up to the south of the Imperial Kingdom of
-Italy, has hardly ever changed its boundaries, except by the various
-separations and unions of the insular and the continental kingdom.
-♦Benevento.♦ Even the outlying papal possession of _Benevento_ after
-each war went back to its ecclesiastical master. But the shiftings,
-divisions, and reunions of the Two Sicilies and of the island of
-Sardinia have been endless. ♦Charles of Anjou, 1265.♦ The Sicilian
-kingdom of the Norman and Swabian kings, containing both the island
-and the provinces on the mainland, passed unchanged to Charles of
-Anjou. ♦Revolt of the island of Sicily, 1282. | The two kingdoms.♦
-The revolt of the island split the kingdom into two, one insular, one
-continental, each of which called itself the _Kingdom of Sicily_,
-though the continental realm was more commonly known as the _Kingdom
-of Naples_. The wars of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries caused
-endless changes of dynasty in the continental kingdom, but no changes
-of frontier. ♦Union of Aragon, Sardinia, and continental Sicily under
-Alfonso, 1442.♦ Under the famous Alfonso in the fifteenth century,
-Aragon, Sardinia, and the continental Sicily were three kingdoms
-under one sovereign, while the insular Sicily was ruled by another
-branch of the same house. ♦Aragonese kings of the island, 1296-1442.
-| 1458-1701.♦ Then continental Sicily passed to an illegitimate
-branch of the House of Aragon, while Sardinia and insular Sicily
-were held by the legitimate branch. ♦Wars beginning with Charles the
-Eighth, 1494-1528. | Spanish, 1556-1701.♦ The French invasion under
-Charles the Eighth and the long wars that followed, the conquests,
-the restorations, the schemes of division, all ended in the union
-of both the Sicilian kingdoms, now known as the _Kingdom of the Two
-Sicilies_, along with Sardinia, as part of the great Spanish monarchy.
-♦1554-1555.♦ A momentary separation of the insular kingdom, in order
-to give the husband of Mary of England royal rank while his father yet
-reigned, is important only as the first formal use of the title of
-_King of Naples_. ♦Sardinia and Naples Austrian. | Duke of Savoy king
-of Sicily, 1713.♦ In the division of the Spanish monarchy, Sardinia
-and Naples fell to the lot of the Austrian House, while Sicily was
-given to the Duke of Savoy, who thus gained substantial kingly rank.
-♦Exchange of Sicily and Sardinia, 1718.♦ Presently the kings of the two
-island kingdoms made an exchange; Sardinia passed to Savoy, and the
-Emperor Charles the Sixth ruled, like Frederick the Second and Charles
-the Fifth, over both Sicilies. ♦The Spanish Bourbons, 1735-1806.
-| 1817-1860.♦ Lastly, the kingdom was handed over from an Austrian to a
-new Spanish master, the first of the line of Neapolitan Bourbons. Thus,
-at the end of the last century, the Two Sicilies formed a distinct and
-united kingdom, while Sardinia formed the outlying realm of the Duke of
-Savoy and Prince of Piedmont. His kingdom was of far less value than
-his principality or his duchy. ♦Use of the name _Sardinia_.♦ But, as
-Sardinia gave their common sovereign his highest title, the Sardinian
-name often came in common speech to be extended to the continental
-dominions of its king.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Time of the Revolution, 1797-1814.♦
-
-This period, a period of change, but of comparatively slight
-geographical change, was followed by a time when, in Italy as in
-Germany, boundaries were changed, new names were invented or forgotten
-names revived, when old land-marks were rooted up, and thrones were
-set up and cast down, with a speed which baffles the chronicler. The
-first strictly geographical change which was wrought in Italy by the
-revolutionary wars was a characteristic one. ♦Cispadane Republic,
-1796.♦ A _Cispadane Republic_, the first of a number of momentary
-commonwealths bearing names dug up from the recesses of bygone times,
-took in the duchy of Modena and the Papal Legations of Romagna. Without
-exactly following the same boundaries, it answered roughly to the old
-Exarchate. ♦Transpadane Republic, 1797.♦ Then the French victories
-over Austria caused the Austrian duchies of Milan and Mantua to become
-a _Transpadane Republic_. ♦Treaty of Campo Formio, 1797. | Cisalpine
-Republic.♦ Then Venice was wiped out at Campo Formio, and her Lombard
-possessions were joined together with the two newly made commonwealths,
-to form a _Cisalpine Republic_. But the same treaty wrought another
-change which was more distinctly geographical. ♦Venice surrendered
-to Austria.♦ Venice and the eastern part of her possessions on the
-mainland, the old Venetia, the Lombard _Austria_, was now handed over
-to the modern state which bore the latter name. This change may be
-looked on as distinctly cutting short the boundaries of Italy. The
-duchy of Milan in Austrian hands had been an outlying part of the
-Austrian dominions; but Venetia marches on the older territory of
-the Austrian house, and was thus more completely severed from Italy.
-The whole north of the Hadriatic coast thus became Austrian in the
-modern sense. One Italian commonwealth—for Venice had long counted as
-Italian—was thus wiped out, and handed over to a foreign king. But
-elsewhere, at this stage of revolutionary progress, the fashion ran
-in favour of the creation of local commonwealths. ♦Ligurian Republic,
-1797. | Parthenopæan Republic. | Tiberine Republic, 1798-1801.♦ The
-dominions of Genoa became a _Ligurian Republic_; Naples became a
-_Parthenopæan Republic_; Rome herself exchanged for a moment the
-memories of kings, consuls, emperors, and pontiffs to become the head
-of a _Tiberine Republic_. ♦Piedmont joined to France, 1798-1800.♦
-Piedmont was overwhelmed; the greater part was incorporated with
-France. Some small parts were added to the neighbouring republics, and
-the king of Sardinia withdrew to his island kingdom. Amid this crowd
-of new-fangled states and new-fangled names, ancient San Marino still
-lived on.
-
-Thus far revolutionary Italy followed the example of revolutionary
-France, and the new states were all at least nominal commonwealths. In
-the next stage, when France came under the rule of a single man, above
-all when that single ruler took on him the Imperial title, the tide
-turned in favour of monarchy. In Rome and Naples it had already turned
-so in another way. ♦Restoration of the Pope and the King of the Two
-Sicilies, 1801.♦ By help of the Czar and the Sultan, the new republics
-vanished, and the old rulers, Pope and King, came back again. And now
-France herself began to create kingdoms instead of commonwealths.
-♦Kingdom of Etruria, 1801-1808.♦ Parma was annexed to France, and its
-Duke was sent to rule in Tuscany by the title of _King of Etruria_.
-Presently Italy herself gave her name to a kingdom. ♦Kingdom of Italy,
-1805-1814.♦ The Cisalpine republic, further enlarged by Venice and
-the other territory ceded to Austria at Campo Formio, enlarged also
-by the _Valtellina_ and the former bishopric of _Trent_ at one end
-and by the march of _Ancona_ at the other, became the _Kingdom of
-Italy_. ♦Buonaparte king of Italy.♦ Its King, the first since Charles
-the Fifth who had worn the Italian crown, was no other than the new
-ruler of France, the self-styled ‘Emperor.’ But, in Buonaparte’s later
-distributions of Italian territory, it was not his Italian kingdom,
-but his French ‘empire’ whose frontiers were extended. ♦Annexation
-of Liguria, 1805; | of Etruria, 1808. | Grand duchy of Lucca.♦ The
-Ligurian Republic was annexed; so before long was the new kingdom
-of Etruria; _Lucca_ meanwhile was made into a grand duchy for the
-conqueror’s sister. ♦Incorporation of Rome and France, 1809.♦ Lastly,
-Rome itself, with what was left of the papal dominions, was also
-incorporated with the French dominion. The work alike of Cæsar and of
-Charles was wiped out from the Eternal City. The Empire of the Gauls,
-which Civilis had dreamed of more than seventeen centuries before, had
-come at last.
-
-The fate of the remainder of the peninsula had been already sealed
-before Rome became French. The kingdom of the Two Sicilies fell
-asunder. The Bourbon king kept his island, as the Savoyard king kept
-his. ♦Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily, 1806. | 1809. | _Stati degli
-Presidi._♦ The continental kingdom passed, as a _Kingdom of Naples_,
-first to Joseph Buonaparte, and then to Joachim Murat. ♦Benevento.♦
-But the outlying Tuscan possessions of the Sicilian crown had already
-passed to France, and _Benevento_, the outlying papal possession in the
-heart of the kingdom, became a separate principality.
-
-♦Italy under French dominion.♦
-
-Thus all Italy—unless we count the island kingdoms of Sardinia and
-Sicily as parts of Italy—was brought under French dominion in one form
-or another. But of that dominion there were three varieties. ♦Part
-incorporated with France.♦ The whole western part of the land, from
-Aosta to Tarracina—unless it is worth while to except the new Lucchese
-duchy—was formally incorporated with France. ♦Extent of the kingdom of
-Italy.♦ The north-eastern side, from Bözen to Ascoli, formed a Kingdom
-of Italy, distinct from France, but held by the same sovereign. And
-this Kingdom of Italy was further increased to the north by part of
-those Italian lands which had become Swiss and German. ♦Kingdom of
-Naples.♦ Southern Italy, the Kingdom of Naples, remained in form an
-independent kingdom; but it was held by princes who could not be looked
-on as anything but the humble vassals of their mighty kinsman. Never
-had Italy been brought more completely under foreign dominion. ♦Revival
-of the Italian name.♦ Still, in a part at least of the land, the name
-of Italy, and the shadow of a Kingdom of Italy, had been revived. ♦Its
-effects.♦ And, as names and shadows are not without influence in human
-affairs, the mere existence of an Italian state, called by the Italian
-name, did something. The creation of a sham Italy was no unimportant
-step towards the creation of a real one.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Settlement of, 1814-1815.♦
-
-The settlement of Italy after the fall of Buonaparte was far more
-strictly a return to the old state of things than the contemporary
-settlement of Germany. Italy remained a geographical expression. Its
-states were, as before, independent of one another. ♦No tie between the
-Italian states.♦ They were practically dependent on a foreign power:
-but they were in no way bound together, even by the laxest federal tie.
-♦The princes restored, but not the commonwealths.♦ The main principle
-of settlement was that the princes who had lost their dominions should
-be restored, but that the commonwealths which had been overthrown
-should not be restored. Only harmless San Marino was allowed to live
-on. Venice, Lucca, and Genoa remained possessions of princes. ♦Kingdom
-of Lombardy and Venice.♦ The sovereign of Hungary and Austria, now
-calling himself ‘Emperor’ of his archduchy, carved out for himself
-an Italian kingdom which bore the name of the _Kingdom of Lombardy
-and Venice_. On the strength of this, the Austrian, like his French
-predecessor, took upon him to wear the Italian crown. ♦Its extent.♦ The
-new kingdom consisted of the former Italian possessions of Austria,
-the duchies of Milan and Mantua, enlarged by the former possessions
-of Venice, which had become Austrian at Campoformio. The old boundary
-between Germany and Italy was restored. Trent, Aquileia, Trieste, were
-again severed from Italy. They remained possessions of the same prince
-as Milan and Venice, but they formed no part of his Lombardo-Venetian
-kingdom. On another frontier, where restoration would have had to be
-made to a commonwealth, the arrangements were less conservative, and
-the _Valtellina_ remained part of the new kingdom. The Ticino formed,
-as before, the boundary towards Piedmont. ♦Genoa annexed to Piedmont.♦
-The King of Sardinia came again into possession of this last country,
-enlarged by the former dominions of _Genoa_. ♦Monaco.♦ This gave him
-the whole Ligurian seaboard, except where the little principality of
-_Monaco_ still went on. ♦Tuscany, Parma, Modena, Lucca.♦ _Parma_,
-_Modena_, and _Tuscany_ again became separate duchies. _Lucca_ remained
-a duchy alongside of them. ♦Lucca annexed to Tuscany.♦ The family
-arrangements by which these states were handed about to this and that
-widow do not concern geography; all that need be marked is that, by
-virtue of one of these compacts, Lucca was in the end added to Tuscany.
-That grand-duchy was further increased by the addition of the former
-outlying possessions of the Sicilian crown, including Elba, the island
-which for a moment was an Empire. ♦The Papal states.♦ The Pope came
-back to all his old Italian possessions, outlying Benevento included.
-♦The Two Sicilies.♦ The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was formed again
-by the restoration of the Kingdom of Naples to the Bourbon king. Thus
-was formed the Italy of 1815, an Italy which, save in the sweeping away
-of its commonwealths, and the consequent extension of Sardinian and
-Austrian territory, differed geographically but little from the Italy
-of 1748. But in 1815 there were hopes which had had no being in 1748.
-Italy was divided on the map; but she had made up her mind to be one.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The union of Italy comes from Piedmont.♦
-
-The union of Italy was at last to come from one of those corners which
-in earlier history we have looked on as being hardly Italian at all.
-It was not Milan or Florence or Rome which was to grow into the new
-Italy. That function was reserved for a princely house whose beginnings
-had been Burgundian rather than Italian, whose chief territories had
-long lain on the Burgundian side of the Alps, but which had gradually
-put on an Italian character, and which had now become the one national
-Italian dynasty. The Italian possessions of the Savoyard house,
-Piedmont, Genoa, and the island of Sardinia, now formed one of the
-chief Italian states, and the only one whose rule, if still despotic,
-was not foreign. Savoy, by ceasing to be Savoy, was to become Italy.
-♦Movements of 1848.♦ The movements of 1848 in Italy, like those in
-Germany, led to no lasting changes on the map: but they do so far
-affect geography that new states were actually founded, if only for a
-moment. ♦Momentary commonwealths.♦ Rome, Venice, Milan, were actually
-for a while republics, and the Two Sicilies were for a while separated.
-In the next year all came back as before. The next lasting change
-on the map was that which at last restored a real Kingdom of Italy.
-♦Campaign of 1859.♦ The joint campaign of France and Sardinia won
-_Lombardy_ for the Sardinian kingdom. Lombardy was now defined as that
-part of the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom which lay west of the Mincio,
-except that Mantua was left out. She was left to Austria. A French
-scheme for an Italian confederation came to nothing. ♦Union of the
-smaller states, 1860.♦ Tuscany, Modena, Parma, and Romagna voted their
-own annexation to Piedmont. The Two Sicilies were won by Garibaldi,
-and the kingly title of Sardinia was merged in that of the restored
-Kingdom of Italy. ♦Addition of the Sicilies.♦ This new Italian kingdom
-was, by the addition of the Sicilies, extended over lands which had
-never been part of the elder Italian kingdom. But Venetia was still
-cut off; the Pope kept the lands on each side of Rome, the so-called
-_Patrimony_ and the _Campagna_. ♦Cession of Savoy and Nizza to France.♦
-But France annexed the lands, strictly Burgundian rather than Italian,
-of _Savoy_ and _Nizza_. The Italian kingdom was thus again called into
-being; but it had not yet come to perfection. Italy had ceased to be a
-geographical expression; but the Italian frontier still presented some
-geographical anomalies.
-
-♦Recovery of Venetia, 1866; | of Rome, 1870.♦
-
-The war between Prussia and Austria gave Venetia to Italy; the war
-between Germany and France allowed Italy to recover Rome. ♦Part of the
-old kingdom not yet recovered.♦ The two great gaps in her frontier
-were thus made good; but, to say nothing of the annexations made by
-France, a large Italian-speaking population, lying within the bounds
-of the old Italian kingdom, still remains outside its modern revival.
-Trent, Aquileia, Trieste, Istria, are still parts, not of an Italian
-kingdom, not of a German kingdom, confederation, or empire, but of an
-Austro-Hungarian monarchy. Otherwise the Italian kingdom has formed
-itself, and it has taken its place among the great powers of Europe.
-Yet the whole peninsula does not form part of the Italian kingdom. ♦San
-Marino remains free.♦ Surrounded on every side by that kingdom, the
-commonwealth of _San Marino_, like Rhodes or Byzantium under the early
-Cæsars, still keeps its ancient freedom.
-
-
-§ 5. _The Kingdom of Burgundy._
-
-♦Union of Burgundy with Germany and Italy, 1032.♦
-
-The Burgundian Kingdom, which was united with those of Germany and
-Italy after the death of its last separate king Rudolf the Third,
-has had a fate unlike that of any other part of Europe. ♦Dying out
-of the kingdom.♦ Its memory, as a separate state, has gradually died
-out. ♦Chiefly annexed by France;♦ The greater part of its territory
-has been swallowed up bit by bit by a neighbouring power, and the
-small part which has escaped that fate has long lost all trace of
-its original name or its original political relations. By a long
-series of annexations, spreading over more than five hundred years,
-the greater part of the kingdom has gradually been incorporated with
-France. ♦part Italian; | part Swiss.♦ Of what remains, a small corner
-forms part of the modern kingdom of Italy, while the rest still keeps
-its independence in the form of the commonwealths which make up the
-western cantons of Switzerland. ♦Burgundy represented by Switzerland.♦
-These cantons, in fact, are the truest modern representatives of the
-Burgundian kingdom. ♦Neutrality of Switzerland and Belgium.♦ And it is
-on the Confederation of which they form a part, interposed as it is
-between France, Italy, the new German Empire, and the modern Austrian
-monarchy, as a central state with a guaranteed neutrality, that some
-trace of the old function of Burgundy, as the middle kingdom, is
-thrown. This function it shares with the Lotharingian lands at the
-other end of the Empire, which now form part of the equally neutral
-kingdom of Belgium, lands which, oddly enough, themselves became
-Burgundian in another sense.
-
-The Burgundian Kingdom, lying between the Alps, the Saône and the
-Rhone, and the Mediterranean, might be thought to have a fair natural
-boundary. ♦Boundaries of the kingdom.♦ And, while it kept any shadow of
-separate being, its boundaries did not greatly change. ♦Fluctuation of
-its frontier.♦ They were however somewhat fluctuating on the side of
-the Western kingdom, being sometimes bounded by the Rhone and sometimes
-reaching to the line of hills to the west of it. They were also, as
-we have seen, somewhat fluctuating on the side of Germany. ♦Chiefly
-Romance speaking.♦ At this end the kingdom took in some German-speaking
-districts; otherwise the language was Romance, including several
-dialects of the tongue of _Oc_.
-
-♦County Palatine. | Lesser Burgundy.♦
-
-The northern part of the kingdom, answering to the former Transjurane
-kingdom—the _Regnum Jurense_—formed two chief states, the _County
-Palatine of Burgundy_—the modern _Franche Comté_—and the _Lesser
-Burgundy_, roughly taking in western Switzerland and northern Savoy.
-♦Provence.♦ On the Mediterranean lay the great county of _Provence_,
-with a number of smaller counties lying between it and the two northern
-principalities. ♦The Free Cities.♦ But the great characteristic of
-the land was that, next to Italy, no part of Europe contained so many
-considerable cities lying near together. Many of these at different
-times strove more or less successfully after a republican independence,
-and a few have kept it to our own day.
-
-♦Little real unity in the kingdom.♦
-
-But, though the Burgundian kingdom might be thought to have, on three
-sides at least, a good natural frontier, it had but little real unity.
-The northern part naturally clave to its connexion with the Empire much
-longer than the southern. ♦The Burgundian Palatinate.♦ The _County
-Palatine_ of Burgundy often passed from one dynasty to another, and it
-is remarkable for the number of times that it was held as a separate
-state by several of the great princes of Europe. ♦Held by the Emperor
-Frederick, 1156-1189; | by Philip of France, 1315-1330.♦ It was held by
-the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in right of his wife; the marriage of
-one of his female descendants carried it to Philip the Fifth of France.
-♦United with the French Duchy.♦ Then it became united with the French
-duchy of Burgundy under the dukes of the House of Valois. ♦1477. | Held
-by the House of Austria, Charles the Fifth Count of Burgundy.♦ Saving
-a momentary French occupation after the death of Charles the Bold, it
-remained with them and their Austrian and Spanish representatives.
-Among these it had a second Imperial Count in the person of Charles
-the Fifth. ♦Annexed to France, 1674.♦ But, through all these changes
-of dynasty, it remained an acknowledged fief of the Empire, till its
-annexation to France under Lewis the Fourteenth. ♦Dole the capital of
-the county.♦ The capital of this county, it must be remembered, was
-_Dole_. ♦Besançon a Free Imperial city. 1189-1651.♦ The ecclesiastical
-metropolis of _Besançon_, though surrounded by the county, remained a
-free city of the Empire from the days of Frederick Barbarossa to those
-of Ferdinand the Third. ♦United to France.♦ It was then merged in the
-county, and along with the county it passed to France. ♦Montbeilliard.♦
-And it should be noticed that a small Burgundian land in this quarter,
-the county of _Montbeilliard_ or _Mümpelgard_, first as a separate
-state, then in union with the duchy of Württemberg, kept its allegiance
-to the Empire till the wars of the French Revolution, when it was
-annexed to France and was never restored.
-
-♦The Lesser Burgundy.♦
-
-While the Burgundian Palatinate thus kept its history as an unit in
-European geography, the _Lesser Burgundy_ to the south-west of it had
-a different history. The geography here gets somewhat confused through
-the fact that this Lesser Burgundy, which in the twelfth century passed
-under the power of the _Dukes of Zähringen_ in Swabia as _Rectors_,
-took in some districts which were not parts of the Burgundian kingdom.
-♦The eastern part German.♦ The eastern part of the kingdom itself
-was of German speech, and its frontier towards the German duchy of
-Alemannia or Swabia was somewhat fluctuating. The Aar may be taken
-as the boundary of the kingdom, while the Lesser Burgundy, as an
-administrative division, stretched somewhat further to the East.
-♦Cities of the Lesser Burgundy.♦ Thus Basel, as well the foundations
-of the House of Zähringen at Bern and Freiburg, stood on strictly
-Burgundian ground, while the city of Luzern and the land of Unterwalden
-come under the head of the Lesser Burgundy, without forming part of the
-Burgundian kingdom. These lands long kept up their connexion with the
-Empire, though the Lesser Burgundy did not long remain as a separate
-unit. ♦Dukes of Zähringen. | End of their house, 1218.♦ When the House
-of Zähringen came to an end, the country began to split up into small
-principalities and free cities which gradually grew into independent
-commonwealths. ♦Break-up of the duchy. | Savoyard territory.♦ The
-counts of Savoy, of whom more presently, acquired a large territory on
-both sides of the Lake of Geneva. ♦Bishops, Counts, and Free Cities.♦
-Other considerable princes were the bishops of _Basel_, _Lausanne_,
-_Geneva_, and _Sitten_, the counts of _Geneva_, _Kyburg_, _Gruyères_,
-and _Neufchâtel_. ♦The Free Lands.♦ _Basel_, _Solothurn_, and _Bern_
-were Imperial cities. The complicated relations between the Bishops
-and the city of Geneva hindered that city from having a strict right
-to that title. In Unterwalden and in _Wallis_, notwithstanding the
-possessions and claims of various spiritual and temporal lords, the
-most marked feature was the retention of the old rural independence.
-♦The Old League of High Germany.♦ Of the cities in this region, Luzern,
-Bern, Freiburg, Solothurn, and Basel, all gradually became members of
-the _Old League of High Germany_, the ground-work of the modern Swiss
-Confederation. ♦Conquests of Bern and Freiburg from Savoy, 1536.♦ The
-Savoyard lands north of the lake were conquered by Bern and Freiburg in
-the sixteenth century, a conquest which also secured the independence
-of Geneva. ♦The Burgundian cantons of Switzerland.♦ All these lands,
-after going through the intermediate stage of allies or subjects
-of some or other of the confederate cantons, have in modern times
-become independent cantons themselves. This process of annexation and
-liberation will be traced more fully when we come to the history of the
-Swiss Confederation.
-
-To the south of this group of states, and partly intermingled with
-them, lay another group, lying partly within the Cisjurane and partly
-within the Transjurane kingdom, which gradually grew into a great
-power. ♦Growth of Savoy.♦ These were the states which were united step
-by step under the Counts of _Maurienne_, afterwards Counts of _Savoy_.
-♦Burgundian possession of its county.♦ When their dominions were at
-their greatest extent, they held south of the Lake of Geneva, besides
-Maurienne and Savoy strictly so called, the districts of _Aosta_,
-_Tarantaise_, the _Genevois_, _Chablais_, and _Faucigny_, together with
-_Vaud_ and _Gex_ north of the lake. Thus grew up the power of Savoy,
-which has already been noticed in its purely Italian aspect, but which
-must receive fuller separate treatment in a section of its own.
-
-♦States between the Palatinate and the Mediterranean.♦
-
-The remainder of the Burgundian Kingdom consisted of a number of small
-states stretching from the southern boundary of the Burgundian county
-to the Mediterranean. ♦Bresse and Bugey become Savoyard. | Bugey,
-1137-1344; | Bresse, 1272-1402.♦ North of the Rhone lay the districts
-of _Bresse_ and _Bugey_, which passed at various times to the House
-of Savoy. ♦Lyons, Vienne, Orange, &c. | Provence.♦ Southwards on the
-Rhone lay a number of small states, among which the most important
-in history are the archbishopric, the county, and the free city of
-_Lyons_, the county or _Dauphiny_ of _Vienne_ and the city of _Vienne_,
-the county or principality _of Orange_, the city of _Avignon_, the
-county of _Venaissin_, the free city of _Arles_, the capital of the
-kingdom, the free city of _Massalia_ or _Marseilles_, the county of
-_Nizza_ or _Nice_, and the great county or marquisate of _Provence_.
-In this last power lay the first element of danger, especially to the
-republican independence of the free cities. ♦Changes of dynasty. | The
-Angevins, 1246.♦ After being held by separate princes of its own, as
-well as by the Aragonese kings, it passed by marriage into the hands
-of a French prince, Charles of Anjou, the conqueror of Sicily, and
-also the destroyer of the second freedom of Massalia. ♦Growing French
-connexion.♦ The possession of the greatest member of the kingdom by
-a French ruler, though it made no immediate change in the formal
-state of things, gave fresh strength to every tendency which tended to
-withdraw the Burgundian lands from their allegiance to the Empire and
-to bring them, first into connexion with France, and then into actual
-incorporation with the French kingdom.
-
-♦Process of French annexation.♦
-
-Step by step, though by a process which was spread over many centuries,
-all the principalities and commonwealths of the Burgundian kingdom,
-save the lands which have been Swiss and the single valley which is
-now Italian, have come into the hands of France. The tendency shows
-itself early. ♦Avignon first seized, 1226. | Annexation of Lyons,
-1310.♦ _Avignon_ was seized for a moment during the Albigensian wars;
-but the permanent process of French annexation began when Philip the
-Fair took advantage of the disputes between the archbishops and the
-citizens of _Lyons_, to join that Imperial city to his dominions. The
-head of all the Gauls, the seat of the Primate of all the Gauls, thus
-passed into the hands of the new monarchy of Paris, the first-fruits of
-French aggrandizement at the cost of the Middle Kingdom. ♦Purchase of
-the Dauphiny of Vienne, 1343.♦ Later in the same century, the Dauphiny
-of _Vienne_ was acquired by a bargain with its last independent
-prince. This land also passed, through the intermediate stage of an
-Imperial fief held by the heir-apparent of the French crown, into a
-mere province of France. ♦The city of Vienne annexed, 1448.♦ But the
-acquisition of the Dauphiny did not carry with it that of the city
-of _Vienne_, which escaped for more than a century. ♦Valence, 1446.♦
-Between the acquisition of the Dauphiny and the acquisition of the
-city, the county of _Valence_ was annexed to the Dauphiny. ♦Provence,
-1481.♦ Later in the same century followed the great annexation of
-_Provence_ itself. The rule of French princes in that county for two
-centuries had doubtless paved the way for this annexation. And the
-acquisition of Provence carried with it the acquisition of the cities
-of _Arles_ and _Marseilles_, which the counts of Provence had deprived
-of their freedom. By this time the whole of the land between the Rhone
-and the sea had been swallowed up, save one state at the extreme
-south-east corner of the kingdom, and a group of small states which
-were now quite hemmed in by French territory. ♦Nizza passes to Savoy,
-1388.♦ The first was the county of _Nizza_ or Nice, which had passed
-away from Provence to Savoy before the French annexation of Provence.
-But by this time Savoy had become an Italian power, and Nizza was
-from henceforth looked on as Italian rather than Burgundian. Between
-Provence and the Dauphiny lay the city of _Avignon_, the county of
-_Venaissin_, and the principality of _Orange_. ♦Avignon and Venaissin
-become Papal, 1348. | Annexed to France, 1791.♦ Avignon and Venaissin
-became papal possessions by purchase from the sovereign of Provence;
-and, though they were at last quite surrounded by French territory,
-they remained papal possessions till they were annexed in the course of
-the great Revolution. These outlying possessions of the Popes perhaps
-did somewhat towards preserving the independence of a more interesting
-fragment of the ancient kingdom. ♦Orange.♦ This was the Principality
-of _Orange_, which the neighbourhood of the Pope hindered from being
-altogether surrounded by French territory. This little state, whose
-name has become so much more famous than itself, passed through several
-dynasties, and for a long time it was regularly seized by France in the
-course of every war. ♦Its annexation to France, 1714-1771.♦ But it was
-as regularly restored to independence at every peace, and its final
-annexation did not happen till the eighteenth century. The acquisition
-of Orange, Avignon, and Venaissin, completed the process of French
-aggrandizement in the lands between the Rhone and the Var. The stages
-of the same process as applied to the Savoyard lands will be best told
-in another section.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Modern states which have split off from the three kingdoms.♦
-
-We have thus traced the geographical history of the three Imperial
-kingdoms themselves. It now follows to trace in the like sort the
-origin and growth of certain of the modern powers of Europe which
-have grown out of one or more of those kingdoms. Certain parts of
-the German, Italian, and Burgundian kingdoms have split off from
-these kingdoms, so as to form new political units, distinct from
-any of them. Five states of no small importance in later European
-history have thus been formed. ♦Their character as middle states.♦
-Most of them partake more or less of the character of middle states,
-interposed between France and one or more of the Imperial kingdoms.
-♦Switzerland.♦ First, there is the Confederation of _Switzerland_,
-which arose by certain German districts and cities forming so close
-an union among themselves that their common allegiance to the Empire
-gradually died out. The Confederation grew into its present form by the
-addition to these German districts of certain Italian and Burgundian
-districts. ♦Savoy.♦ Secondly, there are, or rather were, the dominions
-of the Dukes of _Savoy_, formed by the union of various Italian and
-Burgundian districts. This however, as a middle power, has ceased
-to exist; nearly all its Burgundian possessions have been joined to
-France, while its Italian possessions have grown into a new Italy. ♦The
-Dukes of Burgundy.♦ Thirdly, there were the dominions of the Dukes of
-_Burgundy_, forming a middle power between France and Germany, and
-made up by the union of French and Imperial fiefs. ♦Represented by the
-kingdoms of the Low Countries.♦ These are represented on the modern
-maps by the kingdoms of the _Netherlands_ and _Belgium_, the greater
-part of both of which belonged to the Burgundian dukes. Of these
-kingdoms much the greater part had split off from the old kingdom of
-Germany. Certain parts were once French fiefs, but had ceased to be
-so. ♦Recognized neutrality of Belgium, Switzerland, and once of part
-of Savoy.♦ The position of three out of these four states as middle
-powers, and their importance in that character, has been acknowledged
-even by modern diplomacy in the neutrality which is still guaranteed
-to Belgium and Switzerland, and which was formerly extended to certain
-districts of Savoy.
-
-Of these four states, Switzerland, Savoy, and the duchy of Burgundy as
-represented by the two kingdoms of the Low Countries, some have been
-merged in other powers, and those which still remain count only among
-the secondary states of Europe. But a fifth power has also broken off
-from Germany which still ranks among the greatest in Europe. ♦The
-Austrian dominions.♦ This is the power which, starting from a small
-German mark on the Danube, has, by the gradual union of various lands,
-German and non-German, grown into something distinct from Germany,
-first under the name of the _Austrian ‘Empire’_ and more latterly
-under that of the _Austro-Hungarian Monarchy_. This power differs
-from the other states of which we have been just speaking, not only
-in its vastly greater extent, but also in its position. ♦Position of
-the Austrian dominion as a marchland.♦ It is a marchland, a middle
-kingdom, but in a different sense from Burgundy, Switzerland, Savoy,
-or Belgium. ♦Comparison with the western marchlands.♦ All these were
-marchlands between Christian states, between states all of which had
-formed part of the Carolingian Empire. All lie on the western side of
-the German and Italian kingdoms. Austria, on the other hand, as its
-name implies, arose on the eastern side of the German kingdom, as
-a mark against Turanian and heathen invaders. ♦Austria as the march
-against the Magyar.♦ The first mission of Austria was to guard Germany
-against the Magyar. When the Magyar was admitted into the fellowship of
-Europe and Christendom—when, after a while, his realm was united under
-a single sovereign with Austria—the same duty was continued in another
-form. ♦Austria and Hungary the mark of Christendom against the Turk.♦
-The power formed by the union of Hungary and Austria was one of the
-chief among those which had to guard Christendom against the Turk. Its
-history therefore forms one of the connecting links between Eastern and
-Western Europe. In this chapter it will be dealt with chiefly on its
-Western side, with regard to its relations towards Germany and Italy.
-The Eastern aspect of the Austro-Hungarian power has more to do with
-the states which arose out of the break up of the Eastern Empire.
-
-These states then, Switzerland, Savoy, the Duchy of Burgundy, the
-Netherlands, and Austria, form a proper addition to the sections given
-to the three Imperial kingdoms. I will now go on to deal with them in
-order.
-
-
-§ 6. _The Swiss Confederation._
-
-♦The original Confederation practically German,♦
-
-I have just spoken of the Swiss Confederation as being in its origin
-purely German. This statement is practically correct, as all the
-original cantons were German in speech and feeling, and the formal
-style of their union was _the Old League of High Germany_. But in
-strict geographical accuracy there was, as we have seen in the last
-section, a small Burgundian element in the Confederation, if not from
-the beginning, at least from its aggrandizement in the thirteenth and
-fourteenth centuries. ♦though part of it geographically Burgundian.♦
-That is to say, part of the territory of the states which formed the
-old Confederation lay geographically within the kingdom of Burgundy,
-and a further part lay within the Lesser Burgundy of the Dukes of
-Zähringen. But, by the time when the history of the Confederation
-begins, the kingdom of Burgundy was pretty well forgotten, and the
-small German-speaking territory which it took in at its extreme
-north-east corner may be looked on as practically German ground. ♦All
-the old Cantons German in speech.♦ A more practical division than the
-old boundaries of the kingdoms is the boundary of the Teutonic and
-Romance speech; in this sense all the cantons of the old Confederation,
-except part of Freiburg, are German. ♦The later Romance Cantons.♦
-The Romance cantons are those which were formed in modern times
-out of the allied and subject states. ♦Many popular errors.♦ It is
-specially needful to bear in mind, first, that, till the last years of
-the thirteenth century, not even the germ of modern Switzerland had
-appeared on the map of Europe; secondly, that the Confederation did
-not formally become an independent power till the seventeenth century;
-lastly, that, though the _Swiss_ name had been in common use for ages,
-it did not become the formal style of the Confederation till the
-nineteenth century. Nothing in the whole study of historical geography
-is more necessary than to root out the notion that there has always
-been a country of Switzerland, as there has always been a country of
-Germany, Gaul, or Italy. ♦The Swiss do not represent the Helvetii.♦
-And it is no less needful to root out the notion that the Swiss of
-the original cantons in any way represent the Helvetii of Cæsar.
-♦Summary of Swiss history. | A German League having become more united
-and independent than others, annexes Romance allies and subjects.♦
-The points to be borne in mind are that the Swiss Confederation is
-simply one of many German Leagues, which was more lasting and became
-more closely united than other German Leagues—that it gradually split
-off from the German Kingdom—that in the course of this process, the
-League and its members obtained a large body of Italian and Burgundian
-allies and subjects—lastly, that these allies and subjects have in
-modern times been joined into one Federal body with the original German
-Confederates.
-
-♦The Three Lands on the boundary of the three kingdoms.♦
-
-The three Swabian lands which formed the kernel of the Old League lay
-at the point of union of the three Imperial kingdoms, parts of all of
-which were to become members of the Confederation in its later form.
-♦First known document of union, 1291.♦ The first known document of
-confederation between the three lands dates from the last years of the
-thirteenth century. But that document is likely to have been rather
-the confirmation than the actual beginning of their union. They had
-for their neighbours several ecclesiastical and temporal lords, some
-other Imperial lands and towns, and far greater than all, the Counts
-of the house of _Kyburg_ and _Habsburg_, who had lately grown into the
-more dangerous character of Dukes of Austria. ♦Growth of the League.♦
-The Confederation grew for a while by the admission of neighbouring
-lands and cities as members of a free German Confederation, owning no
-superior but the Emperor. ♦Luzern, 1332.♦ First of all, the city of
-_Luzern_ joined the League. ♦Zürich, 1351.♦ Then came the Imperial
-city of _Zürich_, which had already begun to form a little dominion
-in the adjoining lands. ♦Glarus and Zug, 1352.♦ Then came the land
-of _Glarus_ and the town of _Zug_ with its small territory. ♦Bern,
-1353.♦ And lastly came the great city of _Bern_, which had already won
-a dominion over a considerable body of detached and outlying allies
-and subjects. ♦The Eight Ancient Cantons.♦ These confederate lands and
-towns formed the _Eight Ancient Cantons_. Their close alliance with
-each other helped the growth of each canton separately, as well as
-that of the League as a whole. ♦Their growth.♦ Those cantons whose
-geographical position allowed them to do so, were thus able to extend
-their power, in the form of various shades of dominion and alliance,
-over the smaller lands and towns in their neighbourhood. These lesser
-changes and annexations cannot all be recorded here; but it must be
-carefully borne in mind that the process was constantly going on.
-♦Dominion of Zürich and Bern.♦ Zürich, and yet more Bern, each formed,
-after the manner of an ancient Greek city, what in ancient Greece
-would have passed for an empire. ♦Conquests from Austria, 1415-1460.♦
-In the fifteenth century, large conquests were made at the expense of
-the House of Austria, of which the earlier ones were made by direct
-Imperial sanction. The Confederation, or some or other of its members,
-had now extended its territory to the Rhine and the Lake of Constanz.
-♦Aargau, Thurgau, &c.♦ The lands thus won, _Aargau_, _Thurgau_, and
-some other districts, were held as subject territories in the hands of
-some or other of the Confederate states.
-
-♦No new canton formed for a long time.♦
-
-It is a fact to be specially noticed in the history of the
-Confederation, that, for nearly a hundred and thirty years, though
-the territory and the power of the Confederation were constantly
-increasing, no new states were admitted to the rank of confederate
-cantons. Before the next group of cantons was admitted, the general
-state of the Confederation and its European position had greatly
-changed. It had ceased to be a purely German power. ♦Beginning of
-Italian dominions.♦ The first extension beyond the original German
-lands and those Burgundian lands which were practically German began in
-the direction of Italy. ♦Uri obtains Val Levantina, 1441.♦ Uri had, by
-the annexation of Urseren, become the neighbour of the Duchy of Milan,
-and in the middle of the fifteenth century, this canton acquired some
-rights in the _Val Levantina_ on the Italian side of the Alps. This
-was the beginning of the extension of the Confederation on Italian
-ground. But far more important than this was the advance of the
-Confederates over the Burgundian lands to the west. ♦First Savoyard
-conquest of Bern. | 1475.♦ The war with Charles of Burgundy enabled
-Bern to win several detached possessions in the Savoyard lands north
-and east of the lake, and even on the lower course of the Rhone.
-♦Savoyard conquests of Freiburg and Wallis.♦ And, while Bern advanced,
-some points in the same direction were gained by her allies who are not
-yet members of the Confederation, by the city of _Freiburg_ and the
-League of _Wallis_. ♦Growth of Wallis.♦ This last confederation had
-grown up on the upper course of the Rhone, where the small free lands
-had gradually displaced the territorial lords. ♦Freiburg and Solothurn
-become Cantons, 1481.♦ Soon after this came the next admission of
-new cantons, those of the cities of _Freiburg_ and _Solothurn_, each
-of them bringing with it its small following of allied and subject
-territory. ♦Basel and Schaffhausen, 1501.♦ Twenty years later, _Basel_
-and _Schaffhausen_, the latter being the only canton north of the
-Rhine, were admitted with their following of the like kind. ♦Appenzell,
-1513.♦ Twelve years later, _Appenzell_, a little land which had set
-itself free from the rule of the abbots of _Saint Gallen_, after having
-long been in alliance with the Confederates, was admitted to the rank
-of a canton. ♦The Thirteen Cantons, 1513-1798.♦ Thus was made up the
-full number of Thirteen Cantons, which remained unchanged down to the
-wars of the French Revolution.
-
-But the time when the Confederation was finally settled as regards
-the number of cantons was also a time of great extension of territory
-on the part both of the Confederation and of several of its members.
-♦Graubünden.♦ At the south-east corner of the Confederate territory, on
-the borders of the duchy of Milan and the county of Tyrol, the League
-of _Graubünden_ or the _Grey Leagues_ had gradually arisen. A number
-of communities, as in Wallis, had got rid of the neighbouring lords,
-and had formed themselves into three leagues, the _Grey League_ proper,
-the _Gotteshausbund_, and the League of _Ten Jurisdictions_, which
-three were again united by a further federal tie. ♦Their alliance with
-the Confederates.♦ At the end of the fifteenth century, the Leagues so
-formed entered into an alliance with the Confederates. ♦1495-1567.♦
-Then began a great accession of territory towards the south on the part
-both of the Confederates and of their new allies. ♦Italian dominion
-of the Confederation, 1512;♦ The Confederates received a considerable
-territory within the duchy of Milan, including _Bellinzona_, _Locarno_,
-and _Lugano_, as the reward of services done to the House of Sforza.
-♦of the Grey Leagues, 1513.♦ The next year their new allies of the
-Grey Leagues also won some Italian territory, the _Valtellina_ and the
-districts of _Chiavenna_ and _Bormio_. ♦Early Savoyard conquests of
-Bern, Freiburg, and Wallis, 1536.♦ Next came the conquest of a large
-part of the Savoyard lands, of all north of the Lake and a good deal to
-the south, by the arms of Bern, Freiburg, and Wallis. ♦Vaud.♦ Bern and
-Freiburg divided _Vaud_ in very unequal proportions. ♦Lausanne.♦ Bern
-and Wallis divided _Chablais_ on the south side of the lake, and Bern
-annexed the bishopric of _Lausanne_ on the north. ♦Geneva in alliance
-with Bern and Freiburg.♦ _Geneva_, the ally of Bern and Freiburg,
-with her little territory of detached scraps, was now surrounded by
-the dominion of her most powerful allies at Bern. ♦Territory restored
-to Savoy, 1567.♦ But by a later treaty Bern and Wallis gave back to
-Savoy all that they had won south of the Lake, with the territory of
-_Gex_ to the west of it. Geneva thus again had Savoy for a neighbour,
-a neighbour at whose expense she even made some conquests—Gex among
-them—conquests which the French ally of the free city would not allow
-her to keep. Later changes gave her a neighbour yet more dangerous than
-Savoy in the shape of France itself. ♦Gruyères divided between Bern and
-Freiburg, 1554.♦ Before these changes, Bern and Freiburg divided the
-county of _Gruyères_ between them, the last important instance of that
-kind of process.
-
-♦The Allies.♦
-
-The Confederation was thus fully formed, with its Thirteen Cantons and
-their allied states. ♦Saint Gallen. | Bienne.♦ Of these the _Abbot of
-Saint Gallen_, the _town of Saint Gallen_, and the town of _Biel_ or
-_Bienne_, were so closely allied with the Confederates as to have a
-place in their Diets. Besides relations of less close alliance which
-the Confederates had with various Alsatian cities, several other states
-had a connexion so close and lasting with the Confederation or with
-some of its members, as to form part of the same political system.
-♦_Bischofbasel._ | Mühlhausen and Rottweil. | Neufchâtel passes to
-Prussia, 1707.♦ Such were the Leagues of Wallis and Graubünden, the
-Bishop of _Basel_, the outlying town of _Mühlhausen_ in Elsass, and
-for a while that of _Rottweil_. Bern too, and sometimes other cantons,
-had relations both with the town and with the princes of _Neufchâtel_,
-which, after passing through several dynasties, was at last inherited
-by the Kings of Prussia. ♦Constanz.♦ _Constanz_, at the other end of
-the Confederate land, was refused admission as a canton, but for a
-while it was in alliance with some of the cantons. ♦Passes to Austria,
-1548.♦ But this connexion was severed when Constanz, instead of a free
-Imperial city, became a possession of Austria. ♦The Confederation
-released from the allegiance to the Empire, 1658.♦ The power thus
-formed, a power in which a body of German Confederates was surrounded
-by a body of allies and subjects, German, Italian, and Burgundian, all
-of them originally members of the Empire, was by the Peace of Westfalia
-formally released from all allegiance to the Empire and its chief.
-♦Date of the practical separation, 1495.♦ Their practical separation
-may be dated much earlier, from the time when the Confederates refused
-to accept the legislation of Maximilian.
-
-♦Geographical position of the League.♦
-
-The growth of the League into an independent power was doubtless
-greatly promoted by its geographical position, as occupying the
-natural citadel of Europe. ♦Its anomalous frontier.♦ But the piecemeal
-way in which it grew up was marked by the anomalous nature of its
-frontier on several points. On the north the Rhine would seem to be a
-natural boundary, but Schaffhausen beyond the Rhine formed part of the
-Confederation, while Constanz and other points within it did not. To
-the south the possession of territory on the Italian side of the Alps
-seems an anomaly, an anomaly which is brought out more strongly by a
-singularly irregular and arbitrary frontier. ♦The Confederation as a
-middle state.♦ But looking on the Confederation as the middle state,
-arising at the point of junction of the three Imperial kingdoms, it was
-in a manner fitting that it should spread itself into all three.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Wars of the French Revolution.♦
-
-The form which the Confederation thus took in the sixteenth
-century remained untouched till the wars of the French Revolution.
-♦Dismemberment of the Grey Leagues, 1797.♦ The beginning of change was
-when the Italian districts subject to the Grey Leagues were transferred
-to the newly formed _Cisalpine Republic_. In the next year the whole
-existing system was destroyed. ♦Abolition of the Federal system, 1798.
-| The Helvetic Republic.♦ The Federal system was abolished; instead of
-the Old League of High Germany, there arose, after the new fashion
-of nomenclature, a _Helvetic Republic_, in which the word _canton_
-meant no more than _department_. Yet even by such a revolution as
-this some good was done. ♦Freedom of the subject districts.♦ The
-subject districts were freed from the yoke of their masters, whether
-those masters were the whole Confederation or one or more of its
-several cantons. ♦Freedom of Vaud.♦ Thus, above all, the Romance land
-of _Vaud_ was freed from subjection to its German masters at Bern.
-♦Annexation of _Bischofbasel_ and Geneva to France.♦ Some of the
-allied districts, as the bishopric of Basel and the city of Geneva,
-were annexed to France. But the Leagues of Wallis and Graubünden
-were incorporated with the Helvetic Republic. ♦Act of Mediation,
-1803.♦ In 1803 the Federal system was restored by Buonaparte’s _Act
-of Mediation_, which formed a Federal republic of nineteen cantons.
-♦The nineteen cantons.♦ These were the original thirteen, with the
-addition of _Aargau_, _Graubünden_, _St. Gallen_, _Ticino_, _Thurgau_,
-and _Vaud_, which were formed out of the formerly allied and subject
-lands. ♦Wallis incorporated with France.♦ _Wallis_ was separated from
-the Confederation, and became, first a nominally distinct republic,
-and afterwards a French department. ♦Neufchâtel. | 1806.♦ _Neufchâtel_
-was, in the course of Buonaparte’s wars with Prussia, detached from
-that power, to form a principality under his General Berthier. ♦The
-Swiss Confederation of twenty-two cantons. 1815.♦ At last, in 1815, the
-present _Swiss Confederation_ was established, consisting of twenty-two
-cantons, the number being made up by the addition of _Neufchâtel_,
-_Wallis_, and _Geneva_. ♦_Bischofbasel_ added to Bern.♦ The bishopric
-of Basel was also again detached from France, and added to the canton
-of Bern, a canton differing in language and religion, and cut off
-by a mountain range. ♦Neufchâtel separated from Prussia, 1848.♦ The
-great constitutional changes which have been made since that time
-have not affected geography, unless we count the division of the city
-and district of Basel, _Baselstadt_ and _Baselland_, into distinct
-half-cantons, and the surrender of all rights over Neufchâtel by the
-King of Prussia. But this last was not strictly a geographical change;
-it was rather a change from a _quasi_ monarchic to a purely republican
-government in that particular canton.
-
-
-§ 7. _The State of Savoy._
-
-♦Position and growth of Savoy.♦
-
-The growth of the power of Savoy, the border state of Burgundy and
-Italy, has necessarily been spoken of more than once in earlier
-sections; but it seems needful to give a short connected account of its
-progress, and to mark the way in which a power originally Burgundian
-gradually lost on the side of Burgundy and grew on the side of Italy,
-till it has in the end itself grown into a new Italy. ♦Geographical
-position of the Savoyard lands.♦ The lands which have at different
-times passed under the rule of the House of Savoy lie continuously,
-though with an irregular frontier, and though divided by the great
-barrier of the Alps. ♦Their three divisions.♦ They fall however into
-three main geographical divisions, which at one time became also
-political divisions, being held by different branches of the Savoyard
-House. ♦Italian.♦ There are the Italian possessions of that House,
-which have grown into the modern Italian kingdom. ♦Burgundian south of
-the lake.♦ There are the more strictly Savoyard lands south of the Lake
-of Geneva, and the other lands south of the Rhone after it issues from
-that lake, all of which have passed away under the power of France.
-♦Burgundian north of the lake.♦ And there are the lands north of the
-Lake and of the Rhone, part of which have also become French, while
-others have become part of the Swiss Confederation. Both these last lay
-within the kingdom of Burgundy, and stretched into both its divisions,
-Transjurane and Cisjurane. In no part of our story is it more necessary
-to avoid language which forestalls the arrangements of later times.
-♦Popular confusions.♦ A wholly false impression is given by the use
-of language such as commonly is used. We often hear of the princes of
-Savoy holding lands ‘in France’ and ‘in Switzerland. They held lands
-which by virtue of later changes have severally become French and
-Swiss; but those lands became French and Swiss only by ceasing to be
-Savoyard. On the other hand, to speak of them from the beginning as
-holding lands in Italy is perfectly accurate. The Savoyard states
-were a large and fluctuating assemblage of lands on both sides of the
-Alps, lying partly within the Italian and partly within the Burgundian
-kingdom. These last have shared the fate of the other fiefs of that
-crown.
-
-♦The Savoyard state originally Burgundian.♦
-
-The cradle of the Savoyard power lay in the Burgundian lands
-immediately bordering upon Italy and stretching on both sides of
-the Alps. It was to their geographical position, as holding several
-great mountain passes, that the Savoyard princes owed their first
-importance, succeeding therein in some measure to the Burgundian kings
-themselves.[15] The early stages of the growth of the house are very
-obscure; and its power does not seem to have formed itself till after
-the union of Burgundy with the Empire. ♦Possessions of the Counts
-of Maurienne.♦ But it seems plain that, at the end of the eleventh
-century, the Counts of _Maurienne_, which was their earliest title,
-held rights of sovereignty in the Burgundian districts of _Maurienne_,
-_Savoy_ strictly so called, _Tarantaise_, and _Aosta_. ♦Aosta; its
-special position.♦ This last valley and city, though on the Italian
-side of the Alps, had hitherto been rather Burgundian than Italian.[16]
-Its allegiance had fluctuated several times between the two kingdoms;
-but, from the time that Savoy held lands in both, the question became
-of no practical importance. And, without entering into minute questions
-of tenure, it may be said that the early Savoyard possessions reached
-to the Lake of Geneva, and spread on both sides of the inland mouth
-of the Rhone. The power of the Savoyard princes in this region was
-largely due to their ecclesiastical position as advocates of the
-abbey of Saint Maurice. ♦Geographical character of the Burgundian
-territories.♦ Thus their possessions had a most irregular outline,
-nearly surrounding the lands of _Genevois_ and _Faucigny_. A state of
-this shape, like Prussia in a later age and on a greater scale, was, as
-it were, predestined to make further advances. But for some centuries
-those advances were made much more largely in Burgundy than in Italy.
-♦Their early Italian possessions.♦ The original Italian possessions
-of the House bordered on their Burgundian counties of Maurienne and
-Aosta, taking in _Susa_ and _Turin_. ♦Marquesses in Italy.♦ This small
-marchland gave its princes the sounding title of _Marquesses in Italy_.
-The endless shiftings of territory in this quarter could be dealt with
-only at extreme length, and they are matters of purely local concern.
-♦Fluctuations of dominion.♦ In truth, they are not always fluctuations
-of territory in any strict sense at all, but rather fluctuations of
-rights between the feudal princes, the cities, and their bishops.
-♦Their position in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.♦ In the
-twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the princes of Savoy were still
-hemmed in in their own corner of Italy by princes of equal or greater
-power, at _Montferrat_, at _Saluzzo_, at _Iverea_, and at _Biandrate_.
-And it must be remembered that their position as princes at once
-Burgundian and Italian was not peculiar to them. ♦Other princes at once
-Italian and Burgundian.♦ The Dauphins of the Viennois and the Counts of
-Provence both held at different times territories on the Italian side
-of the Alps. The Italian dominions of the family remained for a long
-while quite secondary to its Burgundian possessions, and the latter may
-therefore be traced out first.
-
-♦Advance of Savoy in Burgundy. | Faucigny and the Genevois.♦
-
-The main object of Savoyard policy in this region was necessarily the
-acquisition of the lands of _Faucigny_ and the _Genevois_. ♦First
-advance north of the lake.♦ But the final incorporation of those lands
-did not take place till they were still more completely hemmed in by
-the Savoyard dominions through the extension of the Savoyard power to
-the north of the Lake. ♦Grant of Moudon. 1207.♦ This began early in
-the thirteenth century by a royal grant of _Moudon_ to Count Thomas of
-Savoy. ♦Romont the northern capital.♦ _Romont_ was next won, and became
-the centre of the Savoyard power north of the Lake. ♦Peter, Count
-of Savoy. 1263-1268.♦ Soon after, through the conquests of Peter of
-Savoy, who was known as the Little Charlemagne and who plays a part in
-English as well as in Burgundian history, these possessions grew into
-a large dominion, stretching along a great part of the shores of the
-Lake of Neufchâtel and reaching as far north as _Murten_ or _Morat_.
-♦1239-1268.♦ But it was a straggling, and in some parts fragmentary,
-dominion, the continuity of which was broken by the scattered
-possessions of the Bishops of Lausanne and other ecclesiastical and
-temporal lords. This extension of dominion brought Peter into close
-connexion with the lands and cities which were afterwards to form the
-Old League of High Germany. ♦His relations with Bern.♦ Bern especially,
-the power to which his conquests were afterwards to be transferred,
-looked on him as a protector. ♦Barons of Vaud. | Union of Vaud with
-the elder branch. 1349.♦ This new dominion north of the Lake was,
-after Peter’s reign, held for a short time by a separate branch of
-the Savoyard princes as _Barons of Vaud_; but in the middle of the
-fourteenth century, their barony came into the direct possession of the
-elder branch of the house. The lands of Faucigny and the Genevois were
-thus altogether surrounded by the Savoyard territory. ♦Faucigny held
-by the Dauphins of the Viennois.♦ Faucigny had passed to the Dauphins
-of the Viennois, who were the constant rivals of the Savoyard counts,
-down to the time of the practical transfer of their dauphiny to France.
-♦Savoy acquires Faucigny and Gex. 1355.♦ Soon after that annexation,
-Savoy obtained _Faucigny_, with _Gex_ and some other districts beyond
-the Rhone, in exchange for some small Savoyard possessions within the
-Dauphiny. ♦The Genevois. 1401.♦ The long struggle for the Genevois,
-the _county_ of Geneva, was ended by its purchase in the beginning
-of the fifteenth century. This left the _city_ of Geneva altogether
-surrounded by Savoyard territory, a position which before long
-altogether changed the relations between the Savoyard counts and the
-city. ♦Changed relations to city of Geneva.♦ Hitherto, in the endless
-struggles between the Genevese counts, bishops, and citizens, the
-Savoyard counts, the enemies of the immediate enemy, had often been
-looked on by the citizens as friends and protectors. Now that they had
-become immediate neighbours of the city, they began before long to
-be its most dangerous enemies. ♦Amadeus the Eighth, Count 1391; | Duke
-1417; | Antipope 1440; | died 1451.♦ The acquisition of the Genevois
-took place in the reign of the famous Amadeus the Eighth, the first
-Duke of Savoy, who received that rank by grant of King Siegmund,
-and who was afterwards the Antipope Felix. ♦Greatest extent of the
-dominions of Savoy in Burgundy.♦ In his reign the dominions of Savoy,
-as a power ruling on both sides of the Alps, reached their greatest
-extent. But the Savoyard power was still pre-eminently Burgundian,
-and Chambery was its capital. The continuous Burgundian dominion of
-the house now reached from the Alps to the Saône, surrounding the
-lake of Geneva and spreading on both sides of the lake of Neufchâtel.
-♦Annexation of Nizza. 1388.♦ Besides this continuous Burgundian
-dominion, the House of Savoy had already become possessed of _Nizza_,
-by which their dominions reached to the sea. This last territory
-had however, though technically Burgundian, geographically more to
-do with the Italian possessions of the house. ♦Savoy brought into
-the neighbourhood of France.♦ But this great extension of territory
-brought Savoy on its western side into closer connexion with the most
-dangerous of neighbours. Her frontier for a certain distance joined
-the actual kingdom of France. The rest joined the Dauphiny, which was
-now practically French, and the county of Provence, which was ruled by
-French princes and which before the end of the century became an actual
-French possession. ♦New relations towards Bern and the Confederates.♦
-To the North again the change in the relations between the House of
-Savoy and the city of Geneva led in course of time to equally changed
-relations towards Bern and her Confederates. ♦Loss of the Burgundian
-dominion of Savoy.♦ Through the working of these two causes, all that
-the House of Savoy now keeps of this great Burgundian territory is
-the single city and valley of Aosta. After the fifteenth century, the
-Burgundian history of that house consists of the steps spread over more
-than three hundred years by which this great dominion was lost.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Growth of Savoy in Italy.♦
-
-The real importance of the house of Savoy in Italy dates from much the
-same time as the great extension of its power in Burgundy. ♦The largest
-dominions cut short in the twelfth century.♦ During the eleventh and
-twelfth centuries, partly through the growth of the cities, partly
-through the enmity of the Emperor Henry the Sixth, the dominions of
-the Savoyard princes as marquesses of Susa had been cut short, so as
-hardly to reach beyond their immediate Alpine valleys. ♦Grants to
-Count Thomas. 1207.♦ In the beginning of the thirteenth century, when
-Count Thomas obtained his first royal grant north of the lake, he also
-obtained grants of _Chieri_ and other places in the neighbourhood of
-Turin. These grants were merely nominal; but they were none the less
-the beginning of the Italian advance of the house. ♦First homage of
-Saluzzo. 1216.♦ In the same reign _Saluzzo_ for the first time paid
-a precarious homage to Savoy. ♦Italian dominion of Charles of Anjou.
-1259.♦ Later in the thirteenth century, Charles of Anjou, now Count of
-Provence and King of Sicily, made his way into Northern Italy also,
-and thus brought the house of Savoy into a dangerous neighbourhood
-with French princes on its Italian as well as on its Burgundian
-side. Through the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the Savoyard
-border went on extending itself. But the Italian possessions of the
-house, like its possessions north of the lake, were separated from
-the main body of Savoyard territory to form a fief for one of the
-younger branches. ♦Counts of Achaia in Piedmont. 1301-1418.♦ This
-branch bore by marriage the empty title of Counts of _Achaia_ and
-_Morea_—memories of Frank dominion within the Eastern Empire—while,
-as if to keep matters straight, a branch of the house of Palaiologos
-reigned at Montferrat. ♦Advance in the fourteenth century.♦ During
-the fourteenth century, among many struggles with the marquesses of
-Montferrat and Saluzzo, the Angevin counts of Provence, and the lords
-of Milan, the Savoyard power in Italy generally increased. ♦Reunion
-of Piedmont. 1418.♦ Under Amadeus the Eighth, the lands held by the
-princes of Achaia were united to the possessions of the head of the
-house. ♦Acquisition of Biella, &c. 1435.♦ Before the end of the reign
-of Amadeus, the dominions of Savoy stretched as far as the Sesia,
-taking in _Biella_, _Santhia_ and _Vercelli_. Counting Nizza and Aosta
-as Italian, which they now practically were, the Italian dominions of
-the House reached from the Alps of Wallis to the sea. ♦Relations with
-Montferrat.♦ But they were nearly cut in two by the dominions of the
-Marquesses of _Montferrat_, from whom however the Dukes of Savoy now
-claimed homage. ♦Claims on Saluzzo; its doubtful homage.♦ _Saluzzo_,
-lying between the old inheritance of Susa and the new possession of
-Nizza, also passed under Savoyard supremacy. But it lay open to a very
-dangerous French claim on the ground of a former homage done to the
-Viennese Dauphins. Amadeus, the first Duke of Savoy, took the title of
-_Count of Piedmont_, and afterwards that of _Prince_. ♦Establishment of
-Savoy as a middle state.♦ His possessions were now fairly established
-as a middle state, Italian and Burgundian, in nearly equal proportions.
-
-♦Effects of the Italian wars.♦
-
-In the course of the next century and a half the Savoyard state
-altogether changed its character in many ways. The changes which
-affected all Europe, especially the great Italian wars, could not fail
-greatly to affect the border state of Italy and Gaul. And there is no
-part of our story which gives us more instructive lessons with
-regard to the proper limits of our subject. During this time the
-Savoyard power was brought under a number of influences, all of which
-deeply affected its history, but which did not all alike affect its
-geography. ♦French influence and occupation.♦ We have a period of
-French influence, a period of French occupation, and more than one
-actual fresh settlement of the frontier. Mere influence does not
-concern us at all. Occupation concerns us only when it takes the form
-of permanent conquest. An occupation of nearly forty years comes very
-near to permanent conquest; still when, as in this case, it comes to
-an end without having effected any formal annexation, it is hardly to
-be looked on as actually working a change on the map. ♦Occupation by
-France.♦ France occupied Piedmont for nearly as long a time as Bern
-occupied the lands south of the lake. Yet we look on the one occupation
-as simply part of the military history, while in the other we see a
-real, though only temporary, geographical change. ♦Increased Italian
-character of Savoy.♦ But the result alike of influence, of occupation,
-and of actual change of boundaries, all tended the same way. They all
-tended to strengthen the Italian character of the House of Savoy, to
-cut short its Burgundian possessions, and, if not greatly to increase
-its Italian possessions, at least to put it in the way of greatly
-increasing them.
-
-♦Decline of Savoy.♦
-
-During the second half of the fifteenth century, the power of the
-House of Savoy greatly declined, partly through the growing influence
-of France, partly through the division, in the form of appanages, of
-the lands which had been so lately formed together into a compact
-state. ♦The Italian wars.♦ Then came the Italian wars, in which the
-Savoyard dominions became the highway for the kings of France in their
-invasions of Italy. The strictly territorial changes of this period
-chiefly concern the marquisate of Saluzzo on the Italian side and the
-northern frontier on the Burgundian side. In the end these two points
-of controversy were merged in a single settlement. ♦First loss of
-lands north of the lake. 1475.♦ The first loss of territory on the
-northern frontier, the first sign that the Savoyard power in Burgundy
-was gradually to fall back, was the loss of part of the lands north of
-the lake in the war between Charles of Burgundy and the Confederates.
-_Granson_ on the lake of Neufchâtel, _Murten_ or _Morat_ on its own
-lake, _Aigle_ at the south-east end of the great lake, _Échallens_
-lying detached in the heart of Vaud, all passed away from Savoy and
-became for ever Confederate ground. Sixty years later, the affairs of
-Geneva led to the great intervention of Bern, Freiburg and Wallis, by
-which Savoy was for ever shorn of her possessions north of the lake.
-♦Loss of the lands on both sides of the lake. 1536.♦ For a while indeed
-she was cut off from the lake altogether; Chablais passed away as well
-as Vaud. Geneva, with her detached scraps of territory, was now wholly
-surrounded by her own allies. ♦Reunion of the lands south of the lake.
-1567.♦ Thirty years later, Bern restored all her conquests south of the
-lake, together with Gex to the west, leaving Geneva again surrounded by
-the dominions of Savoy. Wallis too gave up part of her share, keeping
-only the narrow strip on the left bank of the Rhone. ♦Charles the Good.
-1504-1553. | Emanuel Filibert. 1553-1580.♦ The loss and the recovery
-mark the difference between the reigns of Duke Charles the Third,
-called the Good, and Duke Emmanuel Filibert with the Iron Head. The
-difference of the two reigns is equally marked with regard to France.
-♦Beginning of French occupation 1536. | Its end. 1574.♦ Almost at the
-same moment as the conquests made by Bern, began that occupation, whole
-or partial, of Savoyard territory by the French arms which did not come
-wholly to an end for thirty-eight years. Savoy then appeared again
-as a power whose main strength lay in Italy, whose capital, instead
-of Burgundian Chambery, was Italian Turin. And all later changes of
-frontier and the changes of frontier in her more southern dominions
-also tended the same way to increase the Italian character of the
-Savoyard power, and to lessen its extent in the lands which we may
-distinguish as Transalpine, for the Burgundian name has now altogether
-passed away from them.
-
-The first formal exchange of Burgundian for Italian ground happened
-under Emmanuel Filibert, shortly after the emancipation of his
-dominions. ♦Acquisition of Tenda.♦ The small county of _Tenda_ was
-acquired in exchange for the marquisate of _Villars_ in Bresse.
-This extended the Italian frontier, without formally narrowing the
-Burgundian frontier; still it was a step in the direction of more
-important changes. ♦Disputes about the homage of Saluzzo.♦ The first
-of these was caused by the endless disputes which arose out of the
-disputed homage of Saluzzo. ♦Annexation of Saluzzo by France. 1548.♦
-The Marquesses of Saluzzo preferred the French claimant of their
-homage to the Savoyard, a preference which led in the end to definite
-annexation by France. This was the first acquisition of Italian soil
-by France as such, as distinguished from the claims of French princes
-over Milan, Naples, and Asti. France thus threw a continuous piece
-of French territory into the heart of the states of Savoy. When the
-French occupation ceased, Saluzzo still remained to France. ♦Conquest
-of Saluzzo. 1588.♦ Presently it was conquered by Duke Charles Emmanuel.
-♦Reign of Charles Emanuel. 1580-1630.♦ The reign of this prince marks
-the final change in the destiny of the house of Savoy. He himself
-had dreamed of wider conquests on the Gaulish side of the Alps than
-had ever presented himself to any prince of his house. He was to be
-Count of Provence, King of Burgundy, perhaps King of France. The real
-results of his reign told in exactly the opposite way. ♦Bresse, &c.
-exchanged for Saluzzo. 1601.♦ By the treaty which ended his war with
-France, Saluzzo was ceded to Savoy in exchange for _Bresse_, _Bugey_,
-_Valromey_, and _Gex_. ♦Loss of position beyond the Alps.♦ A powerful
-neighbour was thus shut out from a possession which cut the Savoyard
-states in twain; but the price at which this advantage was gained
-amounted to a final surrender of the old position of the Savoyard House
-beyond the Alps. The Rhone and not the Saône became the boundary,
-while the surrender of Gex brought France to the shores of the Lake.
-Geneva, her city and her scattered scraps of territory, had now,
-besides Bern, two other neighbours in France and Savoy. ♦Attempts on
-Geneva. 1602-1609.♦ The two attempts of Charles Emmanuel to seize upon
-the city were fruitless. Savoy now became distinctly an Italian power,
-keeping indeed the lands between the Alps and the Lake, the proper
-Duchy of Savoy, but having her main possessions and her main interests
-in Italy. ♦Later history of Savoy.♦ We may here therefore finish the
-history of the Transalpine possessions of the Savoyard House. ♦Annexed
-to France. 1792-1796.♦ The Duchy of Savoy remained in the hands of its
-own Dukes till their continental dominion was swept away in the storm
-of the French Revolution. ♦Restored. 1814-1815.♦ It was restored after
-the first fall of Buonaparte, but with a narrowed frontier, which left
-its capital _Chambery_ to France. This was set right by the treaties
-of the next year. ♦Savoy and Nizza annexed to France. 1860.♦ Lastly,
-as all the world knows, Savoy itself, including the guaranteed neutral
-lands on the Lake, passed, along with Nizza, to France. Savoy itself
-was so far favoured as to be allowed to keep its ancient name, and
-to form the departments of _High_ and _Low Savoy_, instead of being
-condemned, as in the former temporary annexation, to bear the names of
-_Leman_ and _Mont Blanc_. The Burgundian Counts who have grown into
-Italian Kings have thus lost the land under whose name their House
-grew famous. ♦Aosta spared.♦ Aosta alone remains as the last relic of
-the times when the Savoyard Dukes, the greatest lords of the Middle
-Kingdom, still kept their place as the truest representatives of the
-Middle Kingdom itself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Italian history of the House of Savoy.♦
-
-The purely Italian history of the house now begins, a history which
-has been already sketched in dealing with the geography of Italy.
-♦Its character.♦ Savoy now takes part in every European struggle, and,
-though its position led to constant foreign occupation, some addition
-of territory was commonly gained at every peace. ♦French occupation.
-1629.♦ Thus, before the reign of Charles Emmanuel was over, Piedmont
-was again overrun by French troops. ♦Annexation of part of Montferrat.
-1631. | French occupation of Pinerolo. 1630-1696.♦ Though the Savoyard
-possessions in Italy were presently increased by a part of the Duchy of
-_Montferrat_, this was a poor compensation for the French occupation
-of _Pinerolo_ and other points in the heart of Piedmont, which lasted
-till nearly the end of the century. ♦Later Italian advance.♦ The
-gradual acquisition of territory at the expense of the Milanese duchy,
-the acquisition and exchange of the two island kingdoms, the last
-annexation by France, the acquisition of the Genoese seaboard, the
-growth of the Kingdom of Sardinia into the Kingdom of Italy, have been
-already told. Our present business has been with Savoy as a middle
-power, a character which practically passed from it with the loss of
-Vaud and Bresse, and all traces of which are now sunk in the higher but
-less interesting character of one of the great powers of Europe. From
-Savoy in its character of a middle power, as one of the representatives
-of ancient Burgundy, we naturally pass to another middle power which
-prolonged the existence of the Burgundian name, and on part of which,
-though not on a part lying within its Burgundian possessions, some
-trace of the ancient functions of the middle kingdom is still laid by
-the needs of modern European policy.
-
-
-§ 8. _The Duchy of Burgundy and the Low Countries._
-
-♦Position of the Valois Dukes of Burgundy.♦
-
-Among all the powers which we have marked as having for their special
-characteristic that of being middle states, the one which came most
-nearly to an actual revival of the middle states of earlier days was
-the Duchy of Burgundy under the Valois Dukes. A great power was formed
-whose princes held no part of their dominions in wholly independent
-sovereignty. ♦Their twofold vassalage.♦ In practical power they were
-the peers of their Imperial and royal neighbours; but their formal
-character throughout every rood of their possessions was that of
-vassals of one or other of those neighbours. ♦Its effects.♦ Such
-a twofold vassalage naturally suggested, even more strongly than
-vassalage to a single lord could have done, the thought of emancipation
-from all vassalage, and of the gathering together of endless separate
-fiefs into a single kingdom. ♦Schemes for a Burgundian kingdom.♦ The
-gradual acquisitions of earlier princes, especially those of Philip the
-Good, naturally led up to the design, avowed by his son Charles the
-Bold, of exchanging the title of Duke for that of King. The memories of
-the older Burgundian and Lotharingian kingdoms had no doubt a share in
-shaping the schemes of a prince who possessed so large a share of the
-provinces which had formed those kingdoms. The schemes of Charles, one
-can hardly doubt, reached to the formation of a realm like that of the
-first Lothar, a realm stretching from the Ocean to the Mediterranean.
-His actual possessions, at their greatest extent, formed a power to
-which Burgundy gave its name, but which was historically at least
-as much Lotharingian as Burgundian. ♦Historical importance of the
-Burgundian power.♦ And though this actual dominion was only momentary,
-no power ever arose which fills a wider and more œcumenical place in
-history than the line of the Valois Dukes. Their power connects the
-earliest settlement of the European states with the latest. ♦1870.♦
-It spans a thousand years, and connects the division of Verdun with
-the last treaty that guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. The growth
-of their power was directly influenced by memories of the early
-Carolingian partitions; and, even in its fall, it has itself influenced
-the geography and politics of Europe ever since. As a Burgundian power,
-it was as ephemeral as all other Burgundian powers have ever been. As a
-Lotharingian power, it abides still in its effects. ♦History of the Low
-Countries.♦ The union of the greater part of the Low Countries under a
-single prince, and that a prince who was on the whole foreign to the
-Empire, strengthened that tendency to split off from the Empire which
-was already at work in some of those lands. Later events caused them
-to split off in two bodies instead of one. This last tendency became
-so strong that a modern attempt to unite them broke down, and their
-place in the modern polity of Europe is that of two distinct kingdoms.
-♦Final result of the Burgundian dominion.♦ The existence of those two
-kingdoms is the final result of the growth of the Burgundian power in
-the fifteenth century. ♦Its effect on language.♦ And by leading to the
-separation of the northern Netherlands from the Empire, it has led to
-one result which could never have been reckoned on, the preservation
-of one branch of the Low-Dutch tongue as the acknowledged and literary
-speech of an independent nation. ♦The Netherlands and Belgium.♦ Its
-political results were the creation, in the shape of the northern
-Netherlands, of a power which once held a great place in the affairs
-of Europe and of the world, and the slower growth, in the shape of
-the southern Netherlands, of a state in which modern European policy
-still acknowledges the character of a middle kingdom. As the neutral
-confederation of Switzerland represents the middle kingdom of Burgundy,
-so the neutral kingdom of Belgium represents the middle kingdom of
-Lotharingia.
-
-♦Ducal Burgundy a fief of the Western Kingdom.♦
-
-The Duchy of Burgundy which gave its name to the Burgundian power of
-the fifteenth century was that one among the many lands bearing the
-Burgundian name which lay wholly outside the Burgundian kingdom of the
-Emperors. This Burgundy, the only one which has kept the name to our
-own time, the duchy of which Dijon is the capital, never was a fief
-of the Eastern Kingdom or of the Empire, after the final separation.
-It always acknowledged the supremacy of the kings of Laon and Paris.
-♦Two lines of Dukes. 1032.♦ By these last the duchy was twice granted
-in fief to princes of their own house, once in the eleventh century
-and once in the fourteenth. ♦The Valois. 1363.♦ This last grant was
-the beginning of the Dukes of the House of Valois, with the growth
-of whose power we have now to deal. ♦Union of Flanders and Burgundy.
-1369. | The county of Burgundy.♦ Philip the Hardy, the first Duke of
-this line, obtained, by his marriage with Margaret of Flanders, the
-counties of _Flanders_, _Artois_, _Rhetel_, and _Nevers_, all fiefs of
-the crown of France, together with the _County Palatine of Burgundy_ as
-a fief of the Empire. The peculiar position of the Dukes of Burgundy
-of this line was at once established by this marriage. ♦Two masses of
-territory.♦ Duke Philip held of two lords, and his dominions lay in
-two distinct masses. The two Burgundies, duchy and county, and the
-county of Nevers, lay geographically together; Flanders and Artois
-lay together at a great distance; the small possession of Rhetel lay
-again detached between the two. Any princes who held such a territory
-as this could hardly fail to devote their main policy to the work of
-bringing about the geographical union of their scattered possessions.
-Nor was this all. The possession of the two Burgundies made their
-common sovereign a vassal at once of France and of the Empire.
-♦Position of the Netherlands.♦ The possession of Flanders, Artois,
-and Rhetel further brought him into connexion with those border
-lands of the Empire and of the French kingdom where the authority of
-either over-lord was weakest, and which had long been tending to form
-themselves into a separate political system distinct from both. The
-results of this complicated position, as worked out, whether by the
-prudence of Philip the Good or by the daring of Charles the Bold, form
-the history of the Dukes of Burgundy of the House of Valois.
-
-♦Imperial and French fiefs in the Netherlands.♦
-
-The lands which we are accustomed to group together under the name of
-the _Netherlands_ or _Low Countries_ lay chiefly within the bounds
-of the Empire; but the county of Flanders had always been a fief of
-France. ♦Fief of the Counts of Flanders within the Empire.♦ Part
-however of the dominions of its counts, the north-eastern corner of
-their dominions, the lands of _Alost_ and _Waas_, were held of the
-Empire. ♦Zealand.♦ These lands, together with the neighbouring islands
-of _Zealand_, formed a ground of endless disputes between the Counts of
-Flanders and their northern neighbours the Counts of _Holland_. ♦County
-of Holland.♦ This last county gradually disentangles itself from the
-general mass of the Frisian lands which lie along the whole coast from
-the mouth of the Scheld to the mouth of the Weser. ♦Inroads of the
-sea. 1219, 1282.♦ And those great inroads of the sea in the thirteenth
-century which gave the Zuyder-Zee its present extent helped to give the
-country a natural boundary, and to part it off from the Frisian lands
-to the north-east. ♦Disputes with the free Frisians.♦ Towards the end
-of the thirteenth century Friesland west of the Zuyder-Zee had become
-part of the dominions of the Counts. ♦Independence of West Friesland.
-1417-1447. | County of East Friesland. 1454.♦ The land immediately east
-of the gulf established its freedom, while _East Friesland_ passed to
-a line of counts, under whom its fortunes parted off from those of the
-Netherlands. Part of its later history has been already given in the
-character of a more purely German state. ♦The Bishops of Utrecht.♦
-Both the counts and the free Frisians had also dangerous neighbours
-in the Bishops of _Utrecht_, the great ecclesiastical princes of this
-region, who held a large temporal sovereignty lying apart from their
-city on the eastern side of the gulf. These disputes went on, as also
-disputes with the Dukes of Geldern, without any final settlement,
-almost to the time when all these lands began to be united under the
-Burgundian power. But before this time, the Counts of Holland had
-become closely connected with lands much further to the south. ♦Duchy
-of Brabant.♦ Among a number of states in this region, the most powerful
-was the Duchy of _Brabant_, which represented the Duchy of the Lower
-Lotharingia, and whose princes held the mark of _Antwerp_ and the
-cities of _Brussels_, _Löwen_ or _Louvain_, and _Mechlin_. ♦County
-of Hennegau or Hainault united with Holland. 1299.♦ To the South of
-them lay the county of _Hennegau_ or _Hainault_. At the end of the
-thirteenth century, this county was joined by marriage with that of
-Holland. Holland and Hainault were thus detached possessions of a
-common prince, with Brabant lying between them. ♦Mark of Namur.♦ South
-of Brabant lay the small mark or county of _Namur_, which, without
-being united to Flanders, was held by a branch of the princes of that
-house.
-
-♦Common character of these states.♦
-
-All these states, though their princes held of two separate over-lords,
-had much in common, and were well fitted to be worked together into
-a single political system. They had much in common in the physical
-character of the country, and in the unusual number of great and
-flourishing cities which these countries contained. ♦Importance of the
-cities.♦ None of these cities indeed actually reached the position
-of free cities of the Empire; but their wealth, and the degree of
-practical independence which they possessed, forms a main feature in
-the history of the Low Countries. In point of language, the northern
-part of these states spoke various dialects of Low-Dutch, from Flemish
-to Frisian; in the southern lands of Hainault, Artois, and Namur, the
-language, though not French, was not Teutonic, but an independent
-Romance speech, the Walloon. ♦South-western group of states.♦ To
-the west of these states lay another group of small principalities
-connected with the former greater group in many ways, but not so
-closely as those which we have just gone through. ♦Bishopric of
-Lüttich. | Duchies of Luxemburg and Limburg.♦ The great ecclesiastical
-principality of _Lüttich_ or _Liège_, lying in two detached parts,
-divided the lands of which we have been speaking from the counties,
-afterwards duchies, of _Lüzelburg_ or _Luxemburg_ and of _Limburg_. Of
-these the more distant Limburg passed in the fourteenth century to the
-Dukes of Brabant. ♦Luxemburg a Duchy. 1353.♦ Luxemburg is famous as
-having given a series of princes to the kingdom of Bohemia and to the
-Empire, and in their hands it rose to the rank of a duchy. ♦Geldern.♦
-Lastly, to the north of Lüttich, forming a connecting link between this
-group of states and the more purely Frisian powers, lay the duchy of
-_Geldern_, of whose quarters the most northern portion stretched to
-the Zuyder Zee. These eastern states, though not so closely connected
-with one another as those to the west, were easily led into the same
-political system. ♦Middle position of all these states.♦ Without
-drawing any hard and fast line, we may say that all the states of this
-region formed, if not yet a middle state, yet a middle system, apart
-alike from France and the Empire, though in various ways connected
-with both. Mainly Imperial, mainly Teutonic, they were not wholly so.
-♦French influence.♦ Besides the homage lawfully due to France from
-Flanders and Artois, French influence in various ways, in politics,
-in manners, and in language, had made great inroads in the southern
-Netherlands. Brabant and Hainault had practically quite as much to do
-with France as with the Empire. ♦Walloon language.♦ And this French
-influence was of course helped by the fact that a considerable region
-in the south was, though not of French, yet not of Teutonic speech.
-Altogether, with much to unite them to the great powers on either side,
-with much to keep them apart from either of them, with much more to
-unite them to one another, the states of the Netherlands might almost
-seem to be designed by nature to be united under a single political
-head. ♦Union of the Netherlands under the Dukes of Burgundy.♦ Such a
-head was supplied by the Dukes of Burgundy and Counts of Flanders, by
-whom, in the course of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, nearly
-the whole of the Netherlands was united into a single power which was
-to be presently broken into two by the results of religious divisions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Leaving then for the present the growth and fall of the Burgundian
-power in the lands more to the south, we will go on to trace the steps
-by which the provinces of the Low Countries were united under the
-Valois Dukes and their Austrian descendants. ♦Reign of Philip the Good.
-1419-1467.♦ The great increase of territory in this region was made
-during the long reign of Philip the Good. ♦Namur. 1421-1429.♦ His first
-acquisition was the county of _Namur_, a small and outlying district,
-but one which, as small and outlying, would still more strongly suggest
-the rounding off of the scattered territory. ♦1429-1433.♦ A series
-of marriages and disputes next enabled Philip to make a much more
-important extension of his dominions. ♦1405.♦ Brabant and Limburg had
-passed to a younger branch of the Burgundian House. ♦1418.♦ John,
-Duke of Brabant, the cousin of Philip by a marriage with Jacqueline,
-Countess of Holland and Hainault, united those states for a moment. The
-disputes and confusions which followed on her marriages and divorces
-led to the annexation of her territories by the Duke of Burgundy,
-a process which was finally concluded by the formal cession of her
-dominions by Jacqueline. ♦Brabant and Limburg. 1430. | Holland and
-Hainault. 1433.♦ Meanwhile Philip had succeeded to Brabant and Limburg,
-and the union of Flanders, Brabant, Hainault, Zealand, and Holland,
-together made a dominion which took in all the greatest Netherland
-states, and formed a compact mass of territory. On this presently
-followed a great acquisition of territory which was more strictly
-French than the fiefs which Philip already held of the French crown in
-Flanders and Artois. The Treaty of Arras, by which Philip, hitherto
-the ally of England against France, made peace with his western
-overlord, gave him, under the form of mortgage, the lands on the Somme.
-♦The towns on the Somme. 1435-1483.♦ The acquisition of these lands,
-_Ponthieu_, _Vermandois_, _Amiens_, and _Boulogne_, advanced the
-Burgundian frontier to a dangerous neighbourhood to Paris on this side
-as well as on the other. It had the further effect of keeping the small
-continental possessions which England still kept at Calais and Guisnes
-apart from the French territory. During the reigns of Philip and
-Charles the Bold, the continental neighbour of England was not France
-but Burgundy. But this great southern dominion was not lasting. The
-towns on the Somme, redeemed and again recovered, passed on the fall of
-Charles the Bold once more into French hands. ♦Recovered by France.♦
-So did Artois itself, and, though Artois was won back, Amiens and the
-rest were not. Yet, if the towns on the Somme had stayed under the rule
-of the successive masters of the Low Countries, it might by this time
-have seemed as natural for Amiens to be Belgian as it now seems natural
-for Cambray and Valenciennes to be French. The Treaty of Madrid drew a
-definite boundary. ♦France resigns the homage of Flanders and Artois.
-1526.♦ France gave up all claim to homage from Flanders and Artois,
-and Charles the Fifth, in his Burgundian, or rather in his Flemish,
-character, finally gave up all claim to the lands on the Somme.
-
-The south-western frontier was thus fixed; but meanwhile the new
-state had advanced in other directions. ♦Luxemburg. 1443.♦ Philip’s
-last great acquisition was the duchy of _Luxemburg_. He now possessed
-the greater part of the Netherlands; but his dominions were still
-intersected by the bishoprics of Utrecht and Lüttich and the duchy of
-Geldern. ♦Geldern and Zutphen. 1472.♦ The duchy of Geldern and county
-of Zutphen were added by Charles the Bold. ♦Final annexation. 1543.♦
-But they formed a precarious possession, lost and won more than once,
-down to their final annexation under Charles the Fifth. ♦Bishopric of
-Lüttich never annexed.♦ Of the two great ecclesiastical principalities
-by which the Burgundian possessions in the Netherlands were cut
-asunder, the bishopric of _Lüttich_, though its history is much mixed
-up with that of the Burgundian Dukes, and though it came largely
-under their influence, was never formally annexed. ♦Annexation of the
-bishopric of Utrecht, 1531; | and Friesland, 1515.♦ But the temporal
-principality of the Bishop of _Utrecht_ was secularized under Charles
-the Fifth. _Friesland_, the Friesland immediately east of the Zuyder
-Zee, was already reincorporated with the dominions of the prince who
-represented the ancient counts of Holland. ♦Dominions of Charles the
-Fifth.♦ The whole Netherlands were thus consolidated under the rule
-of Charles the Fifth. They were united with the far distant county of
-Burgundy, and with it they formed the Burgundian circle in the new
-division of the Empire. The bishopric of Lüttich, which intersected
-the whole southern part of the country, remained in the circle of
-Westfalia. ♦The seventeen provinces.♦ Seventeen provinces, each keeping
-much of separate being, were united under a single prince, and, since
-the treaty of Madrid, they were free from any pretensions on the part
-of foreign powers. The Netherlands formed one of the most compact and
-important parts of the scattered dominions of the Emperor who was also
-lord of Burgundy and Castile. ♦Their separation from the Empire.♦
-But the final union of these lands under the direct dominion of an
-Emperor at once led to their practical separation from the Empire.
-♦The possessions of Philip of Spain. 1555.♦ They passed, with all the
-remaining possessions and claims of the Burgundian House, to Philip of
-Spain, and they were reckoned among the crowd of distant dependencies
-which had come under the rule of the crowns of Castile and Aragon.
-In Spanish hands they acted less as a middle state than as a power
-which helped to hem in France on both sides. Had the great revolt of
-the Netherlands ended in the final liberation of the whole seventeen
-provinces, the middle state would have been formed in its full
-strength. ♦The War of Independence. 1568-1609.♦ As it was, the work of
-the War of Independence was imperfect. The northern provinces won their
-freedom in the form of a federal commonwealth. The southern provinces
-remained dependencies of Spain, to become the chosen fighting ground of
-European armies, the chosen plaything of European diplomacy.
-
-♦The Seven United Provinces. 1578.♦
-
-The end of the long war of independence waged by the northern provinces
-was the establishment of the famous federal commonwealth of the _Seven
-United Provinces_, _Holland_, _Zealand_, _Utrecht_, _Gelderland_,
-_Over-Yssel_, _Friesland_, and _Groningen_. These answered nearly to
-the dominions of the Counts of Holland and Bishops of Utrecht in
-earlier times. ♦Gelderland.♦ But besides these, part of the duchy of
-_Geldern_ formed one of the United Provinces, while its southern part
-shared the fate of the southern provinces. But, besides the United
-Seven, the Confederation also kept parts of Brabant, Geldern, and
-Flanders as common possessions. ♦Formal independence of the Empire.
-1648.♦ The power thus formed, one which so long held an European
-importance quite disproportioned to its geographical extent, had under
-Burgundian rule become practically independent of the Empire, but it
-was only by the Peace of Westfalia that its independence was formally
-acknowledged. The maritime strength of the Confederation made it more
-than an European power. It became a colonizing power in three parts
-of the world. ♦Colonies of the Netherlands.♦ In the course of the
-seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Seven Provinces extended
-their dominion over many points on the continent of India and over the
-neighbouring island of _Ceylon_, over the great equatorial islands of
-_Java_, _Sumatra_, and the _Moluccas_, over many points in _Guinea_
-and southern Africa, and over part of _Guiana_ in South America. ♦New
-Netherland passes to England. 1664.♦ But the great North American
-settlement of _New Netherland_ passed to England, and _New Amsterdam_
-became _New York_. ♦No real name for the county.♦ Singularly enough,
-this great power never had any strict geographical name. _Netherlands_
-was too large, as it took in the whole of the Low Countries and not the
-emancipated provinces only. _Holland_ was too small, as being the name
-of one province only, though the greatest. ♦Use of the name _Dutch_.♦
-And, by one of the oddest cases of caprice of language, in common
-English usage the name of the whole Teutonic race settled down on this
-one small part of it, and the men of the Seven Provinces came to be
-exclusively spoken of as _Dutch_.
-
-♦The Spanish Netherlands. 1578-1706.♦
-
-Meanwhile the southern provinces, the greater part of Brabant
-and Flanders, with Artois, Hennegau or Hainault, Namur, Limburg,
-Luxemburg, and the southern part of Geldern,—taking in Antwerp at
-one end and Cambray at the other—remained under the sovereignty of
-the representatives of the Burgundian Dukes. That is, they remained
-an outlying dependency of the Spanish monarchy. But their southern
-frontier was open to constant aggressions on the part of France.
-♦Dunkirk held by England. 1658-1662.♦ _Dunkirk_ indeed was for a moment
-held by England, as Calais and Boulogne had been in earlier times.
-♦Cession of parts of Artois and of Gravelines, 1659;♦ By the Peace of
-the Pyrenees France obtained Arras and the greater part of Artois,
-leaving Saint Omer to Spain. ♦Dunkirk, 1662;♦ France also began to
-work her way up along the coast of Flanders, taking _Gravelines_ by
-virtue of the treaty, and presently adding Dunkirk by purchase from
-England. ♦Philippeville, Marienburg, Thionville.♦ The treaty also
-added to France several points along the frontiers of Hainault, Liège,
-and Luxemburg, including the detached fortresses of _Philippeville_
-and _Marienburg_, and _Thionville_ famous in far earlier days. During
-the endless wars of Lewis’ reign, the boundary fluctuated with each
-treaty. ♦1668. | 1677.♦ Acquisitions were made by France at the
-Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, some of which were surrendered, and others
-gained, by the Peace of Nimwegen. ♦Boundary fixed by the Peace of
-Utrecht. 1713.♦ At last the boundary was finally fixed by the Peace
-of Utrecht in the last days of Lewis. Parts of Flanders and Hainault
-were finally confirmed to France, which thus kept _Lille_, _Cambray_,
-and _Valenciennes_. ♦The Spanish Netherlands pass to Austria.♦ The
-provinces which had hitherto been Spanish now passed to the only
-surviving branch of the House of Austria, that which reigned in the
-archduchy and supplied the hereditary candidates for the Empire.
-♦Annexed by France. 1792.♦ The first wars of the French Revolution
-added the Austrian Netherlands to France, and with them the bishopric
-of Lüttich which still so oddly divided them. ♦Kingdom of Holland.
-1806-1810.♦ A later stage of the days of confusion changed the Seven
-United Provinces, enlarged by the addition of East Friesland, into a
-_Kingdom of Holland_, one of the states which the new conqueror carved
-out for the benefit of his kinsfolk. ♦Holland annexed by France.
-1810-1813.♦ Presently the new kingdom was incorporated with the new
-‘Empire,’ along with the German lands to the north-east of it. The
-Corsican had at last carried out the schemes of the Valois kings, and
-the whole Burgundian heritage formed for a moment part of France.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the general settlement of Europe, after the long wars with France,
-the restoration of the Low Countries as a middle state was a main
-object. ♦Kingdom of the Netherlands. 1814.♦ This was brought about
-by the union of the whole Netherlands into a single kingdom bearing
-that name. The southern boundary did not differ very greatly from
-that fixed by the Peace of Utrecht. ♦The boundaries.♦ As in the
-case of the Savoyard frontier, France kept a little more by the
-arrangements of 1814 than she finally kept by those of 1815. To the
-east, East-Friesland passed to Hannover, leaving the boundary of the
-new kingdom not very different from that of the two earlier powers
-which it represented, gaining only a small territory on the banks of
-the Maes. ♦Incorporation of Lüttich.♦ But the bishopric of Lüttich was
-incorporated with the lands which it had once parted asunder, and so
-ceased altogether to be German ground. ♦Grand Duchy of Luxemburg.♦ The
-new king, as we have already seen, entered the German confederation in
-his character of Grand Duke of _Luxemburg_, the duchy being somewhat
-shortened to the east in favour of Prussia. Lastly, after fifteen years
-of union, the new kingdom again split asunder. ♦Kingdom of Belgium.
-1830-1831.♦ It was now divided into the kingdom of the Netherlands,
-answering to the old United Provinces, and the kingdom of Belgium,
-answering to the old Spanish or Austrian Netherlands. ♦Luxemburg
-divided.♦ But part of Limburg remained to the northern kingdom, and its
-sovereign also kept part of Luxemburg, as a district state, forming
-part of the German confederation. The western part of the duchy formed
-part of the kingdom of Belgium. ♦1867.♦ Later events, as has been
-already recorded, have severed the last tie between Germany and the
-Netherlands; they have wiped out the last survival of the days when the
-Counts of Holland and of Luxemburg were alike princes of the German
-kingdom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Effects of Burgundian rule.♦
-
-The above may pass as a sketch of the fluctuations along the borderland
-in their European aspect. It is needless to go through every small
-shifting of frontier, or to recount in detail the history of small
-border principalities like _Saint Pol_ and _Bouillon_. The main
-historical aspect of these countries is their tendency, in all ages, to
-form somewhat of a middle system between two greater powers on either
-side of them. The guaranteed neutrality of Belgium and the guaranteed
-neutrality of Switzerland are alike survivals or revivals—it is hard
-to say which they should be called—of the instinctive feeling which,
-in the ninth century, called the Lotharingian kingdom into being. The
-modern form of this thousand-year old idea was made possible through
-the growth of the power of the Burgundian Dukes of the House of Valois.
-
-The real historical work of those dukes was thus done in those parts
-of their dominions from which they did not take their name, but which
-took their name from them. The history of their other dominions
-may be told in a few words; indeed a great part of it has been told
-already. ♦Schemes of Charles the Bold.♦ The schemes of Charles the
-Bold for uniting his scattered dominions by the conquest of the duchy
-of Lorraine, for extending the power thus formed to the sea-board of
-the royal Burgundy, for forming in short a middle kingdom stretching
-from the Ocean to the Mediterranean, acting as a barrier alike between
-France and Germany and between France and Italy, remained mere schemes.
-They are important only as showing how deeply the idea or the memory of
-a middle state was still fixed in men’s minds. The conquests of Charles
-in Lorraine, his purchases in Elsass, were momentary possessions
-which hardly touch geography. But the fall of Charles, by causing
-the break-up of the southern dominion of his house, helped to give
-greater importance to its northern dominion. While the Netherlands grew
-together, the Burgundies split asunder. After the fall of Charles the
-fate of the two Burgundies was much the same as the fate of Flanders
-and Artois. Both were for a while seized by France; but the county,
-like Artois, was afterwards recovered for a season. The duchy of
-Burgundy was lost for ever; the county, along with the outlying county
-of Charolois, remained to those who by female succession represented
-the Burgundian Dukes, that is to Charles the Fifth and his Spanish
-son. The annexation of the Burgundian county, and with it of the city
-of Besançon, by Lewis the Fourteenth has been recorded in an earlier
-section.
-
-
-§ 9. _The Dominions of Austria._
-
-We now come to one among these German states which have parted off
-from the kingdom of Germany whose course has been widely different
-from the rest, and whose modern European importance stands on a widely
-different level. As the Lotharingian and Frisian lands parted off on
-the north-west of the kingdom, as a large part of the Swabian lands
-parted off to the south-west of the kingdom, so the _Eastern Mark_,
-the mark of _Austria_, parted off no less, but with widely different
-consequences. ♦Origin of the name _Oesterreich_, _Austria_.♦ The name
-of _Austria_, _Oesterreich_—_Ostrich_ as our forefathers wrote it—is,
-naturally enough, a common name for the eastern part of any kingdom.
-♦Other lands so called.♦ The Frankish kingdom of the Merwings had its
-_Austria_; the Italian kingdom of the Lombards had its _Austria_ also.
-We are half inclined to wonder that the name was never given in our own
-island either to Essex or to East-Anglia. But, while the other Austrias
-have passed away, the _Oesterreich_, the _Austria_, the Eastern mark,
-of the German kingdom, its defence against the Magyar invader, has
-lived on to our own times. It has not only lived on, but it has become
-one of the chief European powers. And it has become so by a process
-to which it would be hard to find a parallel. ♦Special position of
-the Austrian power.♦ The Austrian duchy supplied Germany with so many
-Kings, and Rome with so many Emperors, that something of Imperial
-character came to cleave to the duchy itself. Its Dukes, in resigning,
-first, the crown of Germany, and then all connexion with Germany, have
-carried with them into their new position the titles and bearings
-of the German Cæsars. ♦Union with Hungary.♦ The power which began
-as a mark against the Magyar came to have a common sovereign with
-the Magyar kingdom; and the Austrian duchy and Magyar kingdom, each
-drawing with it a crowd of smaller states of endless nationalities,
-have figured together in the face of modern Europe as the _Austrian
-Empire_ or the _Austro-Hungarian Monarchy_. ♦The so-called ‘Empire’ of
-Austria.♦ It is not easy, in drawing a map, to find a place for the
-‘Empire’ of Austria. The Archduchy is there, and its sovereign has not
-dropped his archiducal title. A crowd of kingdoms, duchies, counties,
-and lordships, all acknowledging the sovereignty of the same prince,
-are there also. But it is not easy to find the geographical place of an
-‘Empire’ of Austria, as distinct from the Archduchy. Nor is it easy to
-understand on what principle an ‘Empire’ of Austria can be understood
-as taking in all the states which happen to own the Hungarian King
-and Austrian Archduke as their sovereign. The matter is made more
-difficult when we remember that the title of ‘Hereditary Emperor of
-Austria’ was first taken while its bearer was still King of Germany
-and Roman Emperor-elect. ♦Union of separate states under the Austrian
-House.♦ But, putting questions like these aside, the gradual union of
-a great number of states, German and non-German, under the common rule
-of the archiducal house of Austria, by whatever name we call the power
-so formed, is a great fact both of history and of geography. A number
-of states, originally independent of one another, differing in origin
-and language and everything that makes states differ from one another,
-some of them members of the former Empire, some not, have, as a matter
-of fact, come together to form a power which fills a large space in
-modern history and on the modern map. ♦Lack of national unity.♦ But it
-is a power which is altogether lacking in national unity. It is a power
-which is not coextensive with any nation, but which takes in parts of
-many nations. It cannot even be said that there is a dominant nation
-surrounded by subject nations. ♦German, Magyar, and other races.♦ The
-Magyar nation in its unity, and a fragment of the German nation, stand
-side by side on equal terms, while Italians, Roumans, and Slaves of
-almost every branch of the Slavonic race, are grouped around those two.
-♦No strictly federal tie.♦ There is no federal tie; it is a stretch of
-language to apply the federal name to the present relation between the
-two chief powers of Hungary and Austria. Nor can any strictly federal
-tie be said to unite Bohemia, Dalmatia, Croatia, and Galicia. And yet
-these other members of the general body are not mere subject provinces,
-like the dominions of Old Rome. The same prince is sovereign of a crowd
-of separate states, two of which stand out prominently as centres
-among the rest. There is neither national unity, nor federation, nor
-mere subjection of one land or nation to another. All this has come by
-the gradual union by various means of many crowns upon the same brow.
-♦Anomalous nature of the Austrian power.♦ The result is an anomalous
-power which has nothing else exactly like it, past or present. But the
-very anomaly makes the growth of such a power a more curious study.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Eastern Mark.♦
-
-The beginnings of the Austrian state are to be found in the small
-_Mark_ on the Danube, lying between Bohemia, Moravia, and the Duchy of
-Kärnthen or Carinthia. It appears in its first form as an appendage
-to Bavaria.[17] This mark Frederick Barbarossa raised into a duchy,
-under its first duke Henry the Second, and it was enlarged to the
-westward at the expense of Bavaria by the addition of the lands above
-the Enns. ♦Duchy of Austria, 1156.♦ Thus was formed the original
-_Duchy of Austria_, the duchy of the Dukes of the House of Babenberg.
-It had not long risen to ducal rank before it began to extend itself at
-the expense of states which had hitherto been of greater moment than
-itself. Itself primarily a mark against the Magyar, Austria had to the
-south of it the lands where the German Kingdom marched at once upon
-the Magyar, the Slave, and the Kingdom of Italy. ♦Duchy of Carinthia.♦
-Here lay the great Duchy of Carinthia, a land where the population
-was mainly Slave, though on this frontier the Slavonic population had
-been brought into much earlier and more thorough subjection to the
-German Kings than the Slaves on the north-eastern frontier. ♦Duchy of
-Styria, 1180;♦ At the time of the foundation of the duchy of Austria,
-the Carinthian duchy had begun to split in pieces, and its northern
-part, hitherto the _Upper Carinthian Mark_, grew into the Duchy of
-_Steyermark_ or _Styria_. ♦united to Austria, 1192.♦ Twelve years
-later, Leopold the Fifth of Austria inherited the duchy of Styria, a
-duchy greater than his own, by the will of its duke Ottokar. Carinthia
-itself went on as a separate duchy; but it now took in only a narrow
-territory in the south-western part of the old duchy, and that broken
-up by outlying possessions of the archbishops of Salzburg and other
-ecclesiastical lords. ♦The county of Görz.♦ To the south grew up a
-considerable power in the hands of the counts of _Görz_ or _Gorizia_
-on the Italian border. ♦Ecclesiastical position of its Counts.♦ The
-possessions of these counts stretched, though not continuously, from
-Tyrol to Istria, and their influence was further enlarged by their
-position as advocates of the bishoprics of _Trent_ and _Brixen_ and
-of the more famous patriarchate of _Aquileia_. These are the lands,
-the marchlands of Germany towards its eastern and south-eastern
-neighbours, which came by gradual annexations to form the German
-possessions of the Austrian power. But the further growth of that power
-did not begin till the duchy itself had passed away to the hands of a
-wholly new line of princes.
-
-♦Momentary union of Austria and Bohemia.♦
-
-The first change was one which brought about for a moment from one side
-an union which was afterwards to be brought about in a more lasting
-shape from the other side. This was the annexation of Austria by the
-kingdom of _Bohemia_. ♦Bohemia a kingdom, 1158.♦ That duchy had been
-raised to the rank of a kingdom, though of course without ceasing to
-be a fief of the Empire, a few years after the mark of Austria had
-become a duchy. The death of the last duke of Austria of the Babenberg
-line led to a disputed succession and a series of wars, in which the
-princes of Bavaria, Bohemia, and Hungary all had their share. ♦Ottokar
-of Bohemia annexes Austria and Styria, 1252-1262. | Carinthia, 1269.♦
-In the end, between marriage, conquest, and royal grant, Ottokar king
-of Bohemia obtained the duchies of Austria and Styria, and a few years
-later he further added Carinthia by the bequest of its Duke. Thus a new
-power was formed, by which several German states came into the power
-of a Slavonic king. ♦Great power of Ottokar.♦ The power of that king
-for a moment reached the Baltic as well as the Hadriatic; for Ottokar
-carried his arms into Prussia, and became the founder of Königsberg.
-But this great power was but momentary. Bohemia and Austria were again
-separated, and Austria, with its indefinite mission of extension over
-so many lands, including Bohemia itself, passed to a house sprung from
-a distant part of Germany.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦House of Habsburg.♦
-
-We have now come to the European beginnings of the second House of
-Austria, the house whose name seems to have become inseparably
-connected with the name of Austria, though the spot from which that
-house drew its name has long ceased to be an Austrian possession. This
-is the house of the Counts of _Habsburg_. They took this name from
-their castle on the lower course of the Aar, in the north-west corner
-of the Aargau, in that southern Swabian land where the Old League of
-High Germany was presently to arise, and so greatly to extend itself
-at the cost of the power of Habsburg. ♦Union of Habsburg, Kyburg, and
-Lenzburg.♦ By an union of the lands of Habsburg with those of the
-Counts of _Kyburg_ and _Lenzburg_, a considerable, though straggling,
-dominion was formed. It stretched in and out among the mountains and
-lakes, taking in Luzern, and forming a dangerous neighbour to the free
-city of Zürich. ♦Their possession in Elsass.♦ Besides these lands,
-the same house also held _Upper Elsass_ with the title of Landgrave,
-a dominion separated from the other Swabian lands of the House by
-the territory of the free city of Basel. ♦Rudolf king, 1273. | His
-victories over Ottokar, 1276-1278. | Albert of Habsburg Duke of Austria
-and Styria, 1282.♦ The lord of this great Swabian dominion, the famous
-Rudolf, being chosen to the German crown, and having broken the power
-of Ottokar, bestowed the duchies of Austria and Styria on his son
-Albert, afterwards King. ♦Meinhard Duke of Carinthia and Count of
-Tyrol, 1286.♦ Carinthia at first formed part of the same grant; but it
-was presently granted to Meinhard Count of Görz and Tyrol. Görz passed
-to another branch of the house of its own Counts. Three powers were
-thus formed in these regions, the duchies of _Austria_ and _Styria_,
-the duchy of _Carinthia_ with the county of _Tyrol_, and the county of
-_Görz_.
-
-♦Scattered territories of the House of Habsburg.♦
-
-Thus under Albert the possessions of the House of Habsburg were large,
-but widely scattered. The two newly acquired eastern duchies not only
-gave its princes their highest titles, but they formed a compact
-territory, well suited for extension northward and southward. ♦Falling
-off of the Swabian lands.♦ But among the outlying Swabian territories,
-though some parts remained to the Austrian House down to the end of the
-German Kingdom, the tendency was to diminish and gradually to part off
-altogether from Germany. In the lands south of the Rhine this happened
-through union with the Confederates; in the Alsatian lands it happened
-at a later stage through French annexation.
-
-♦Connexion of Austria with the Empire.♦
-
-It is to be hoped that it is no longer needful to explain that the
-hereditary lands of the House of Habsburg or Austria had no inherent
-connexion with the German Kingdom and Roman Empire of which they were
-fiefs, beyond the fact that they were among its fiefs. They were
-further connected with it only by the accident that, from Rudolf
-onwards, many princes of that house were chosen Kings, and that, from
-the middle of the fifteenth century, onwards, all the Kings were chosen
-from that house and from the house into which it merged by female
-succession. It is to be hoped that there is no longer any need to
-explain that every Emperor was not Duke of Austria, and that every Duke
-of Austria was not Emperor. But it may be needful to explain that every
-Duke of Austria was not master of the whole dominions of the House of
-Austria. ♦Divisions of the Austrian dominions.♦ The divisions, the
-reunions, the joint reigns, which are common to the House of Austria
-with other German princely houses, become at once more important and
-more puzzling in the case of a house which gradually came to stand
-above all the others in European rank. The caution is specially needful
-in the case of the Swabian lands, as the history of the Confederates
-is liable to be greatly misunderstood, if every Duke of Austria
-who appears there is taken for the sole sovereign of the Austrian
-dominions. It is needless to go here through all these shiftings
-between princes of the same house. Through all changes the unity of
-the house and its possessions was maintained, even while they were
-parted out or held in common by different members of the house. But
-it is important to bear in mind that some of the Dukes of Austria who
-figure in the history of Switzerland were rather Landgraves of Elsass
-or Counts of Tyrol than Dukes of Austria in any practical sense.
-
-The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries may be defined as a time during
-which the Austrian House on the whole steadily advanced in the Eastern
-part of its dominions and steadily fell back in the Western. But in the
-course of the fourteenth century an acquisition was made which, without
-making them absolutely continuous, brought them into something more
-like geographical connexion with one another. ♦Acquisition of Carinthia
-and Tyrol, 1335.♦ This was the acquisition of the Duchy of Carinthia
-and County of _Tyrol_, the latter of which lands lay conveniently
-between the Eastern and Western dominions of the house. ♦Extent of the
-Austrian territory.♦ These now stretched continuously from the Bohemian
-frontier to Istria, and they threw out, in the form of Tyrol and the
-Swabian lands, a scattered, but nearly continuous, territory stretching
-to the borders of Lorraine and the county of Burgundy. The Austrian
-possessions now touched the eastern gulf of the Hadriatic and came
-into the neighbourhood of the Dalmatian Archipelago. ♦Commendation of
-Trieste, 1382.♦ Somewhat later they reached the main Hadriatic itself,
-when the city of _Trieste_, hitherto disputed between the commonwealth
-of Venice and the patriarchs of Aquileia, commended itself to the
-Austrian Duke Leopold as its lord. This is the same Leopold who four
-years later fell at Sempach. By this time the Swabian possessions
-had been increased north of the Rhine, while south of the Rhine the
-Austrian dominion was steadily giving way. ♦Loss of Thurgau, 1460.♦
-The Confederates and their several cantons advanced in every way, by
-purchase and conquest, till, after the loss of Thurgau, the House of
-Austria kept nothing south of the Rhine except the towns known as the
-_Waldstädte_.
-
-By this time the division of the estates of the house had taken a more
-lasting shape. One branch reigned in Austria, another in Carinthia and
-Styria, a third in Tyrol and the other western lands. At this time
-begins the unbroken series of Austrian elections to the German and
-Imperial crowns. ♦Albert the Second, king, 1437-1440.♦ The first was
-Albert the Second, Duke of Austria. ♦Frederick the Third, king, 1440;
-Emperor, 1452. | Archduke of Austria, 1453.♦ Then Frederick the Third,
-the first Emperor of the House, united the Austrian and Carinthian
-duchies, and raised Austria to the unique rank of an Archduchy.
-♦Siegmund, Count of Tyrol, &c., 1429-1496.♦ Meanwhile, Siegmund Count
-of Tyrol held the western lands, and appears as Duke of Austria in
-Confederate and Burgundian history. He there figures as the prince who
-lost Thurgau to the Confederates and who mortgaged his Alsatian lands
-to Charles the Bold. ♦Maximilian, King of the Romans, 1486; Archduke,
-1493; Count of Tyrol, 1496; Emperor-elect, 1508.♦ In Maximilian the
-whole possessions of the house of Austria were united. ♦Beginning of
-union with lands beyond the Empire.♦ But by this time the affairs of
-the purely German lands which had hitherto formed the possessions of
-the Austrian house had begun to be mixed up with the succession to
-lands and kingdoms beyond the Empire, and with lands which, though
-technically within the Empire, had a distinct being of their own. In
-the course of the fifteenth century the house of Austria, hitherto
-simply one of the chief German princely houses, put on two special
-characters. ♦Succession of Austrian Kings and Emperors.♦ It became, as
-we have already seen, the house which exclusively supplied kings and
-Emperors to Germany and the Empire. And it became, by virtue of its
-hereditary possessions rather than of its Imperial position, one of the
-chief European powers. For a while the greatest of European powers, it
-has remained a great European power down to our own time.
-
-♦Union with Bohemia and Hungary.♦
-
-The special feature in the history of the house of Austria from the
-fifteenth century onwards is its connexion—a connexion more or less
-broken, but still constantly recurring till in the end it becomes fully
-permanent—with the kingdom of Bohemia within the Empire and with the
-kingdom of Hungary beyond its bounds. These possessions have given the
-Austrian power its special character, that of a power formed by the
-union under one prince of several wholly distinct nations or parts of
-nations which have no tie beyond that union. The Austrian princes,
-originally purely German, equally in their Swabian and in their
-Austrian possessions, had already, by the extension of their power to
-the south, obtained some Slavonic and some Italian-speaking subjects.
-Still, as a power, they were purely German. ♦Various acquisitions of
-Austria.♦ But in the period which begins in the fifteenth and goes on
-into the nineteenth century, we shall see them gradually gathering
-together, sometimes gaining, sometimes losing—gaining and losing by
-every process, warlike and peaceful, by which territory can be gained
-or lost—a crowd of kingdoms, duchies, and counties, scattered over
-all parts of Europe from Flanders to Transsilvania. But it is the
-acquisition of the two crowns of Bohemia and Hungary which, above all
-others, gave the House of Austria its special position as a middle
-power, a power belonging at once to the system of Western and to
-the system of Eastern Europe. Among the endless shiftings of the
-states which have been massed together under the rule of the House
-of Habsburg, that house has more than once been at the same moment
-the neighbour of the Gaul and the neighbour of the Turk; and it has
-sometimes found Gaul and Turk arrayed together against it. Add to
-all this that, though the connexion between the house of Austria and
-the Empire was a purely personal one, renewed in each generation by
-a special election, still the fact that so many kings of Hungary and
-archdukes of Austria were chosen Emperors one after another, caused
-the house itself, after the Empire was abolished, to look in the eyes
-of many like a continuation of the power which had come to an end. The
-peculiar position of the Austrian house could hardly have been obtained
-by a mere union of Hungary, Austria, and the other states under princes
-none of whom were raised to Imperial rank. Nor could it have been
-obtained by a series of mere dukes of Austria, even though they had
-been chosen Emperors from generation to generation. It was through the
-accidental union under one sovereign of a crowd of states which had no
-natural connexion with each other, and through the further accident
-that the Empire itself seemed to become a possession of the House, that
-the House of Habsburg, and its representative the House of Lorraine,
-have won their unique position among European powers.
-
-The first hints, so to speak, of a coming union between the Hungarian
-and Bohemian kingdoms and the Austrian duchy began, as we have seen,
-in the days of Ottokar. A Bohemian king had then held the Austrian
-duchy, while a Hungarian king had for a moment occupied part of
-Styria. ♦Relations with Hungary and Bohemia.♦ But the later form which
-the union was to take was not that of the Bohemian or the Hungarian
-reigning over Austria, but that of the Austrian reigning over Hungary
-and Bohemia. The duchy was not to be added to either of the kingdoms;
-but both kingdoms were in course of time to be added to the duchy.
-The growth of both Hungary and Bohemia as kingdoms will be spoken
-of elsewhere. We have now to deal only with their relations to the
-Austrian House. ♦Rudolf, son of Albert, King of Bohemia, 1306.♦ For a
-moment, early in the fourteenth century, an Austrian prince, son of the
-first Austrian King of Germany, was actually acknowledged as King of
-Bohemia. But this connexion was only momentary. The first beginnings
-of anything like a more permanent connexion begin a hundred and thirty
-years later. ♦Albert the Second, King of Hungary and Bohemia, 1438.♦
-The second Austrian King of Germany wore both the Hungarian and the
-Bohemian crowns by virtue of his marriage with the daughter of the
-Emperor and King Siegmund. The steps towards the union of the various
-crowns are now beginning. ♦Siegmund, King of Hungary, 1386; King of the
-Romans, 1414; King of Bohemia, 1419; Emperor, 1433.♦ Siegmund was the
-third King of Bohemia who had worn the crown of Germany, the second
-who had worn the crown of the Empire. Under his son-in-law, Hungary,
-Bohemia, and Austria were for a moment united with the German crown; in
-the next reign, as we have seen, begins the lasting connexion between
-Austria and the Empire. But the Hungarian and Bohemian kingdoms parted
-again. ♦Wladislaus Postumus, Duke of Austria, 1440-1457; King of
-Hungary and Bohemia, 1453-1457.♦ One Austrian King, the son of Albert,
-reigned at least nominally over both kingdoms, as well as over the
-special Austrian duchy. But the final union did not come for another
-eighty years. The Turk was now threatening and conquering. At Mohacz
-Lewis, king of the two kingdoms, fell before the invaders. ♦Ferdinand,
-Archduke of Austria, 1519; King of Hungary and Bohemia, 1527; King of
-the Romans, 1531; Emperor-elect, 1556. | Permanent union of Bohemia.♦
-His Bohemian kingdom passed to Ferdinand of Austria, and from that day
-to this, unless we except the momentary choice of the Winter King, the
-Palatine Frederick, the Bohemian crown has always stayed in the House
-of Austria. And for many generations it has been worn by the actual
-sovereign of the Austrian archduchy.
-
-♦Effects of the union with Hungary.♦
-
-The acquisition of the crown of Hungary was of greater importance. It
-at once put the Austrian House into a wholly new position; it gave it
-its new later character of a middle state between Eastern and Western
-Europe. The duchy had begun as a mark against the Turanian and heathen
-invaders of earlier times. Those Turanian and heathen invaders had
-long before settled down into a Christian kingdom; they had latterly
-become the foremost champions of Christendom against the Turanian and
-Mahometan invaders who had seized the throne of the Eastern Cæsars.
-♦Mission against the Turk.♦ With the crown of Hungary, the main duty of
-the Hungarian crown, the defence of Christendom against the Ottoman,
-passed to the Archdukes and Emperors of the Austrian House. ♦The
-Austrian kings in Hungary.♦ But for a long time Hungary was a most
-imperfect and precarious possession of its Austrian Kings. ♦1526-1699.♦
-For more than a century and a half after the election of Ferdinand, his
-rule and that of his successors was disputed and partial. They had from
-the very beginning to strive against rival kings, while the greater
-part of the kingdom and of the lands attached to the crown was either
-held by the Turk himself or by princes who acknowledged the Turk as
-their superior lord. These strictly Hungarian affairs, as well as the
-changes on the frontier towards the Turk, will be spoken of elsewhere.
-♦Peace of Passarowitz, 1718.♦ It was not till the eighteenth century
-that the Austrian Kings were in full possession of the whole Hungarian
-kingdom and all its dependencies.
-
-♦Acquisition of Görz, 1500.♦
-
-Meanwhile the Austrian power had been making advances in other
-quarters. At the end of the fifteenth century the Austrian possessions
-at the north-east of the Hadriatic were greatly enlarged by the
-addition of the county of _Görz_, which carried with it the fallen city
-of Aquileia. ♦New position towards Italy.♦ A more direct path towards
-Italian dominion was thus opened. The wars of the League of Cambray
-made no permanent addition to Austrian dominion in this quarter; but
-the master of Trieste and Aquileia, whose territory cut off Venice
-from her Istrian possessions, might already almost pass for an Italian
-sovereign. ♦Dominions of Charles the Fifth.♦ Under Charles the Fifth
-the House of Austria became, as we have seen, possessed of a vast
-Italian dominion. But after him it passed away alike from the Empire
-and the German branch of the house, to become part of the heritage of
-the Austrian Kings of Spain. ♦Austrian rule in Italy.♦ It was not, as
-we have already seen, till the beginning of the eighteenth century that
-either an Emperor or a reigning archduke again obtained any territory
-within the acknowledged bounds of Italy. The fluctuations of Austrian
-rule in Italy, from the acquisition of the Duchy of Milan down to our
-own day, have been already told in the Italian section. Lombardy and
-Venetia are now again Italian; but Austria still keeps the north-east
-corner of the great gulf. She still keeps Görz and Aquileia, Trieste
-and all Istria, to say nothing of the dangerous way which her frontier
-still stretches on Italian ground in the land of Trent and Roveredo.
-
-♦Burgundian possessions.♦
-
-These last named possessions still abide as traces of the Austrian
-advance in these regions, and its fluctuations there have been among
-the most important facts of modern history. Another series of Austrian
-acquisitions in the West of Europe have altogether passed away.
-The great Burgundian inheritance passed to the House of Austria.
-♦Maximilian and Philip.♦ But it was only for a short time, in the
-persons of Maximilian and Philip, that it was in any way united to the
-actual Austrian Archduchy. ♦The Austrian Netherlands.♦ After Charles
-the Fifth the Burgundian possessions passed, like those in Italy, to
-the Spanish branch of the House, and, just as in Italy, it was not till
-the eighteenth century that actual Emperors or archdukes again reigned
-over a part of the Netherlands. ♦Loss of Elsass.♦ Before this time the
-Alsatian dominion of Austria had passed away to France, and the remnant
-of her Swabian possessions passed away, as we have seen, in the days of
-general confusion. The changes of her territory in Germany during that
-period have been already spoken of. Her acquisitions in Eastern Europe
-will come more fully elsewhere; but a word must be given to them here.
-♦Loss of Silesia, 1740. | Final partition of Poland, 1772.♦ Looking at
-the House of Austria simply as a power, without reference to the German
-or non-German character of its dominions, the loss of _Silesia_ may
-be looked on as counterbalanced by the territory gained from Poland
-at the first and third partitions. ♦Galicia and Lodomeria.♦ The first
-partition gave the Austrian House a territory of which the greater
-part was originally Russian rather than Polish, and in which the old
-Russian names of _Halicz_ and _Vladimir_ were strangely softened
-into a _Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria_. ♦Third partition, 1795.
-| New-Galicia.♦ The third partition added _Cracow_ and a considerable
-amount of strictly Polish territory. These last passed away, first
-to the Duchy of Warsaw, and then to the restored Kingdom of Poland.
-♦Annexation of Cracow, 1846.♦ But Galicia has been kept, and it has
-been increased in our day by the seizure of the republic of Cracow.
-These lands lie to the north of the Hungarian kingdom. Parted from them
-by the whole extent of that kingdom, and adjoining that kingdom at
-its south-west corner lie the coast lands of Austria on the Hadriatic.
-♦Dalmatia, 1797.♦ By the Peace of Campoformio, Austria took _Dalmatia_
-strictly so called, and the other Venetian possessions as far south as
-Budua. ♦Recovered, 1814. | Ragusa, 1814.♦ These lands, lost in the wars
-with France, were won again at the Peace, with the addition of _Ragusa_
-and its territory.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This account of the gains and losses of a power which has gained and
-lost in so many quarters is necessary somewhat piecemeal. It may be
-well then to end this section with a picture of the Austrian power as
-it stood at several points of the history of the last century and a
-half, leaving the fluctuating frontier towards the Turk to be dealt
-with in our survey of the more strictly Eastern lands.
-
-♦Reign of Maria Theresa, 1740-1780.♦
-
-We will begin at a date when we come across a sovereign whose position
-is often strangely misunderstood, the Empress-Queen Maria Theresa—Queen
-in her own right of Hungary and Bohemia, Empress by the election of
-her husband to the Imperial Crown. ♦Her hereditary dominions.♦ The
-Pragmatic Sanction of her father Charles the Sixth made her heiress
-of all his hereditary dominions. That is, it made her heiress,
-within the Empire, of the kingdom of Bohemia with its dependencies
-of Moravia and Silesia—of the Archduchy of Austria with the duchies,
-counties, and lordships of Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, Tyrol, Görz,
-and Trieste—of Constanz and a few other outlying Swabian points—as
-also of Milan, Mantua, and the Austrian Netherlands, lands which it
-needs some stretch, whether of memory or of legal fiction, to look
-on as being then in any sense lands of the Empire. Altogether beyond
-the Empire, it gave her the Kingdom of Hungary with its dependent
-lands of Croatia, Slavonia, and Transsilvania or Siebenbürgen. These
-hereditary dominions, lessened by the loss of Silesia, increased by the
-addition of Galicia, she handed on to their later Kings and Archdukes.
-Her marriage transferred those hereditary dominions, it indirectly
-transferring the Empire itself, to a new family, the House of Lorraine.
-The husband of Maria Theresa, Francis, who had exchanged his duchy
-of Lorraine for that of Tuscany, was in truth the first Lotharingian
-Emperor. After him came three Emperors of his house, under the third of
-whom the succession of Augustus and Charles came to an end.
-
-♦Austrian dominions in 1811.♦
-
-We may take another view of the Austrian territory at the moment when
-the French power in Germany was at its height. The Roman Empire and
-the German kingdom had now come to an end; but their last sovereign
-still, with whatever meaning, called himself Emperor of his archduchy,
-though without dropping his proper title of Archduke. ♦New use of the
-name _Austria_.♦ From this time the word Austria was used, commonly
-but inaccurately, to take in all the possessions of the House of
-Austria. And, as all the possessions of the House of Austria were now
-geographically continuous, it became more natural to speak of them by
-a single name than it had been when the dominions of that house in
-Italy and the Netherlands lay apart from the great mass of Austrian
-territory. And at this moment, when the Empire had come to an end
-and when the German Confederation had not yet been formed, there was
-no distinction between German and non-German lands. The ‘Empire’ of
-Francis the Second or First, as it stood at the time of Buonaparte’s
-greatest power, had, as compared with the hereditary dominions of Maria
-Theresa, gone through these changes. Tyrol and the Swabian lands had
-passed to other German princes; Salzburg had been won and lost again.
-In Italy the Venetian possessions had been won and lost, and they,
-together with the older Italian possessions of Austria, had passed to
-the French kingdom of Italy. France in her own name had encroached
-on the Austrian dominions at two ends. She had absorbed the Austrian
-Netherlands at one corner, the newly won territory of Dalmatia at
-another. This last territory, with parts of Carinthia and Carniola, and
-with the Hungarian kingdom of Croatia, received, on passing to France,
-the name of the _Illyrian Provinces_. Illyrian they were in the widest
-and most purely geographical sense of that name. But this use of the
-Illyrian name was confusing and misleading, as tending to put out of
-sight that the true representatives of the old Illyrian race dwell to
-the south, not only of Carinthia and Carniola, but of Dalmatia itself.
-The loss of the Austrian possessions in this quarter brought back
-the new Austrian ‘Empire’ to the condition of the original Austrian
-duchy. It became a wholly inland dominion, without an inch of sea-coast
-anywhere.
-
-♦Austria at the peace. 1814-5.♦
-
-We have already seen how Austria won back her lost Italian and
-Dalmatian territory, and so much of her lost German territory as was
-geographically continuous. ♦Ragusa and Cattaro.♦ Released from her
-inland prison, provided again with a great sea-board on both sides
-of the Hadriatic, she now refused to Ragusa the restoration of her
-freedom, and filched from Montenegro her hard-won haven of Cattaro.
-The recovered lands formed, in the new nomenclature of the Austrian
-possessions, the kingdoms of Lombardy and Venice, of Illyria, and of
-Dalmatia. The last was an ancient title of the Hungarian crown. The
-Kingdom of Illyria was a continuation of the affected nomenclature
-which had been bestowed on the lands which formed it under their
-French occupation. We have already traced the driving out of the
-Austrian power from Lombardy and Venetia, its momentary joint
-possession in Sleswick, Holstein, and Lauenburg. ♦Cracow, 1846.♦
-The only other actual change of frontier has been the annexation of
-the inland commonwealth of Cracow, to match the annexation of the
-sea-faring commonwealth of Ragusa. ♦Separation of Hungary, 1848.♦ The
-movement of 1848 separated Hungary for a moment from the Austrian
-power. ♦Recovery of Hungary, 1849.♦ Won back, partly by Russian help,
-partly by the arms of her own Slavonic subjects, the Magyar kingdom
-remained crushed till Austria was shut out alike from Germany and
-from Italy. ♦Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, 1867.♦ Then arose the present
-system, the so called _dualism_, the theory of which is that the
-‘Austro-Hungarian Monarchy’ consists of two states under a common
-sovereign. By an odd turning about of meanings, Austria, once really
-the _Oesterreich_, the Eastern land, of Germany, has become in truth
-the Western land, the _Neustria_, of the new arrangement. With the
-Hungarian kingdom are grouped the principality of Transsilvania and
-the kingdoms of Slavonia and Croatia. The Austrian state is made up
-of _Austria_ itself—the archduchy with the addition of _Salzburg_—the
-duchy of _Styria_, the county of _Tyrol_, the kingdoms of _Bohemia_,
-_Galicia_ and _Lodomeria_, _Illyria_, and _Dalmatia_ with _Ragusa_ and
-_Cattaro_. These last lands are not continuous. Thus two states are
-formed. ♦Modern Austria.♦ In one the dominant German duchy has Slavonic
-lands on each side of it, and an Italian fringe on its coast. ♦Modern
-Hungary.♦ In the other state, the ruling Magyar holds also among the
-subjects of his crown the Slave, the Rouman, and the outlying Saxon of
-Siebenbürgen. ♦Herzegovina, Bosnia, and Spizza, 1878.♦ Add to this that
-the latest arrangements of all have added to the Austrian dominions,
-under the diplomatic phrase of ‘administration,’ the Slavonic lands of
-_Herzegovina_ and _Bosnia_, while the kingdom of Dalmatia is increased
-by the harbour of _Spizza_. A power like this, which rests on no
-national basis, but which has been simply patched together during
-a space of six hundred years by this and that grant, this and that
-marriage, this and that treaty, is surely an anachronism on the face
-of modern Europe. Germany and Italy are nations as well as powers.
-Austria, changed from the _Austria_ of Germany into the _Neustria_ of
-Hungary, is simply a name without a meaning.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have thus gone through the geographical changes of the three
-Imperial kingdoms, and of the states and powers which were formed
-by parts of those kingdoms falling away, and in some cases uniting
-themselves with lands beyond the Empire. They have all to some extent
-kept a common history down to our own time. We have now to turn to
-another land which parted off from the Empire in like manner, but which
-parted off so early as to become a wholly separate and rival land, with
-an altogether independent history of its own.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[12] Unless we except the small part of Flanders held by the
-Confederation.
-
-[13] On the marks, see Waitz, _Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichten_, vii.
-62, et seq.
-
-[14] No influence was more powerful for this end than the _Zollverein_
-or customs union, which gradually united most of the German states
-for certain purposes. But as it did not affect the boundaries or the
-governments of sovereign states, it hardly concerns geography. Neither
-do the strivings after more perfect union in 1848 and the following
-years.
-
-[15] Compare the mention of Rudolf in the letter of Cnut, on his Roman
-Pilgrimage, in Florence of Worcester, 1031. He is there ‘Rodulphus rex,
-qui maxime ipsarum clausurarum dominatur.’
-
-[16] That Aosta was strictly Burgundian appears from the ‘Divisio
-Imperii, 806’ (Pertz, Leges, i. 141), where Italy is granted whole
-to Pippin, Burgundy is divided between Charles and Lewis; but it is
-provided that both Charles and Lewis shall have success to Italy,
-‘Karolus per vallem Augustanam quæ ad regnum ejus pertinet.’ The
-Divisio Imperii of 839 is still plainer (Pertz, Leges, i. 373,
-Scriptores, i. 434). There the one share takes in ‘Regnum Italiæ
-partemque Burgundiæ, id est, vallem Augustanam,’ and certain other
-districts. So Einhard (Vita Karoli, 15) excludes Aosta from Italy.
-‘Italia tota, quæ ab Augusta Prætoria usque in Calabriam inferiorem, in
-qua Græcorum et Beneventanorum constat esse confinia, porrigitur.’ As
-Calabria was not part of Italy in this sense, so neither was Aosta.
-
-[17] See Waitz, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte, iv. 73.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE KINGDOM OF FRANCE.
-
-
-♦Origin and growth of France.♦
-
-The process by which a great power grew up to the west of the Western
-Empire has something in common with the process by which the powers
-spoken of in the later sections of the last Chapter split off from the
-Western Empire. As in the case of Switzerland and the United Provinces,
-so in the case of France, a land which had formed part of the dominions
-of Charles the Great became independent of his successors. ♦Comparison
-with Austria.♦ As in the case of Austria to the east, so in the case
-of France to the west, a duchy of the old Empire grew into a power
-distinct from the Empire, and tried to attach to itself the old
-Imperial titles and traditions. ♦Different nature of the Austrian and
-the French territories.♦ But there is more than one point of difference
-between the two cases. As a matter of geography, the power of the
-Austrian house has for some centuries largely rested on the possession
-of dominions beyond the boundaries of the Carolingian Empire, while
-it has been only for a moment, and that chiefly by the annexation of
-territory from Austria itself, that France has ever held any European
-possessions beyond the Carolingian frontier.[18] ♦Difference in the
-process of separation.♦ But the true difference lies in the date and
-circumstances of the separation. ♦The other powers split off after
-the Empire has become German.♦ The Swabian, Lotharingian, Frisian,
-and Austrian lands which gradually split off from the Empire to form
-distinct states split off after the Empire had been finally annexed to
-the crown of Germany, indeed after Germany and the Empire had come to
-mean nearly the same thing. But France can hardly be said to have split
-off from the German kingdom or from the Empire itself. The first prince
-of the Western _Francia_ who bore the kingly title was indeed the man
-of the King of the East-Franks.[19] But no lasting relation, such as
-afterwards bound the princes of the Empire to its head, sprang out of
-his homage. Again from 887 to 963 the Imperial dignity was not finally
-attached to any one kingdom. It fluctuated between Germany and Italy;
-it might have passed to Burgundy; it might have passed to Karolingia,
-as it had once already done in the person of Charles the Bald. ♦The
-Empire divided into four kingdoms, of which three are again united,
-while one remains distinct.♦ The truer way of putting the matter is to
-say that in 887 the Empire split up into four kingdoms, of which three
-came together again, and formed the Empire in a new shape. The fourth
-kingdom remained separate; it can hardly be said to have split off
-from the Empire, but its separation hindered the full reconstruction
-of the Empire. It has had a distinct history, a history which made
-it the special rival of the Empire. ♦Karolingia receives the name of
-_France_.♦ This was _Karolingia_, the kingdom of the West-Franks, to
-which, through the results of the change of dynasty in 987, the name of
-_France_ gradually came to be applied.
-
-♦France a nation as well as a power.♦
-
-But there is yet another distinction of greater practical importance.
-France was so early detached from the rest of the elder Frankish
-dominions that it was able to form from the first a nation as well as a
-power. Its separation happened at the time when the European nations
-were forming. The other powers did not split off till long after those
-nations were formed, and they did not in any strict sense form nations.
-But France is a nation in the fullest sense. Its history is therefore
-different from the history of Austria, of Burgundy, of Switzerland, or
-even of Italy. As a state which had become wholly distinct from the
-Empire, which was commonly the rival and enemy of the Empire, which
-largely grew at the expense of the Empire, above all, as a state which
-won for itself a most distinct national being, France fully deserves
-a chapter, and not a mere section. Still that chapter is in some sort
-an appendage to that which deals with the Imperial kingdoms of the
-West. It naturally follows on our survey of those kingdoms, before we
-go on further to deal with the European powers which arose out of the
-dismemberment of the Empire of the East.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Extent of the royal domain at the accession of the Parisian house.
-987.♦
-
-We left Karolingia or the Western Kingdom at that point where the
-modern French state took its real beginning under the kings of the
-house of Paris. Their duchy of France had since its foundation been cut
-short by the great grant of Normandy, and by the practical independence
-which had been won by the counts of _Anjou_, _Maine_, and _Chartres_.
-By their election to the kingdom the Dukes of the French added to
-their duchy the small territory which up to that time had still been
-in the immediate possession of the West-Frankish Kings at Laon. And,
-with the crown and the immediate territory of those kings, the French
-kings at Paris also inherited their claim to superiority over all the
-states which had arisen within the bounds of the Western Kingdom.
-♦Definition of the word _France_.♦ But the name _France_, as it was
-used in the times with which we are dealing, means only the immediate
-territory of the King. ♦Two forms of growth; annexation of fiefs of the
-French crown and of lands altogether beyond the kingdom.♦ The use of
-the name spreads with every increase of that territory, whether that
-increase was made by the incorporation of a fief or by the annexation
-of territory wholly foreign to the kingdom. These two processes must be
-carefully distinguished. Both went on side by side for some centuries;
-but the incorporation of the vassal states naturally began before the
-annexation of altogether foreign territory.
-
-♦Various feudal gradations.♦
-
-Among the fiefs which were gradually annexed a distinction must be
-drawn between the great princes who were really national chiefs owing
-an external homage to the French crown, and the lesser counts whose
-dominions had been cut off from the original duchy of France. And a
-distinction must be again drawn between these last and the immediate
-tenants of the Crown within its own domains, vassals of the Duke as
-well as of the King. ♦The great vassals.♦ To the first class belong
-the Dukes and Counts of _Burgundy_, _Aquitaine_, _Toulouse_, and
-_Flanders_; to the second the Counts of _Anjou_, _Chartres_, and
-_Champagne_. ♦Special character of Normandy.♦ Historically, _Normandy_
-belongs to the second class, as the original grant to Rolf was
-undoubtedly cut off from the French duchy. But the whole circumstances
-of the Norman duchy made it a truly national state, owing to the French
-crown the merest external homage. ♦Britanny.♦ _Britanny_, yet more
-distinct in every way, was held to owe its immediate homage to the
-Duke of the Normans. ♦The Twelve Peers.♦ The so-called Twelve Peers of
-France seem to have been devised by Philip Augustus out of the romances
-of Charlemagne; but the selection shows who were looked on as the
-greatest vassals of the crown in his day. The six lay peers were the
-Dukes of Burgundy, Normandy, and Aquitaine, the Counts of Flanders,
-Toulouse, and Champagne. ♦Champagne.♦ This last was the only one of the
-six who could not be looked upon as a national sovereign. His dominions
-were _French_ in a sense in which Normandy or Aquitaine could not be
-called French. ♦Different position of the Bishops in the Eastern and
-Western kingdom.♦ The six ecclesiastical peers offer a marked contrast
-to the ecclesiastical electors of the Empire. The German bishops became
-princes, holding directly of the Empire. But the bishops within the
-dominions of the great vassals of the French crown were the subjects of
-their immediate sovereigns. The Archbishop of Rouen or the Archbishop
-of Bourdeaux stood in no relation to the King of the French. The
-ecclesiastical peerage of France consisted only of certain bishops
-who were immediate vassals of the King in his character of King,
-among whom was only one prelate of the first rank, the Archbishop and
-Duke of _Rheims_. The others were the Bishops and Dukes of _Langres_
-and _Laon_, and the Bishops and Counts of _Beauvais_, _Noyon_, and
-_Châlons_. As the bishops within the dominions of the great feudatories
-had no claim to rank as peers of the kingdom, neither had those
-prelates who were actually within the King’s immediate territory,
-vassals therefore of the Duke of the French as well as of the King.
-Thus the Bishop of _Paris_ and his metropolitan the Archbishop of
-_Sens_ had no place among the twelve peers.
-
-
-§ 1. _Incorporation of the Vassal States._
-
-At the accession of the Parisian dynasty, the royal domain took in the
-greater part of the later _Isle of France_, the territory to which the
-old name specially clung, the greater part of the later government of
-_Orleans_, besides some outlying fiefs holding immediately of the King.
-♦Chief vassals within the royal domain.♦ Within this territory the
-counties of _Clermont_, _Dreux_, _Moulins_, _Valois_, and _Gatinois_,
-are of the greatest historical importance. Two of the great rivers of
-Gaul, the Seine and the Loire, flowed through the royal dominions; but
-the King was wholly cut off from the sea by the great feudatories who
-commanded the lower course of the rivers. ♦States on the Channel and♦
-The coast of the channel was held by the princes of Britanny, Normandy,
-and Flanders, and the smaller county of _Ponthieu_, which lay between
-Normandy and Flanders and fluctuated in its homage between the two.
-♦on the Ocean;♦ The ocean coast was held by the rulers of Britanny,
-of _Poitou_ and _Aquitaine_ united under a single sovereign, and of
-_Gascony_ to the south of them. ♦on the Mediterranean coast.♦ That
-small part of the Mediterranean coast which nominally belonged to the
-Western Kingdom was held by the counts of _Toulouse_ and _Barcelona_.
-♦Neighbours of the royal domain.♦ Of these great feudatories, the
-princes of Flanders, Burgundy, Normandy, and Champagne, were all
-immediate neighbours of the King. To the west of the royal domain
-lay several states of the second rank which played a great part in
-the history of France and Normandy. ♦Chartres and Blois. 1125-1152.♦
-These were the counties of _Chartres_ and _Blois_, which were for a
-while united with _Champagne_. ♦Anjou and Touraine united. 1044.
-| Maine.♦ Beyond these, besides some smaller counties, were _Anjou_ and
-_Touraine_, and _Maine_, the great borderland of Normandy and France.
-Thus surrounded by their own vassals, the early Kings of the house of
-Paris had far less dealings with powers beyond their own kingdom than
-their Karolingian predecessors. They were thus able to make themselves
-the great power of Gaul before they stood forth on a wider field as
-one of the great powers of Europe.
-
-♦The kingdom smaller than the old duchy.♦
-
-As regards their extent of territory, the Kings of the French at the
-beginning of the eleventh century had altogether fallen away from the
-commanding position which had been held by the Dukes of the French
-in the middle of the tenth. But this seeming loss of power was fully
-outweighed by the fact that there were now Kings and not merely Dukes,
-lords and no longer vassals. ♦Advantage of the kingly position.♦
-As feudal principles grew, opportunities were constantly found for
-annexing the lands of the vassal to the lands of his lord. ♦First
-advances of the Kings. | Gatinois. 1068. | Viscounty of Bourges. 1100.♦
-Towards the end of the eleventh century the royal domain had already
-begun to increase by the acquisition of the _Gatinois_ and of the
-viscounty of _Bourges_, a small part only of the later province of
-Berry, but an addition which made France and Aquitaine more clearly
-neighbours than before. Towards the end of the twelfth century began
-a more important advance to the north-east. The first aggrandizement
-of France at the expense of Flanders was the beginning of an important
-chain of events in European history. ♦Amiens and Vermandois. 1183.
-| Valois. 1185.♦ In the early years of Philip Augustus the counties of
-_Amiens_ and _Vermandois_ were united to the crown, as was the county
-of _Valois_ two years later. ♦Artois. 1180-1187.♦ So for a while was
-the more important land of _Artois_. Later in the reign of the same
-prince came an annexation on a far greater scale, which did not happen
-till the first years of the thirteenth century, but which was the
-result of causes which had been going on ever since the eleventh.
-
-♦Growth of the House of Anjou.♦
-
-In the course of the twelfth century a power grew up within the
-bounds of the Western Kingdom which in extent of territory threw the
-dominions of the French King into insignificance. The two great powers
-of northern and southern Gaul, Normandy and Aquitaine, each carrying
-with it a crowd of smaller states, were united in the hands of a
-single prince, and that a prince who was also the king of a powerful
-foreign kingdom. The Aquitanian duchy contained, besides the county of
-_Poitou_, a number of fiefs, of which the most important were those of
-_Perigueux_, _Limoges_, the dauphiny of _Auvergne_, and the county of
-_Marche_ which gave kings to Jerusalem and Cyprus. ♦Union of Aquitaine
-and Gascony. 1052.♦ To these, in the eleventh century, the duchy of
-_Gascony_, with its subordinate fiefs, was added, and the dominions
-of the lord of Poitiers stretched to the Pyrenees. ♦Conquests of
-William of Normandy. Ponthieu. 1056. | Domfront. 1049. | Maine. 1063.♦
-Meanwhile Duke William of Normandy, before his conquest of England, had
-increased his continental dominions, by acquiring the superiority of
-_Ponthieu_ and the immediate dominion, first of the small district of
-_Domfront_ and then of the whole of _Maine_. Maine was presently lost
-by his successor, and passed in the end to the house of Anjou. ♦Union
-of Maine and Anjou. 1110.♦ But the union of several lines in descent
-in the same person united England, Normandy, Anjou, and Maine in the
-person of Henry the Second.
-
-♦Dominions of Henry the Second.♦
-
-For a moment it seemed as if, instead of the northern and southern
-powers being united in opposition to the crown, one of them was to be
-itself incorporated with the crown. ♦Momentary union of France and
-Aquitaine. 1137.♦ The marriage of Lewis the Seventh with Eleanor of
-Aquitaine united his kingdom and her duchy. A king of Paris for the
-first time reigned on the Garonne and at the foot of the Pyrenees.
-♦Their separation. 1152. | Union of Aquitaine, Normandy, and Anjou.
-1152-1154.♦ But the divorce of Lewis and Eleanor and her immediate
-re-marriage with the Duke of Normandy and Count of Anjou again severed
-the southern duchy from the kingdom, and united the great powers of
-northern and southern Gaul. Then their common lord won a crown beyond
-the sea and became the first Angevin king of England. ♦Britanny. 1169.♦
-Another marriage brought Britanny, long the nominal fief of Normandy,
-under the practical dominion of its Duke. The House of Anjou thus
-suddenly rose to a dominion on Gaulish soil equal to that of the French
-king and his other vassals put together, a dominion which held the
-mouths of the three great rivers, and which was further strengthened
-by the possession of the English kingdom. But a favourable moment soon
-came which enabled the King to add to his own dominions the greater
-part of the estates of his dangerous vassal. ♦Claims of Arthur of
-Britanny.♦ On the death of Richard, first of England and fourth of
-Normandy, Normandy and England passed to his brother John, while in
-the other continental dominions of the Angevin princes the claims of
-his nephew Arthur, the heir of Britanny, were asserted. ♦Possible
-effects of his success.♦ The success of Arthur would have given the
-geography of Gaul altogether a new shape. The Angevin possessions on
-the continent, instead of being held by a king of England, would have
-been held by a Duke of Britanny, the prince of a state which, though
-not geographically cut off like England, was even more foreign to
-France. ♦Annexation of Normandy, Anjou, &c. 1202-1205.♦ On the fall of
-Arthur, Philip, by the help of a jurisprudence devised for the purpose,
-was able to declare all the fiefs which John held of the French crown
-to be forfeited to that crown, a sentence which did not apply to the
-fiefs of his mother Eleanor. In the space of two years Philip was
-able to carry that sentence into effect everywhere on the mainland.
-♦1258.♦ Continental Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and Touraine, were joined
-to the dominions of the French crown, and by a later treaty they were
-formally surrendered by John’s son Henry. Poitou went with them, and
-all these lands may from this time be looked on as forming part of
-France. ♦Character and effects of the annexation.♦ Thus far the process
-of annexation was little more than the restoration of an earlier state
-of things. For all these lands, except Poitou, had formed part of the
-old French duchy. ♦Territories kept by the English kings.♦ The Kings
-of England still kept the duchy of Aquitaine with Gascony. ♦The Norman
-Islands.♦ They kept also the insular Normandy, the Norman islands
-which have ever since remained distinct states attached to the English
-crown. ♦Aquitaine.♦ Aquitaine was now no longer part of the continental
-dominions of a prince who was equally at home on both sides of the
-Channel. It was now a remote dependency of the insular kingdom, a
-dependency whose great cities clave to the English connexion, while its
-geographical position and the feelings of its feudal nobility tended to
-draw it towards France.
-
-♦Sudden greatness of France.♦
-
-The result of this great and sudden acquisition of territory was to
-make the King of the French incomparably greater on Gaulish ground than
-any of his own vassals. France had now a large sea-board on the Channel
-and a small sea-board on the Ocean. And now another chain of events
-incorporated a large territory with which the crown had hitherto stood
-in no practical relation, and which gave the kingdom a third sea-board
-on the Mediterranean.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Fiefs of Aragon in Southern Gaul.♦
-
-While north-western and south-western Gaul were united in the hands
-of an insular king, the king of a peninsular kingdom became only less
-powerful in south-eastern Gaul. ♦Counts of Toulouse.♦ Hitherto the
-greatest princes in this region had been the counts of _Toulouse_,
-who, besides their fiefs of the French crown, had also possessions in
-the Burgundian kingdom beyond the Rhone. But during the latter part
-of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, the Counts
-of _Barcelona_, and the kings of Aragon who succeeded them, acquired
-by various means a number of Tolosan fiefs, both French and Imperial.
-_Carcassonne_, _Albi_, and _Nîmes_ were all under the lordship of the
-Aragonese crown. ♦The Albigensian War. 1207-1229.♦ The Albigensian
-war seemed at first likely to lead to the establishment of the house
-of Montfort as the chief power of Southern Gaul. ♦Simon of Montfort
-at Toulouse.♦ But the struggle ended in a vast increase of the power
-of the French crown, at the expense alike of the house of Toulouse
-and of the house of Aragon. ♦Settlement of Meaux.♦ The dominions of
-the Count of Toulouse were divided. ♦Annexation of Narbonne, 1229;♦
-A number of fiefs, _Beziers_, _Narbonne_, _Nîmes_, _Albi_, and some
-other districts, were at once annexed to the crown. ♦of Toulouse,
-1270.♦ The capital itself and its county passed to the crown fifty
-years later. By a settlement with Aragon, the domains of the French
-king were increased, while the French kingdom itself was nominally
-cut short. ♦Roussillon and Barcelona released from homage. 1258.♦ Two
-of the Aragonese fiefs, the counties of _Roussillon_ and _Barcelona_,
-were relieved from even nominal homage. The name of Toulouse, except as
-the name of the city itself, now passed away, and the new acquisitions
-of France came in the end to be known by the name of the tongue which
-was common to them with Aquitaine and Imperial Burgundy. ♦Province
-of Languedoc.♦ Under the name of _Languedoc_ they became one of the
-greatest and most valuable provinces of the French kingdom.
-
-The great growth of the crown during the reign of Saint Lewis was thus
-in the south; but he also extended his borders nearer home. ♦Purchase
-of Blois and Chartres. 1234. | Escheat of Perche. 1257.♦ He won back
-part of the old French duchy when he purchased the superiority of
-_Blois_ and _Chartres_, to which _Perche_ was afterwards added by
-escheat. ♦Annexation of Macon, 1239.♦ Further off, he added _Macon_ to
-the crown, a possession which afterwards passed away to the House of
-Burgundy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Southern advance of the Crown.♦
-
-Thus, during the reigns of Philip Augustus and his grandson, the
-royal possessions had been enlarged by the annexations of two of
-the chief vassal states, two of the lay peerages, annexations which
-gave the French King a sea-board on two seas and which brought him
-into immediate connexion with the affairs of the Spanish peninsula.
-♦Marriage of Philip the Fair, 1284, with the heiress of Champagne and
-Navarre.♦ Later in the thirteenth century, the marriage of Philip the
-Fair with the heiress of _Champagne_ not only extinguished another
-peerage, but made the French kings for awhile actually Spanish
-sovereigns, and made France an immediate neighbour of the German
-kingdom. The county of _Champagne_ had for two generations been united
-with the kingdom of Navarre. These dominions were held in right of
-their wives by three kings of France. ♦Separation of Navarre. 1328.
-| Union of Champagne, 1335; incorporation, 1361.♦ Then Navarre, though
-it passed to a French prince, was wholly separated from France, while
-Champagne was incorporated with the kingdom. This last annexation gave
-France a considerable frontier towards Germany, and especially brought
-the kingdom into the immediate neighbourhood of the Lotharingian
-bishoprics. These acquisitions, of Normandy and the states connected
-with it, of Toulouse and the rest of Languedoc, and now of Champagne,
-were the chief cases of incorporation of vassal states with the royal
-domain up to the middle of the fourteenth century. ♦Appanages.♦ The
-mere grants and recoveries of appanages hardly concern geography. We
-now turn to two great struggles which, in the course of the fourteenth
-and fifteenth centuries, the Kings of France had to wage with two of
-their chief vassals who were also powerful foreign princes. In both
-cases, events which seemed likely to bring about the utter humiliation
-of France did in the end bring to it a large increase of territory.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Hundred Years’ War with England.♦
-
-The former of these struggles was the great war between England and
-France, called by French writers the _Hundred Years’ War_. This war
-might be called either a war for the annexation of France to England
-or a war for the annexation of Aquitaine to France. ♦Designs of the
-French kings on Aquitaine.♦ By the peace between Henry the Third and
-Saint Lewis, Aquitaine became a land held by the king of England as a
-vassal of the French crown. From that time it was one main object of
-the French kings to change their feudal superiority over this great
-duchy into an actual possession. This object had been once obtained for
-a moment by the marriage of Eleanor and Lewis the Seventh. ♦Momentary
-occupation by Philip the Fair. 1294.♦ It was again obtained for a
-moment by the negotiations between Edward the First and Philip the
-Fair. The Hundred Years’ war began through the attempts of Philip of
-Valois on the Aquitanian dominions of Edward the Third. ♦1337.♦ Then
-the King of England found it politic to assume the title of King of
-France. ♦1339.♦ But the real nature of the controversy was shown by
-the first great settlement. ♦Peace of Bretigny. 1360.♦ At the Peace
-of _Bretigny_ Edward gave up all claim to the crown of France, in
-exchange for the independent sovereignty of his old fiefs and of
-some of his recent conquests. _Aquitaine_ and _Gascony_, including
-_Poitou_ but not including _Auvergne_, together with the districts on
-the Channel, _Calais_ with _Guines_ and the county of _Ponthieu_, were
-made over to the King of England without the reservation of any homage
-or superiority of any kind. These lands became a territory as foreign
-to the French kingdom as the territory of her German and Spanish
-neighbours. ♦Renewal of the war. 1370-1374. | Losses of the English.♦
-But in a few years the treaty was broken on the French side, and the
-actual possessions of England beyond the sea were cut down to Calais
-and Guines, with some small parts of Aquitaine adjoining the cities of
-Bourdeaux and Bayonne. ♦Conquests of Henry the Fifth.♦ Then the tide
-turned at the invasion of Henry the Fifth. ♦Treaty of Troyes. 1420.♦
-The Treaty of Troyes united the crowns of England and France. ♦1431.♦
-Aquitaine and Normandy were won back; Paris saw the crowning of an
-English king, and only the central part of the country obeyed the heir
-of the Parisian kingdom, no longer king of Paris but only of Bourges.
-♦Conquest of Aquitaine. 1451-1453.♦ But the final result of the war was
-the driving out of the English from all Aquitaine and France, except
-the single district of Calais. The geographical aspect of the change is
-that Aquitaine, which had been wholly cut off from the kingdom by the
-Peace of Bretigny, was finally incorporated with the kingdom. ♦Final
-union of Aquitaine with France.♦ The French conquest of Aquitaine,
-the result of the Hundred Years’ War, was in form the conquest of a
-land which had ceased to stand in any relation to the French crown.
-Practically it was the incorporation with the French crown of its
-greatest fief, balanced by the loss of a small territory the value of
-which was certainly out of all proportion to its geographical extent.
-In its historical aspect the annexation of Aquitaine was something yet
-more. The first foreshadowing of the modern French kingdom was made
-by the addition of Aquitaine to Neustria, of southern to northern
-Gaul.[20] Now, after so many strivings, the two were united for ever.
-Aquitaine was merged in France. The grant to Charles the Bald took
-effect after six hundred years. ♦Beginning of the modern Kingdom of
-France.♦ France, in the sense which the word bears in modern use, may
-date its complete existence from the addition of Bourdeaux to the
-dominions of Charles the Seventh.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Growth of the Dukes of Burgundy.♦
-
-Thus, in the course of somewhat less than four hundred years, the
-conquest of England by a vassal of France, followed by the union of
-a crowd of other French fiefs in the hands of a common sovereign of
-England and Normandy, had led to the union with France of all the
-continental possessions of the prince who thus reigned on both sides
-of the sea. Meanwhile, on the eastern side of the kingdom, the holder
-of a great French fief swelled into an European power, the special
-rival of his French overlord. ♦Escheat of the duchy of Burgundy. 1361.
-| Grant to Philip the Hardy. 1364.♦ The duchy of Burgundy, granted
-to a branch of the royal house in the earliest days of the Parisian
-kingdom, escheated to the crown in the fourteenth century, and was
-again granted out to a son of the reigning king. ♦Advance of the Valois
-Dukes.♦ A series of marriages, purchases, conquests, transactions of
-every kind, gathered together, in the hands of the Burgundian dukes,
-a crowd of fiefs both of France and of the Empire.[21] The duchy
-of _Burgundy_ with the county of _Charolois_, and the counties of
-_Flanders_ and _Artois_, were joined under a common ruler with endless
-Imperial fiefs in the Low Countries and with the Imperial _County of
-Burgundy_. ♦Advance to the Somme.♦ More than this, under Philip the
-Good and Charles the Bold, the Burgundian frontier was more than
-once advanced to the Somme, and Amiens was separated from the crown.
-♦Annexations at the death of Charles the Bold. 1479.♦ The fall of
-Charles the Bold laid his dominions open to French annexation both
-on the Burgundian and on the Flemish frontier. ♦Momentary annexation
-of Artois and the County of Burgundy.♦ In the first moments of his
-success, Lewis the Eleventh possessed himself of a large part of the
-Imperial as well as the French fiefs of the fallen Duke. ♦Treaty of
-Arras. 1435.♦ But in the end Flanders and Artois remained French fiefs
-held by the House of Burgundy, which also kept the county of Burgundy
-and the isolated county of Charolois. ♦Incorporation of the duchy of
-Burgundy. 1479.♦ But France not only finally recovered the towns on
-the Somme, but incorporated the Burgundian duchy, one of the greatest
-fiefs of the crown. ♦French advance to the east.♦ This was the addition
-of a territory which the kings of France had never before ruled, and
-it marks an important stage in the advance of the French power towards
-the Imperial lands on its eastern border. By the marriage of Mary of
-Burgundy and Maximilian of Austria, the remains of the Burgundian
-dominions passed to the House of Austria, and thereby in the end to
-Spain. The result was that a French king had for a moment an Emperor
-for his vassal in his character of Count of Flanders and Artois.
-♦Flanders and Artois relieved from homage. 1525.♦ But by the treaty of
-Madrid Flanders and Artois were relieved from all homage to France,
-exactly as Aquitaine had been by the Peace of Bretigny. They now became
-lands wholly foreign to France, and, as foreign lands, large parts of
-them were afterwards conquered by France, just as Aquitaine was. But
-the history of their acquisition belongs to the story of the advance of
-France at the expense of the Empire.
-
-♦All the great fiefs annexed except Britanny.♦
-
-Thus, by the end of the reign of Lewis the Eleventh, all the fiefs
-of the French crown which could make any claim to the character of
-separate sovereignties had, with a single exception, been added to the
-dominions of the crown. The one which had escaped was that one which,
-more than any other, represented a nationality altogether distinct
-from that of France. _Britanny_ still remained distinct under its own
-Dukes. ♦1491-1499; incorporated 1532.♦ The marriages of its Duchess
-Anne with two successive French kings, Charles the Eighth and Lewis
-the Twelfth, added Britanny to France, and so completed the work. The
-whole of the Western Kingdom, except those parts which had become
-foreign ground—that is to say, insular Normandy and Calais, Barcelona,
-Flanders, and Artois—was now united under the kings of Paris. Their
-duchy of _France_ had spread its power and its name over the whole
-kingdom. We have now to see how it also spread itself over lands which
-had never formed part of that kingdom.
-
-
-§ 2. _Foreign Annexations of France._
-
-♦Foreign neighbours of Karolingia. | Imperial and Spanish neighbours.♦
-
-When the Western Kingdom finally parted off from the body of the
-Empire, its only immediate neighbours were the Imperial kingdoms to
-the east, and the Spanish kingdoms to the south. ♦England.♦ The union
-of Normandy and England in some sort made England and France immediate
-neighbours. And the long retention of Aquitaine by England, the English
-possession of Calais for more than two hundred years and of the insular
-Normandy down to our own day, have all tended to keep them so. ♦Small
-acquisitions of France from England and Spain.♦ But the acquisitions
-of France from England, and from Spain, in its character as Spain,
-have been comparatively small. Indeed the separation of the Spanish
-March and the insular Normandy may be thought to turn the balance
-the other way. From England France has won Aquitaine and Calais,
-territories which had once been under the homage of the French King.
-♦English conquest of Boulogne. 1544-1550. | 1663.♦ So in the sixteenth
-century _Boulogne_ was lost to England and won back again; so in the
-seventeenth century _Dunkirk_, which had become an English possession,
-was made over to France. Since the final loss of Aquitaine, the wars
-between England and France have made most important changes in the
-English and French possessions in distant parts of the world, but they
-have had no effect on the geography of England, and very little on that
-of France.
-
-♦Boundary of the Pyrenees.♦
-
-Nearly the same may be said of the geographical relations between
-France and Spain. The long wars between those countries have added to
-France a large part of the outlying dominions of Spain; but they have
-not greatly affected the boundaries of the two countries themselves.
-♦Roussillon, its shiftings.♦ The only important exception is the county
-of _Roussillon_, the land which Aragon kept on the north side of the
-mountain range. ♦Finally becomes French. 1659.♦ United to France by
-Lewis the Eleventh, given back by Charles the Eighth, it was finally
-annexed to France by the Peace of the Pyrenees. Towards the other end
-of the mountain frontier, a small portion of Spanish territory has
-been annexed to France, perhaps quite unconsciously. ♦Navarre north
-of the Pyrenees.♦ The old kingdom of _Navarre_, though it lay chiefly
-south of the Pyrenees, contained a small territory to the north. ♦Union
-of France and Navarre. 1589.♦ The accidents of female succession had
-given Navarre to more than one King of France, and in the person of
-Henry the Fourth the crown of France passed to a King of Navarre who
-held only the part of his kingdom north of the Pyrenees. This little
-piece of Spain within the borders of Gaul was thus united with France.
-♦Protectorate of Andorra.♦ On the other hand, the Kings of France, as
-successors of the Counts of Foix, and the other rulers of France after
-them, have held, not any dominion but certain rights as advocates or
-protectors, over the small commonwealth of _Andorra_ on the Spanish
-side of the mountains.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Advance at the expense of the Imperial kingdoms.♦
-
-Of far greater importance is the steady acquisition of territory
-by France at the expense of the Imperial kingdoms, and of the
-modern states by which those kingdoms are represented. ♦Burgundy.
-| 1310-1860.♦ In the case of Burgundy, French annexation has taken the
-form of a gradual swallowing up of nearly the whole kingdom, a process
-which has been spread over more than five hundred years, from the
-annexation of Lyons by Philip the Fair to the last annexation of Savoy
-in our own day. ♦Annexations from Germany. 1552-1811.♦ The advance at
-the expense of the German kingdom did not begin till the greater part
-of the Burgundian kingdom was already swallowed up. ♦Late beginning of
-annexations from Germany.♦ The north-eastern frontier of the Western
-Kingdom changed but little from the accession of the Parisian house
-in the tenth century till the growth of the Dukes of Burgundy in the
-fifteenth. After Lotharingia finally became a part of the Eastern
-Kingdom, there was no doubt that the homage of Flanders was due to
-France, no doubt that the homage of the states which had formed the
-Lower Lotharingia was due to the Empire. The frontier towards the Upper
-Lotharingia and the Burgundian county also remained untouched. The
-Saône remained a boundary stream long after the Rhone had ceased to be
-one. ♦Effect of the Burgundian acquisitions of France;♦ It was on this
-latter river that the great Burgundian annexations of France began,
-annexations which gave France a wholly new European position.[22]
-♦of the Dauphiny; | of Provence.♦ The acquisition of the Dauphiny of
-Viennois made France the immediate neighbour of Italy; the acquisition
-of Provence at once strengthened this last position and more than
-doubled her Mediterranean coast. ♦Relations with the Swiss.♦ Add to
-this that, though France and the Confederate territory did not yet
-actually touch, yet the Burgundian wars and many other events in the
-latter half of the fifteenth century enabled France to establish a
-close connexion with the power which had grown up north of Lake Leman.
-France had thus become a great Mediterranean and Alpine power, ready
-to threaten Italy in the next generation. Later acquisitions within
-the old border of the Burgundian kingdom had a somewhat different
-character. ♦Annexations at the expense of Savoy;♦ Annexations at the
-expense of Savoy, even when geographically Burgundian, were annexations
-at the cost of a power which was beginning to be Italian rather than
-Burgundian. ♦of the County of Burgundy.♦ The annexation of the County
-of Burgundy goes rather with the Alsatian annexations. It was territory
-won at the cost of the Empire and of the House of Austria. ♦Middle
-character of the Burgundian lands.♦ But the lands between the Rhone,
-the Alps, and the sea, still kept, negatively at least, their middle
-character. They were lands which at least were neither German, French,
-nor Italian. ♦They become French.♦ The events of the fourteenth and
-fifteenth centuries ruled that this intermediate region should become
-French. And none of the acquisitions of France ever helped more towards
-the real growth of her power.
-
-It was while the later stages of this process were going on that
-the French kings added to their dominions the Aquitanian lands on
-one side and the Burgundian duchy on the other. The acquisition of
-Aquitaine has, besides its other characters, a third aspect which
-closely connects it with the annexations between the Rhone and the
-Alps. ♦Effect of French annexations on the _Langue d’oc_.♦ The strife
-between Northern and Southern Gaul, between the tongue of _oil_ and the
-tongue of _oc_, now came to an end. Had the chief power in Gaul settled
-somewhere in Burgundy or Aquitaine, the tongue of _oil_ might now pass
-for a _patois_ of the tongue of _oc_. Had French dominion in Italy
-begun as soon and lasted as permanently as French dominion in Burgundy
-and Aquitaine, the tongue of _si_, as well as the tongue of _oc_, might
-now pass for a _patois_ of the tongue of _oil_. But now it was settled
-that French, not Provençal, was to be the ruling speech of Gaul. The
-lands of the Southern speech which escaped were almost wholly portions
-of the dominions of other powers. There was no longer any separate
-state wholly of that speech, except the little principality of Orange.
-♦Extinction of the Provençal speech and nation.♦ The work which the
-French kings had now ended amounted to little short of the extinction
-of an European nation. A tongue, once of at least equal dignity with
-the tongue of Paris and Tours, has sunk from the rank of a national
-language to the rank of a provincial dialect.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Italian conquests of France.♦
-
-The next great conquests of France were made on Italian soil, but
-they are conquests which do not greatly concern geography. This
-distinguishes the relations of France towards Italy from her relations
-towards Burgundy. France has constantly interfered in Italian affairs;
-she has at various times held large Italian territories, and brought
-all Italy under French influence. But France has never permanently
-kept any large amount of Italian territory. The French possession
-of Naples and Milan was only temporary. ♦Not strictly extensions of
-France.♦ And, if it had been lasting, the possession of these isolated
-territories by the French king could hardly have been looked on as an
-extension of the actual French frontier. Those lands could never have
-been incorporated with France in the same way in which other French
-conquests had been. Their retention would in truth have given the later
-history of France quite a different character, a character more like
-that which actually belonged to Spain. The long occupation of Savoyard
-territory on both sides of the Alps[23] would, if it had lasted, have
-been a real extension of the French kingdom. But down to our own day,
-while the lands won by France from the Burgundian kingdom form a large
-proportion of the whole French territory, French acquisitions from
-Italy hardly go beyond the island of Corsica and the insignificant
-district of _Mentone_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Annexations at the expense of Germany.♦
-
-The great annexations of France at the expense of the German kingdom
-and the lands more closely connected with it begin in the middle of
-the sixteenth century. ♦Annexation of Metz, Toul, and Verdun. 1552.♦
-The first great advance was the practical annexation of the three
-Lotharingian bishoprics, though their separation from the Empire was
-not formally acknowledged till the Peace of Westfalia. ♦Effect of
-isolated conquests.♦ This kind of conquest can hardly fail to lead to
-other conquests. France now held certain patches of territory which lay
-detached from one another and from the main body of the kingdom. Yet
-the rounding off of the frontier was not the next step taken in this
-direction. The cause was most likely the close connexion which for
-somewhile existed between the ruling houses of France and Lorraine.
-
-Before the next French advance on German ground, the frontier had
-been extended in other directions. ♦Recovery of Calais, 1558; | of
-Boulogne, 1550.♦ Almost at the same time as the acquisition of the
-Three Bishoprics, _Calais_ was won back from England—the short English
-possession of _Boulogne_ had already come to an end. ♦Surrender of
-Saluzzo and annexation of Bresse, Bugey, and Gex.♦ The first year of
-the sixteenth century saw the surrender of _Saluzzo_, in exchange for
-_Bresse_, _Bugey_, and _Gex_. ♦Occupation of Pinerolo. 1630-1696.♦
-Thirty years later came the renewed occupation of Italian territory at
-_Pinerolo_ and other points in Piedmont, which lasted till nearly the
-end of the seventeenth century.
-
-The next great advance was the work of the Thirty Years’ War and of the
-war with Spain which went on for eleven years longer. ♦The Bishoprics
-surrendered by the Empire.♦ Now came the legal cession of the
-Bishoprics and the further acquisition of the Alsatian dominions and
-rights of the House of Austria. The irregularities of the frontier, and
-the temptation to round off its angles, were increased tenfold. ♦French
-acquisitions in Elsass. 1648.♦ France received another and larger
-isolated territory lying to the east both of her earlier conquests and
-of the independent lands which surrounded them. A part of her dominion,
-itself sprinkled with isolated towns and districts which did not
-belong to her dominion, stretched out without any connexion into the
-middle of the Empire. The Duchy of Lorraine, dotted over by the French
-lands of Metz, Toul, and Verdun, lay between the old French land of
-Champagne and the new French land of _Elsass_ or _Alsace_. ♦Breisach.♦
-And while France was allowed, by the possession of _Breisach_, to
-establish herself at one point on the right bank of the Rhine, her new
-territory on the left bank was broken up by the continued independence
-of _Strassburg_ and the other Alsatian towns and districts which were
-still left to the Empire. ♦France reaches the Rhine.♦ Such a frontier
-could hardly be lasting; now that France had reached and even crossed
-the Rhine, the annexation of the outlying Imperial lands to the west of
-that river was sure to follow.
-
-But, even after this further advance into the heart of Germany, the
-gap was not filled up at the next stage of annexation. ♦Annexation
-of Bar. 1659.♦ At the Peace of the Pyrenees, France obtained the
-scattered lands of the duchy of Bar, which made the greater part of
-the Three Bishoprics continuous with her older possessions. ♦Bar
-restored. 1661.♦ But Bar was presently restored, and, though Lorraine
-was constantly occupied by French armies, it was not incorporated with
-France for another century. Up to this last change the Three Bishoprics
-still remained isolated French possessions surrounded by lands of the
-Empire. But France advanced at the expense of the outlying possessions
-of Spain, lands only nominally Imperial, as well as of the Spanish
-lands on her own southern frontier. ♦Annexation of Roussillon. 1659.♦
-At the Peace of the Pyrenees _Roussillon_ finally became French. No
-Spanish kingdom any longer stretched north of the great natural barrier
-of the peninsula. ♦Annexation in the Netherlands. 1659.♦ The same
-Treaty gave France her first acquisitions in _Flanders_ and _Artois_
-since they had become wholly foreign ground, as well as her first
-acquisitions from _Hainault_, _Liége_, and _Luxemburg_, lands which
-had never owed her homage. Here again the frontier was of the same
-kind as the frontier towards Germany. ♦Isolated points held by each
-power.♦ Isolated points like _Philippeville_ and _Marienburg_ were
-held by France within Spanish or Imperial territory, and isolated
-points like _Aire_ and _St. Omer_ were still held by Spain in what
-had now become French territory. ♦Further annexations. 1668.♦ The
-furthest French advance that was recognized by any treaty was made
-by the earlier Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, when, amongst other places,
-_Douay_, _Tournay_, _Lille_, _Oudenarde_, and _Courtray_ became French.
-♦Changes at the Peace of Nimwegen. 1678.♦ By the Peace of Nimwegen
-the frontier again fell back in eastern Flanders, and Courtray and
-Oudenarde were restored. But in the districts more to the south
-France again advanced, gaining the outlying Spanish towns in Artois,
-_Cambray_ and its district, and _Valenciennes_ in Hainault. ♦1697.♦
-The Peace of Ryswick left the frontier as it had been fixed by the
-Peace of Nimwegen. ♦Treaty of Utrecht and Barrier Treaty. 1713-1715.♦
-Finally, the Treaty of Utrecht and the Barrier Treaty left France in
-possession of a considerable part of Flanders, and of much land which
-had been Imperial. ♦The Barrier Towns.♦ The Netherlands, formerly
-Spanish and now Austrian, kept a frontier protected by the barrier
-towns of _Furnes_, _Ypres_, _Menin_, _Tournai_, _Mons_, _Charleroi_,
-_Namur_. The French frontier on the other side had its series of
-barrier towns stretching from _St. Omer_ to _Charlemont_ on the Maes.
-The arrangements now made have, with very slight changes, lasted
-ever since, except during the French annexation of the whole of the
-Netherlands during the revolutionary wars.
-
-The reign of Lewis the Fourteenth was also a time of at least equal
-advance on the part of France on her more strictly German frontier.
-The time was now come for serious attempts to consolidate the
-scattered possessions of France between Champagne and the Rhine.
-♦Franche Comté conquered. 1668. | Conquered again. 1674.♦ _Franche
-Comté_, as the county of Burgundy was now more commonly called, with
-the city of _Besançon_, was twice seized by Lewis, and the second
-seizure was confirmed by the peace of Nimwegen. ♦Freiburg.♦ By that
-peace also France kept _Freiburg-im-Breisgau_ on the right bank of
-the Rhine. A number of small places in Elsass were annexed after the
-peace of Nimwegen by the process known as _Reunion_. ♦Seizure of
-Strassburg 1681.♦ At last in 1681 _Strassburg_ itself was seized in
-time of peace, and its possession was finally secured to France by
-the peace of Ryswick. ♦Restoration of Freiburg and Breisach.♦ But
-Freiburg and Breisach were restored, and Lorraine, held by France,
-though not formally ceded, was given back to its own Duke. ♦Peace
-of Rastadt. 1714.♦ The arrangements of Ryswick were again confirmed
-by the peace of Rastadt. ♦Annexation of Orange. 1714.♦ In the same
-year the principality of _Orange_ was annexed to France, leaving
-the Papal possessions of Avignon and Venaissin surrounded by French
-territory, the last relic of the Burgundian realm between the Rhone
-and the Alps. ♦Effects of the reign of Lewis the Fourteenth.♦ France
-had thus obtained a good physical boundary towards Spain and Italy,
-and a boundary clearly marked on the map towards the now Austrian
-Netherlands. Her eastern frontier was still broken in upon by the duchy
-of Lorraine, by the districts in Elsass which had still escaped, by
-the county of _Montbeliard_, and by the detached territories of the
-commonwealth of _Geneva_. But France could now in a certain part of her
-territory call the Rhine her frontier. It was an easy inference that
-the Rhine ought to be her frontier through the whole of its course.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next reign, that of Lewis the Fifteenth, in a manner completed
-the work of Henry the Second and Lewis the Fourteenth. The gap which
-had so long yawned between Champagne and Elsass was now filled up.
-♦Arrangements as to Lorraine. 1735. | Its incorporation. 1766.♦ France
-obtained a reversionary right to the duchy of Lorraine, which was
-incorporated thirty-one years later. The lands of Metz, Toul, and
-Verdun were no longer isolated. Elsass, which, by the acquisition
-of Franche Comté, had ceased to be insular, now ceased to be even
-peninsular. Leaving out of sight a few spots of Imperial soil which
-were now wholly surrounded by France, the French territory now
-stretched as a solid and unbroken mass from the Ocean to the Rhine.
-♦Thorough incorporation of French Conquests.♦ And it must be remembered
-that all the lands which the monarchy of Paris had gradually brought
-under its power were in the strictest sense incorporated with the
-kingdom. There were no dependencies, no separate kingdoms or duchies.
-♦Effect of geographical continuity. | Contrast with Spain and Austria.♦
-The geographical continuity of the French territory enabled France
-really to incorporate her conquests in a way in which Spain and Austria
-never could. And the process was further helped by the fact that each
-annexation by itself was small compared with the general bulk of the
-French monarchy. Except in the case of the fragment of Navarre which
-was held by its Bourbon king, France never annexed a kingdom or made
-any permanent addition to the royal style of her kings.
-
-♦Purchase of Corsica. 1768.♦
-
-The same reign saw another acquisition altogether unlike the rest
-in the form of the Italian island of _Corsica_. In itself the
-incorporation of this island with the French kingdom seems as unnatural
-as the Spanish or Austrian dominion in Sicily or Sardinia. ♦Its
-effects.♦ But the result has been different. Corsica has been far more
-thoroughly incorporated with France than such outlying possessions
-commonly are. The truth is that the strong continuity of the
-continental dominions of France made the incorporation of the island
-easier. There were no traditions or precedents which could suggest
-the holding of it as a dependency or as a separate state in any form.
-♦Birth of Buonaparte. 1769.♦ Corsica again was more easily attached to
-France, because the man who did most to extend the dominion of France
-was a Frenchman only so far as Corsicans had become Frenchmen. Corsica
-has thus become French in a sense in which Sardinia and Sicily never
-became Spanish, partly because France had no other possession of the
-kind, partly because Napoleon Buonaparte was born at Ajaccio.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Colonial Dominion of France._
-
-♦Early French colonization.♦
-
-France, like all the European powers which have an oceanic coast,
-entered early on the field of colonization and distant dominion. At one
-time indeed it seemed as if France was destined to become the chief
-European power both in India and in North America. ♦French colonies in
-North America. 1506.♦ French attempts at colonization in the latter
-country began early in the sixteenth century. ♦1540. | 1603.♦ Thus
-_Cape Breton_ at the mouth of the Saint Lawrence was reached early in
-the sixteenth century, the colonization of _Canada_ began a generation
-later, and French dominion in America was confirmed by the foundation
-of _Quebec_. ♦Acadia ceded to England. 1713.♦ The peninsula of _Acadie_
-or _Nova Scotia_ was from this time a subject of dispute between France
-and Great Britain, till it was finally surrendered by France at the
-Peace of Utrecht. ♦Canada and Louisiana.♦ France now, under the names
-of _Canada_ and _Louisiana_, or of _New France_, held or claimed a vast
-inland region stretching from the mouth of the Saint Lawrence to the
-mouth of the Mississippi, while the eastern coast was colonized by
-other powers. ♦Colonization at the mouth of the Mississippi. 1699.
-| Foundation of New Orleans. 1717.♦ At the end of the seventeenth
-century the first colonization began at the mouth of the Mississippi;
-and the city of New Orleans was founded eighteen years later. ♦Rivalry
-of English and French settlements.♦ France and England thus became
-distinctly rival powers in America as well as in Europe. The English
-settlers were pressing westward from the coast to the Ocean. The French
-strove to fix the Alleghany range as the eastern boundary of English
-advance. ♦Share of the Colonies in European Wars.♦ In every European
-war between the two powers the American colonies played an important
-part. ♦English conquest of Canada. 1759. | 1763.♦ Canada was wrested
-from France; and by the Treaty of Paris all the French possessions
-north of the present United States were finally surrendered to England,
-except a few small islands kept for fishing purposes. ♦The Mississippi
-boundary.♦ The Mississippi was now made the boundary of Louisiana,
-leaving nothing to France on its left bank except the city of New
-Orleans. These cessions ruled for ever that men of English blood,
-whether remaining subjects of the mother-country or forming independent
-states, should be the dominant power in the North American continent.
-
-♦The West India islands.♦
-
-Among the West India islands, France in the seventeenth century
-colonized several of the _Antilles_, some of which were afterwards lost
-to England. ♦St. Domingo. 1697.♦ Later in the century she acquired part
-of the great island called variously _Hispaniola_, _Saint Domingo_, and
-_Hayti_. ♦French Guiana. 1624. | Cayenne. 1635.♦ On the coast of South
-America lay the French settlements in _Guiana_, with _Cayenne_ as their
-capital. This colony grew into more importance after the war of Canada.
-
-♦The French in India.♦
-
-Nearly the same course of things took place in the eastern world as
-in the western. In India neither English nor French colonized in any
-strict sense. But commercial settlements grew into dominion, or what
-seemed likely to become dominion: and in India, as in America, the
-temporary greatness of France came before the more lasting greatness
-of England. ♦1664.♦ The French East India Company began later than
-the English; but its steps towards dominion were for a long time
-faster. ♦Bourbon. 1657.♦ Before this the French had occupied the
-_Isle of Bourbon_, an important point on the road to India. ♦Factory
-at Surat. 1668.♦ The first French factory on the mainland was at
-Surat. ♦Pondicherry. 1672.♦ During the later years of the century
-various attempts at settlement were made; but no important or lasting
-acquisition was made, except that of _Pondicherry_. This has ever since
-remained a French possession, often lost in the course of warfare, but
-always restored at the next peace. ♦Chandernagore. 1676.♦ A little
-later France obtained _Chandernagore_ in Bengal. ♦Isle of France.
-1720.♦ In the next century the island of _Mauritius_, abandoned by
-the Dutch, became a French colony under the name of the _Isle of
-France_. Under Labourdonnais and Dupleix France gained for a moment a
-real Indian dominion. ♦Taking of Madras. 1746.♦ Madras was taken, and
-a large dominion was obtained on the eastern coast of India in the
-Carnatic and the Circars. ♦Restored. 1748.♦ But all hope of French
-supremacy in India came to an end in the later years of the Seven
-Years’ War. ♦Effects of the Peace of Paris. 1763.♦ France was confined
-to a few points which have not seriously threatened the eastern
-dominion of England.
-
-
-§ 4. _Acquisitions of France during the Revolutionary Wars._
-
-Thus the French monarchy grew from the original Parisian duchy into
-a kingdom which spread north, south, east, and west, taking in all
-the fiefs of the West-Frankish kings, together with much which had
-belonged to the other kingdoms of the Empire. ♦Acquisitions in the
-Revolutionary Wars.♦ With the great French revolution began a series of
-acquisitions of territory on the part of France which are altogether
-unparalleled. ♦Different classes of annexations.♦ First of all, there
-were those small annexations of territory surrounded or nearly so by
-French territory, whose annexation was necessary if French territory
-was to be continuous. ♦Avignon. | Mülhausen.♦ Such were Avignon,
-Venaissin, the county of _Montbeliard_, the few points in Elsass which
-had escaped the reunions, with the Confederate city of _Mülhausen_.
-Avignon and Venaissin, and the surviving Alsatian fragments, were
-annexed to France before the time of warfare and conquest had begun.
-Mülhausen, as Confederate ground, was respected as long as Confederate
-ground was respected. ♦1796.♦ Montbeliard had been annexed already.
-♦Geneva and _Bischofbasel_. 1801.♦ And with these we might be inclined
-to place the annexations of Geneva and of the _Bishopric of Basel_,
-lands which lay hardly less temptingly when the work of annexation
-had once begun. ♦Second zone;♦ And beyond these roundings off of the
-home estate lay a zone of territory which might easily be looked
-upon as being French soil wrongfully lost. ♦traditions of Gaul and
-the Rhine frontier.♦ When the Western _Francia_ had made such great
-strides towards the dimensions of the Gaul of Cæsar, the inference
-was easily made that it ought to take in all that Gaul had once taken
-in. The conquest and incorporation of the Austrian Netherlands, of
-all Germany on the left bank of the Rhine, of Savoy and Nizza, thus
-became a matter of course. ♦Buonaparte’s feeling towards Switzerland.♦
-That the Gaul of Cæsar was not fully completed by the complete
-incorporation of Switzerland, seems to have been owing to a personal
-tenderness for the Confederation on the part of Napoleon Buonaparte,
-who never incorporated with his dominions any part of the territory
-of the Thirteen Cantons. Otherwise, France under the Consulate might
-pass for a revival of the Transalpine Gaul of Roman geography. And
-there were other lands beyond the borders of Transalpine Gaul, which
-had formed part of Gaul in the earlier sense of the name, and whose
-annexation, when annexation had once begun, was hardly less wonderful
-than that of the lands within the Rhine and the Alps. ♦Piedmont,
-&c.♦ The incorporation of Piedmont and Genoa was not wonderful after
-the incorporation of Savoy. ♦Distinction between conquests under
-the Republic and under the ‘Empire.’♦ In short, the annexations of
-republican France are at least intelligible. They have a meaning; we
-can follow their purpose and object. They stand distinct from the wild
-schemes of universal conquest which mark the period of the ‘Empire.’
-
-♦Example of Corsica.♦
-
-Still the example of such schemes was given during the days of the old
-monarchy. There was nothing to suggest a French annexation of Corsica,
-any more than a French annexation of Cerigo. ♦Character of Buonaparte’s
-conquests.♦ Both were works of exactly the kind, works quite different
-from incorporating isolated scraps of Elsass or of the old Burgundy,
-from rounding off the frontier by Montbeliard, or even from advancing
-to the left bank of the Rhine. The shiftings of the map which took
-place during the ten years of the first French Empire, the divisions
-and the unions, the different relations of the conquered states,
-seem like several centuries of the onward march of the old Roman
-commonwealth crowded into a single day. ♦Dependent and incorporated
-lands.♦ In both cases we mark the distinction between lands which
-are merely dependent and lands which are fully incorporated. And in
-both cases the dependent relation is commonly a step towards full
-incorporation. All past history and tradition, all national feelings,
-all distinctions of race and language, were despised in building
-up the vast fabric of French dominion. Such a power was sure to
-break in pieces, even without any foreign attack, before its parts
-could possibly have been fused together. As it was, Buonaparte never
-professed to incorporate either Spain or the whole of Italy and Germany
-with his Empire. He was satisfied with leaving large parts either in
-the formally dependent relation, in the hands of puppet princes, or
-even in the hands of powers which he deemed too much weakened for
-further resistance. ♦Buonaparte’s treatment of Germany;♦ A large part
-of Germany was incorporated with France, another large part was under
-French protection or dependence, but a large part still remained in the
-hands of the native princes of Austria and Prussia. ♦of Italy.♦ Much of
-Italy was incorporated, and the rest was held, partly by the conqueror
-himself under another title, partly by a prince of his own house. This
-last was the case with Spain. ♦Division of Europe between France and
-Russia.♦ Till the final breach with Russia, the idea of Buonaparte’s
-dominion seems to have been that of a twofold division of Europe
-between Russia and himself, a kind of revival on a vaster scale of the
-Eastern and Western Empires. The western potentate was careful to keep
-everywhere a dominant influence within his own world; but whether the
-territory should be incorporated, made dependent, or granted out to his
-kinsfolk and favourites, depended in each case on the conqueror’s will.
-
-♦Europe in 1811.♦
-
-A glance at the map of Europe, as it stood at the beginning of 1811,
-will show how nearly this scheme was carried out. The kernel of
-the French Empire was France as it stood at the beginning of the
-Revolution, together with those conquests of the Republic which gave
-it the Rhine frontier from Basel to Nimwegen. Beyond these limits the
-former United Provinces, with the whole oceanic coast of Germany as
-far as the Elbe, and the cities of Bremen, Hamburg, and Lübeck, were
-incorporated with France. France now stretched to the Baltic, and, as
-Holstein was now incorporated with Denmark, France and Denmark had
-a common frontier. The Confederation of the Rhine was a protected
-state, and the Kingdom of Prussia and the self-styled ‘Empire’ of
-Austria could practically hardly claim a higher place. Of the former
-Austrian possessions, those parts which had passed to Bavaria and to
-the kingdom of Italy formally stood in the dependent relation, and the
-so-called Illyrian provinces were actually incorporated with France.
-So were the Ionian islands yet further on. In Italy, the whole western
-side of the ancient kingdom, with Rome itself, was incorporated with
-France. North-eastern Italy formed a separate kingdom held by the ruler
-of France. Naples, like Spain, was a dependent kingdom. In northern
-Europe, Denmark and Sweden, like Prussia and Austria, could practically
-claim no higher place. And the new duchy of Warsaw and the new republic
-of Danzig carried French influence beyond the ancient borders of
-Germany.
-
-♦Arrangements of 1814-1815.♦
-
-Such was the extent of the French dominion when the power of Buonaparte
-was at its highest. At his fall all the great and distant conquests
-were given up. ♦The first class of annexations retained by France,
-the rest restored.♦ But those annexations which were necessary for
-the completion of France as she then stood were respected. The new
-Germanic body took back Köln, Trier, and Mainz, Worms and Speyer, but
-not Montbeliard or any part of Elsass. The new Swiss body received
-the Bishopric of Basel, Neufchâtel, Geneva, and Wallis. ♦Boundary
-of Savoy.♦ Savoy and Nizza went back to their own prince. But here a
-different frontier was drawn after the first and the second fall of
-Buonaparte. The earlier arrangement left Chambéry to France. The Pope
-again received Rome and his Italian dominions, but not his outlying
-Burgundian city of Avignon and county of Venaissin. The frontier of the
-new kingdom of the Netherlands, though traced at slightly different
-points by the two arrangements, differed in either case but little from
-the frontier of the Barrier Treaty. In short the France of the restored
-Bourbons was the France of the old Bourbons, enlarged by those small
-isolated scraps of foreign soil which were needed to make it continuous.
-
-The geographical results of the rule of the second Buonaparte consist
-of the completion of the work which began under Philip the Fair,
-balanced by the utter undoing of the work of Richelieu, the partial
-undoing of the work of Henry the Second and Lewis the Fourteenth.
-♦Annexation of Savoy and Nizza. 1860. | Loss of Elsass and Lorraine.
-1871.♦ _Savoy_, _Nizza_, and _Mentone_ were added; but Germany
-recovered nearly all _Elsass_ and a part of _Lorraine_. The Rhine now
-neither crosses nor waters a single rood of French ground. As it was
-in the first beginnings of Northern European history, so it is now;
-Germany lies on both sides of the German river.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The time of the greatest power of France in Europe was by no means
-equally favourable to her advance in other parts of the world.
-♦Independence of Hayti, 1801.♦ The greatest West India colony of
-France, Saint Domingo, now known as _Hayti_, became an independent
-negro state whose chiefs imitated home example by taking the title
-of Emperor. About the same time the last remnant of French dominion
-on the North American continent was voluntarily given up. ♦Louisiana
-ceded to Spain, 1763; recovered, 1800; sold to United States, 1803.♦
-Louisiana, ceded to Spain by the Peace of Paris and recovered under the
-Consulate, was sold to the United States. All the smaller French West
-India islands were conquered by England; but all were restored at the
-peace, except _Tobago_ and _Saint Lucia_. ♦Mauritius kept by England.♦
-The isles of _Bourbon_ and _Mauritius_ were also taken by England,
-and _Bourbon_ alone was restored at the Peace. ♦Pondicherry lost and
-restored.♦ In India _Pondicherry_ was twice taken and twice restored.
-
-But since France was thus wholly beaten back from her great schemes of
-dominion in distant parts of the world, she has led the way in a kind
-of conquest and colonization which has no exact parallel in modern
-times. ♦French conquest of Algeria, 1830;♦ In the French occupation of
-_Algeria_ we see something different alike from political conquests in
-Europe and from isolated conquests in distant parts of the world. ♦of
-Constantine, 1837.♦ It is conquest, not actually in Europe, but in a
-land on the shores of the great European sea, in a land which formed
-part of the Empire of Constantine, Justinian, and Heraclius. ♦Character
-of African conquests.♦ It is the winning back from Islam of a land
-which once was part of Latin-speaking Christendom, a conquest which,
-except in the necessary points of difference between continental and
-insular conquests, may be best paralleled with the Norman Conquest of
-Sicily. Sicily could be wholly recovered for Europe and Christendom;
-but the French settlement in Algeria can never be more than a mere
-fringe of Europe and its civilization on the edge of barbaric Africa.
-It is strictly the first colony of the kind. Portugal, Spain, England,
-had occupied this or that point on the northern coast of Africa; France
-was the first European power to spread her dominion over a long range
-of the southern Mediterranean shore, a land which in some sort answers
-alike to India and to Australia, but lying within two days’ sail of her
-own coast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have thus finished our survey of the states which were formed out
-of the break-up of the later Western Empire. The rest of Western
-Europe must be postponed, as neither the Spanish, the British, nor the
-Scandinavian kingdoms rose out of the break-up of the Empire of Charles
-the Great. In our next Chapter we must trace the historical geography
-of the states which arose out of the gradual dismemberment of the
-dominion of the Eastern Rome, a survey which will lead us to the most
-stirring events and to the latest geographical changes of our own day.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[18] Namely in the Illyrian Provinces and in the Ionian Islands. See
-above, p. 322.
-
-[19] See above, p. 139.
-
-[20] See above, p. 135.
-
-[21] See above, p. 292.
-
-[22] See above, p. 264.
-
-[23] See above, pp. 284, 285.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE EASTERN EMPIRE.
-
-
-♦Contrast between the Eastern and Western Empires.♦
-
-The geographical, like the political, history of the Eastern Empire is
-wholly unlike that of the Western. ♦The Western Empire fell to pieces.♦
-The Western Empire, in the strictest sense, fell asunder. Some of its
-parts fell away formally, others practically. The tie that held the
-rest snapped at the first touch of a vigorous invader. But that invader
-was an European power whose territories had once formed part of the
-Empire itself. From the invasions of nations beyond the European pale
-the Western Empire, as such, suffered but little. The Western Empire
-again, long before its fall, had become, so far as it was a power at
-all, a national power, the _Roman Empire of the German nation_. Its
-fall was the half voluntary parting asunder of a nation as well as of
-an Empire. ♦Position of the Western Emperors;♦ The Western Emperors
-again had, as Emperors, practically ceased to be territorial princes.
-No lands of any account directly obeyed the Emperor, as such, as their
-immediate sovereign. When the Empire fell, the Emperor withdrew to
-his hereditary states, taking the Imperial title with him. In the
-Eastern Empire all is different. It did to some extent fall asunder
-from within, but its overthrow was mainly owing to its being broken in
-pieces from without. ♦of the Eastern.♦ But, throughout its history, the
-Emperor remained the immediate sovereign of all that still clave to
-the Empire, and, when the Empire fell, the Emperor fell with it. ♦The
-Eastern Empire fell mainly through foreign invasion.♦ The overthrow of
-the Empire was mainly owing to foreign invasion in the strictest sense.
-It was weakened and dismembered by the Christian powers of Europe,
-and at last swallowed up by the barbarians of Asia. ♦Tendencies to
-separation.♦ At the same time the tendency to break in pieces after
-the Western fashion did exist and must always be borne in mind. But it
-existed only in particular parts and under special conditions. It is
-found mainly in possessions of the Empire which had become isolated, in
-lands which had been lost and won again, and in lands which came under
-the influence of Western ideas. The importance of these tendencies is
-shown by the fact that three powers which had been cut off in various
-ways from the body of the Empire, Bulgaria, Venice, and Sicily, became
-three of its most dangerous enemies. But the actual destruction of the
-Empire came from those barbarian attacks from which the West suffered
-but little.
-
-Speaking generally then, the Western Empire fell asunder from within;
-the Eastern Empire was broken in pieces from without. Of the many
-causes of this difference, perhaps only one concerns geography. At the
-time of the separation of the Empires, the Western Empire was really
-only another name for the dominions of the King of the Franks, whether
-within or without the elder Empire. ♦Closer connexion of the East with
-Roman political traditions.♦ The Eastern Empire, on the other hand,
-kept the political tradition of the elder Empire unbroken. ♦Disuse of
-the Roman name in the West.♦ No common geographical or national name
-took in the three Imperial kingdoms of the West and their inhabitants.
-♦Its retention in the East.♦ But all the inhabitants of the Eastern
-Empire, down to the end, knew themselves by no national name but that
-of _Romans_, and the land gradually received the geographical name
-of _Romania_. But the Western Empire was not _Romania_, nor were its
-people _Romans_. The only _Romania_ in the West, the Italian land so
-called, took its name from its long adhesion to the Eastern Empire.
-
-♦Importance of distinctions of race in the East.♦
-
-In the East again differences of race are far more important than
-they ever were in the West. In the West nations have been formed by a
-certain commingling of elements; in the East the elements remain apart.
-All the nations of the south-eastern peninsula, whether older than the
-Roman conquest or settlers of later times, are there still as distinct
-nations.
-
-♦The original nations.♦
-
-First among them come three nations whose settlement in the peninsula
-is older than the Roman conquest. One of these has kept its name and
-its language. One has kept its language, but has taken up its name
-afresh only in modern times. The third has for ages lost both its
-name and its language. ♦Albanians.♦ The most unchanged people in the
-peninsula must be the _Albanians_, called by themselves _Skipetar_, the
-representatives of the old Illyrians. ♦Greeks.♦ Next come the Greeks,
-who keep their language, but whose name of _Hellênes_ went out of
-ordinary use till its revival in modern times. ♦Vlachs.♦ Lastly there
-are the _Vlachs_, representing those inhabitants of Thrace, Mœsia, and
-other parts of the peninsula, who, like the Western nations, exchanged
-their own speech for Latin. They must mainly represent the Thracian
-race in its widest sense. ♦Use of the Roman name.♦ Both Greeks and
-Vlachs kept on the Roman name in different forms, and the Vlachs, the
-_Roumans_ of our own day, keep it still. Of the invading races, the
-Goths passed through the Empire without making any lasting settlements
-in it. ♦Slavonic settlers.♦ The last Aryan settlers, setting aside mere
-colonists in later times, were the _Slaves_. ♦Turanian settlers.♦
-Then came the Turanian settlers, Finnish, Turkish, or any other. Of
-these the first wave, the _Bulgarians_, were presently assimilated by
-the Slaves, and the Bulgarian power must be looked at historically as
-Slavonic. ♦Turanian neighbours.♦ Then come Avars, Chazars, Magyars,
-Patzinaks, Cumans, all settling on or near the borders of the Empire.
-♦The Magyars.♦ Of these the Magyars alone grew into a lasting European
-state, and alone established a lasting power over lands which had
-formed part of the Empire. All these invaders came by the way of the
-lands north of the Euxine. Lastly, there are the non-Aryan invaders who
-came by way of Asia Minor or of the Mediterranean sea. ♦The Saracens.♦
-The Semitic Saracens, after their first conquests in Syria, Egypt, and
-Africa, made no lasting conquests. They occupied for a while several
-of the great islands; but on the mainland of the Empire, European and
-Asiatic, they were mere plunderers. ♦The Seljuk and Ottoman Turks.♦
-In their wake came the most terrible enemies of all, the Turks, first
-the Seljuk, then the Ottoman. Ethnologically they must be grouped with
-the nations which came in by the north of the Euxine. Historically,
-as Mahometans, coming in by the southern route, they rank with the
-Saracens, and they did the work which the Saracens tried to do. Most
-of these invading races have passed away from history; three still
-remain in three different stages. ♦Comparison of Bulgarians, Magyars
-and Ottomans.♦ The Bulgarian is lost among the Aryan people who have
-taken his name. The Magyar abides, keeping his non-Aryan language,
-but adopted into the European commonwealth by his acceptance of
-Christianity. The Ottoman Turk still abides on European soil, unchanged
-because Mahometan, still an alien alike to the creed and to the tongues
-of Europe.
-
-♦The Eastern Empire becomes Greek.♦
-
-Among all these nations one holds a special place in the history of
-the Eastern Empire. The loss of the Oriental and Latin provinces of
-the Empire brought into practical working, though not into any formal
-notice, the fact that, as the Western Empire was fast becoming German,
-so the Eastern Empire was fast becoming Greek. ♦Loss of the Oriental
-provinces,♦ To a state which had both a Roman and a Greek side the loss
-of provinces which were neither Roman nor Greek was not a loss but a
-source of strength. ♦of the Latin provinces.♦ And if the loss of the
-Latin provinces was not a source of strength, it at least did much to
-bring the Greek element in the Empire into predominance. ♦Dying out
-of Roman ideas.♦ Meanwhile, within the lands which were left to the
-Empire, first the Latin language, and then Roman ideas and traditions
-generally, gradually died out. Before the end of the eleventh century,
-the Empire was far more Greek than anything else. Before the end
-of the twelfth century, it had become nearly conterminous with the
-Greek nation, as defined by the combined use of the Greek language
-and profession of the Orthodox faith. The name _Roman_, in its Greek
-form, was coming to mean _Greek_. And, about the same time, the other
-primitive nations of the peninsula, hitherto merged in the common mass
-of Roman subjects, began to show themselves more distinctly alongside
-of the Greeks. ♦Appearance of Albanians and Vlachs.♦ We now first
-hear of _Albanians_ and _Vlachs_ by those names, and the importance
-of the nations which have thus come again to light increases as we go
-on. ♦The Latin Conquest, 1204.♦ Then the Greek remnant of the Empire
-was broken in pieces by the great Latin invasion, and, instead of
-a single power, Roman or Greek, we see a crowd of separate states,
-Greek and Frank. ♦The revived Byzantine Empire.♦ The reunion of some
-of these fragments formed the revived Empire of the Palaiologoi. But
-at no moment since the twelfth century has the whole Greek nation
-been united under a single power, native or foreign. ♦1461-1821.♦ And
-from the Ottoman conquest of Trebizond to the beginning of the Greek
-War of Independence, the whole of the Greek nation was under foreign
-masters.[24]
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now first to trace out the steps by which the Empire was broken
-in pieces, and then to trace out severally the geographical history
-of the states which rose out of its fragments. And with these last
-we may class certain powers which do not strictly come under that
-definition, but which come within the same geographical range and which
-absorbed parts of the Imperial territory. Beginning in the West, the
-territory which the Empire at the final separation still held west of
-the Hadriatic, was gradually lost through the attacks, first of the
-Saracens, then of the Normans. ♦Sicily.♦ These lands grew into the
-kingdom of _Sicily_, which has its proper place here as an offshoot
-from the Eastern Empire. ♦Venice.♦ At the other end of the Italian
-peninsula, _Venice_ gradually detached itself from the Empire, to
-become foremost in its partition: here then comes the place of Venice
-as a maritime power. ♦Slavonic powers. | Bulgaria.♦ Then come the
-powers which arose on the north and north-west of the Empire, powers
-chiefly Slavonic, reckoning as Slavonic the great Bulgarian kingdom.
-♦Hungary.♦ Here too will come the kingdom of Hungary, which, as a
-non-Aryan power in the heart of Europe, has much both of likeness and
-of contrast with Bulgaria. The kingdom of Hungary itself lay beyond the
-bounds of the Empire, but a large part of its dependent territory had
-been Imperial soil. ♦Albanians. | Roumans.♦ Here also we must speak
-of the states which arose out of the new developement of the Albanian
-and Rouman races, and of the states, Greek and Frank, which arose just
-before and at the time of the Latin Conquest. ♦Asiatic powers.♦ Then
-there are the powers, both Christian and Mahometan, which arose within
-the Imperial dominions in Asia. Here we have to speak alike of the
-states founded by the Crusaders and of the growth of the Ottoman Turks.
-Lastly, we come to the work of our own days, to the new European states
-which have been formed by the deliverance of old Imperial lands from
-Ottoman bondage.
-
-♦800-1204.♦
-
-We will therefore first trace the geographical changes in the frontier
-of the Empire itself down to the Latin Conquest. ♦1204-1453.♦ The
-Latin Empire of _Romania_, the Greek Empire of _Nikaia_, the revived
-Greek Empire of Constantinople, will follow, as continuing, at least
-geographically, the true Eastern Roman Empire. Then will come the
-powers which have fallen off from the Empire or grown up within the
-Empire, from Sicily to free Bulgaria. But it must be remembered that it
-is not always easy to mark, either chronologically or on the map, when
-this or that territory was finally lost to the Empire. This is true
-both on the Slavonic border and also in southern Italy. ♦Distinction
-between conquest and settlement.♦ On the former above all it is often
-hard to distinguish between conquest at the cost of the Empire and
-settlement within the Empire. In either case the frontier within which
-the Emperors exercised direct authority was always falling back and
-advancing again. Beyond this there was a zone which could not be said
-to be under the Emperor’s direct rule, but in which his overlordship
-was more or less fully acknowledged, according to the relative
-strength of the Empire and of its real or nominal vassals.
-
-
-§ 1. _Changes in the Frontier of the Empire._
-
-♦Power of revival in the Empire.♦
-
-In tracing the fluctuations of the frontier of the Eastern Empire from
-the beginning of the ninth century, we are struck by the wonderful
-power of revival and reconquest which is shown throughout the whole
-history. Except the lands which were won by the first Saracens, hardly
-a province was finally lost till it had been once or twice won back.
-No one could have dreamed that the Empire of the seventh century, cut
-short by the Slavonic settlements to a mere fringe on its European
-coasts, could ever have become the Empire of the eleventh century,
-holding a solid mass of territory from Tainaros to the Danube. But
-before this great revival, the borders of the Empire had both advanced
-and fallen back in the farther West. ♦Sardinia, Sicily, Southern
-Italy.♦ At the time of the separation of the Empires, the New Rome
-still held Sardinia, Sicily, and a small part of southern Italy. The
-heel of the boot still formed the theme of _Lombardy_,[25] while the
-toe took the name of _Calabria_ which had once belonged to the heel.
-_Naples_, _Gaeta_, and _Amalfi_ were outlying Italian cities of the
-Empire; so was _Venice_, which can hardly be called an Italian city.
-♦Loss of the islands. | Advance on the continent.♦ In the course of the
-ninth century the power of the Empire was cut short in the islands, but
-advanced on the mainland. ♦Loss of Sardinia.♦ The history of Sardinia
-is utterly obscure; but it seems to have passed away from the Empire
-by the beginning of the ninth century. ♦Loss of Sicily, 827-965.♦
-Sicily was now conquered bit by bit by the Saracens of Africa during
-a struggle of one hundred and forty years. ♦Loss of Agrigentum, 827;
-| of Palermo, 831;♦ _Agrigentum_, opposite to the African coast, fell
-first; _Palermo_, once the seat of Phœnician rule, became four years
-later the new Semitic capital. ♦Messina, 842;♦ _Messina_ on the strait
-soon followed; but the eastern side of the island, its most thoroughly
-Greek side, held out much longer. ♦Malta, 869;♦ Before the conquest
-of this region, _Malta_, the natural appendage to Sicily, passed into
-Saracen hands. ♦Syracuse, 878.♦ _Syracuse_, the Christian capital,
-did not fall till fifty years after the first invasion, and in the
-north-western corner of the island a remnant still held out for nearly
-ninety years. ♦Tauromenion, 902-963. | Rametta, 965.♦ _Tauromenion_ or
-_Taormina_, on its height, had to be twice taken in the course of the
-tenth century, and the single fort of _Rametta_, the last stronghold
-of Eastern Christendom in the West, held out longer still. By this
-time Eastern Christendom was fast advancing on Islam in Asia; but the
-greatest of Mediterranean islands passed from Christendom to Islam,
-from Europe to Africa, and a Greek-speaking people was cut off from the
-Empire which was fast becoming Greek. ♦Partial recovery and final loss
-of Sicily, 1038-1042.♦ But the complete and uninterrupted Mussulman
-dominion in Sicily was short. The Imperial claims were never forgotten,
-and in the eleventh century they were again enforced. By the arms of
-George Maniakês, Messina and Syracuse, with a part of the island which
-at the least took in the whole of its eastern side, was, if only for a
-few years, restored to the Imperial rule.
-
-♦Advance of the Empire in Italy.♦
-
-While Sicily was thus lost bit by bit, the power of the Empire was
-advancing in the neighbouring mainland of Italy. ♦Taking of Bari, 871.♦
-_Bari_ was won back for Christendom from the Saracen by the combined
-powers of both Empires; but the lasting possession of the prize fell
-to the Cæsar of the East. At the end of the ninth century, the Eastern
-Empire claimed either the direct possession or the superiority of all
-southern Italy from Gaeta downwards. ♦Fluctuations of the Imperial
-power in Italy.♦ The extent of the Imperial dominion was always
-fluctuating; there was perhaps no moment when the power of the Emperors
-was really extended over this whole region; but there was perhaps no
-spot within it which did not at some time or other admit at least the
-Imperial overlordship. The eastern coast, with the heel and the toe in
-a wider sense than before, became a real and steady possession, while
-the allegiance of _Beneventum_, _Capua_, and _Salerno_ was always very
-precarious. ♦Naples, Gaeta, and Amalfi.♦ But _Naples_, _Gaeta_, and
-_Amalfi_, however nominal their allegiance might be, never formally
-cast it aside.
-
-Thus, at the beginning of the ninth century, the Eastern Emperors
-held all Sicily, with some patches of territory on the neighbouring
-mainland. At the beginning of the eleventh century, the island had
-been wholly lost, while the dominion on the mainland had been greatly
-enlarged. ♦The Normans in Italy and Sicily.♦ In the course of the
-eleventh century a new power, the Normans of Apulia, conquered the
-Italian possessions of the Empire, won Sicily from the Mussulman, and
-even made conquests from the Empire east of the Hadriatic. Thus arose
-the Sicilian kingdom, the growth of which will best be traced when we
-come to the powers which arose out of the breaking-up of the Empire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The great islands of the Eastern Mediterranean also fluctuated between
-Byzantine and Saracen dominion. ♦Loss of Crete, 823.♦ _Crete_ was won
-by a band of Mussulman adventurers from Spain nearly at the time
-when the conquest of Sicily began. ♦Its recovery, 963.♦ It was won
-back in the great revival of the Imperial power one hundred and forty
-years later. ♦Cyprus lost, 708; recovered and lost again c. 881-888;
-recovered again, 965.♦ _Cyprus_ was lost sooner; but it went through
-many fluctuations and divisions, a recovery and a second loss, before
-its final recovery at the same time as the recovery of Crete and the
-complete loss of Sicily. ♦Loss and gain among the great islands.♦
-Looking at the Empire simply as a power, there can be no doubt that the
-loss of Sicily was altogether overbalanced by the recovery of Crete
-and Cyprus. Geographically Sicily was an outlying Greek island; Crete
-and Cyprus lay close to the body of the Empire, essential parts of a
-Greek state. But Crete and Cyprus, as lands which had been lost and
-won back, were among the lands where the tendency to fall away from
-within showed itself earliest. Crete never actually separated from the
-Empire. ♦Separation of Cyprus, 1182-1185. | Conquered by Richard of
-Poitou, 1191.♦ Cyprus fell away under a rebel Emperor, to be presently
-conquered by Richard, Count of Poitou and King of England, and to pass
-away from the Empire for ever.
-
-♦Fluctuations in the possession of the great islands, 801.♦
-
-We may thus sum up the fluctuations in the possession of the great
-islands. At the beginning of the ninth century, the Eastern Empire
-still took in Sardinia, Sicily, and Crete; Cyprus was in the hands of
-the Saracens. ♦901.♦ At the beginning of the tenth century, the Empire
-held nothing in any of the four except the north-eastern corner of
-Sicily. ♦1001.♦ At the beginning of the eleventh, Crete and Cyprus had
-been won back; Sicily was wholly lost. ♦1101.♦ At the beginning of the
-twelfth, Crete and Cyprus were still Imperial possessions; a great part
-of Sicily had been won and lost again. ♦1201.♦ At the beginning of the
-thirteenth, Cyprus, like Sicily, had passed to a Western master; Crete
-was still held by the Empire, but only by a very feeble tie. Thus they
-stood at the fall of the old Roman Empire of the East; of the revived
-Empire of the Palaiologoi none of them ever formed a part.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Relations of the Empire towards the Slavonic powers.♦
-
-In the islands the enemies with whom the Empire had to strive were,
-first the Saracens, and then the Latins or Franks, the nations of
-Western Europe. On the mainland the part of the Saracen was taken
-by the Slave. During the four hundred years between the division of
-the Empires and the Frank conquest of the East, the geographical
-history of the Eastern Empire has mainly to deal with the shiftings
-of its frontier towards the Slavonic powers. ♦Three Slavonic groups.♦
-These fall into three main groups. ♦Servia and Croatia.♦ First, in
-the north-western corner of the Empire, are the Croatian and Servian
-settlements, whose history is closely connected with that of the
-kingdom of Hungary and the commonwealth of Venice. ♦Macedonia and
-Greece.♦ Secondly, there are the Slaves of Thrace, Macedonia, and
-Greece. ♦Bulgaria.♦ Thirdly, the great Bulgarian kingdom comes between
-the two. These two last ranges gradually merge into one; the first
-remains distinct throughout. Servia, Croatia, and Dalmatia, will be
-best treated of in another section, remembering that, amidst all
-fluctuations, the claims of the Empire over them were never denied
-or forgotten, and were from time to time enforced. It was towards
-the Bulgarian kingdom that the greatest fluctuations of the Imperial
-frontier took place.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Bulgarian kingdom.♦
-
-The original Finnish Bulgarians were the vanguard of Turanian invasion
-in the lands with which we have to do. Earlier, it would seem, in their
-coming than the Avars, they were slower to settle down into actual
-occupation of European territory. But when they did settle, it was
-not on the outskirts of the Empire, but in one of its acknowledged
-provinces. ♦Settlement south of the Danube, 679.♦ Late in the seventh
-century, the first Bulgarian kingdom was established between Danube
-and Hæmus. It must be remembered that another migration in quite
-another direction founded another Bulgarian power on the Volga and the
-Kama. ♦White Bulgaria.♦ This settlement, _Great_ or _White Bulgaria_,
-remained Turanian and became Mahometan; _Black Bulgaria_ on the Danube
-became Christian and Slavonic. ♦Use of the Bulgarian name.♦ The
-modern Bulgarians bear the Bulgarian name only in the way in which
-the Romanized Celts of Gaul bear the name of their Frankish masters
-from Germany, in which the Slaves of Kief and Moscow bear the name of
-their Russian masters from Scandinavia. In all three cases, the power
-formed by the union of conquerors and conquered has taken the name of
-the conquerors and has kept the speech of the conquered. But though
-the Bulgarian power became essentially Slavonic, it took quite another
-character from the less fully organized Slavonic settlements to the
-west and south of it. ♦The Empire and the Macedonian Slaves.♦ Towards
-the Slaves of Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece, it cannot be said that the
-Empire had any definite frontier. Settled within the Empire, they were
-its tributaries or its enemies, according to the strength of the Empire
-at any particular moment. Up to the coming of the Bulgarians, we might,
-from different points of view, place the Imperial border either at the
-Danube or at no great distance from the Ægæan. ♦The Empire and the
-Bulgarian kingdom.♦ But from the Bulgarian conquest onwards, there was
-on the Bulgarian side a real frontier, a frontier which often shifted,
-but which was often fixed by treaty, and which, wherever it was fixed,
-marked off lands which were, for the time, wholly lost to the Empire.
-♦Loss of the Danubian frontier.♦ With the first Bulgarian settlement,
-the Imperial frontier definitely withdrew for three hundred years from
-the lower Danube to the line of Hæmus or Balkan. ♦Bulgarians south of
-Hæmus.♦ As the Bulgarian power pushed to the south and west the two
-fields of warfare, against the Bulgarians to the north and against the
-half-independent Slaves to the west, gradually melted into one. But
-as long as the Isaurian Emperors reigned, the two fields were kept
-distinct. ♦Extent of Bulgaria in the eighth century.♦ They kept the
-Balkan range against the Bulgarians, whose kingdom, stretching to the
-north-west over lands which are now Servian, had not, at the end of the
-eighth century, passed the mountain barrier of the Empire.
-
-♦Recovery of the Slavonic settlements in Macedonia and Greece.♦
-
-Meanwhile, as a wholly distinct work, the Imperial power was restored
-over the Slaves of Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece. In the middle of
-the eighth, century the inland parts of Greece were chiefly occupied
-by Slavonic immigrants, while the coast and the cities remained
-Greek. ♦775-784. | 807.♦ Before the end of the century, the Slaves of
-Macedonia were reduced to tribute, and early in the ninth, those of
-Greece wholly failed to recover their independence. ♦Recovery of Greece
-from the Slaves. | Slaves on Ta getos.♦ The land was gradually settled
-afresh by Greek colonists, and by the middle of the tenth, only two
-Slavonic tribes, _Melings_ and _Ezerites_ (_Melinci_ and _Jezerci_),
-remained, distinct, though tributary, on the range of Ta getos or
-Pentedaktylos. From this time to the Frankish conquest, Greece, as a
-whole, was held by the Empire. But, as a recovered land, it was one
-of those parts of the Empire in which a tendency to separate began to
-show itself. In the course of these changes, the name _Hellênes_, as a
-national name, quite died out. ♦Hellênes of Maina.♦ It had long meant
-_pagan_, and it was confined to the people of _Maina_, who remained
-pagan till near the end of the ninth century. The Greeks now knew no
-name but that of _Romans_. The local, perhaps contemptuous, name of the
-inhabitants of Hellas was _Helladikoi_.
-
-Thus, at the division of the Empires, Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece had
-been more or less thoroughly recovered by the Eastern Empire, while
-the lands between Hæmus and Danube were wholly lost. ♦Romania.♦ The
-Imperial dominion from the Hadriatic to the Euxine formed, together
-with the Asiatic provinces, _Romania_, the land of the Romans of the
-East. ♦Dalmatia, Servia, and Croatia.♦ The Emperors also kept the
-cities on the Dalmatian coast, and the precarious allegiance of the
-Servian and Croatian principalities. These lands were bound to the
-Empire by a common dread of the encroaching Bulgarian. ♦Greatness of
-the first Bulgarian kingdom.♦ The ninth century and the early years of
-the tenth was a great time of Bulgarian advance. ♦Attempt on Pannonia,
-818-829.♦ The Bulgarians seem to have failed in establishing any
-lasting dominion to the north-west in Pannonia;[26] at the expense of
-the Empire they were more successful. ♦Advance against the Empire.♦
-At the end of the eighth century _Anchialos_ and _Sardica_—afterwards
-called _Triaditza_ and _Sofia_—were border cities of the Empire. The
-conquest of Sardica early in the ninth marks a stage of Bulgarian
-advance. At the end of the century, after the conversion of the nation
-to Christianity, comes the great era of the first Bulgarian kingdom,
-the kingdom of _Peristhlava_. ♦Conquests of Simeon, 923-934.♦ The
-Tzar Simeon established the Bulgarian supremacy over Servia, and
-carried his conquests deep into the lands of the Empire. In Macedonia
-and Epeiros the Empire kept only the sea-coast, Ægæan and Hadriatic;
-Sardica, Philippopolis, Ochrida, were all cities of the Bulgarian
-realm. Hadrianople, a frontier city of the Empire, passed more than
-once into Bulgarian hands. Nowhere in Europe, save in old Hellas, did
-the Imperial dominion stretch from sea to sea.
-
-♦Revival of the Imperial power.♦
-
-So stood matters in the middle of the tenth century. Then came that
-greatest of all revivals of the Imperial power which won back Crete
-and Cyprus, and which was no less successful on the mainland of Europe
-and Asia. ♦Conquest of Bulgaria.♦ Bulgaria was conquered and lost and
-conquered again. But the first time it was conquered, not from the
-Bulgarian but from the Russian. ♦The Russians and Bulgarians. 968-971.♦
-The Russians, long dangerous to Constantinople, now suddenly appear as
-a land power. Their prince Sviatoslaf overthrew the first Bulgarian
-kingdom, and Philippopolis became for a moment a Russian outpost.
-But John Tzimiskês restored the power of the Empire over the whole
-Bulgarian dominions. The Danube was once more the frontier of the
-Eastern Rome.
-
-♦The second Bulgarian kingdom.♦
-
-It remained so for more than two hundred years during the lower part
-of its course. But in the inland regions the Imperial power fell back
-almost at once, to advance again further than ever. A large part of
-the conquered land soon revolted, and a second Bulgarian kingdom,
-Macedonian rather than Mœsian, arose. The kingdom of _Ochrida_, the
-kingdom of Samuel, left to the Empire the eastern part of the old
-Bulgaria between Danube and Hæmus, together with all Thrace and the
-Macedonian coast. But it took in all the inland region of Macedonia;
-it stretched down into Thessaly and Epeiros; and, while it nowhere
-touched the Euxine or the Ægæan, it had a small seaboard on the
-Hadriatic. Now came the great struggle between Romania and Bulgaria
-which fills the last years of the tenth century and the opening years
-of the eleventh. ♦Second conquest of Bulgaria, 1018.♦ At last all
-Bulgaria, and with it for a while Servia, was restored to the Empire.
-♦Croatia.♦ Croatia continued its vassalage, and its princes were
-presently raised to royal rank by Imperial authority.
-
-Thus the Eastern Empire again took in the whole south-eastern
-peninsula. Of its outlying European possessions, southern Italy was
-still untouched. ♦Venice.♦ At what moment Venice ceased to be a
-dependency of the Empire, it would be hard to say. Its dukes still
-received the Imperial investiture, and Venetian ships often joined
-the Imperial fleet. This state of things seems never to have been
-formally abolished, but rather to have dropped out of sight as Venice
-and Constantinople became practically hostile. In the other outlying
-city north of the Euxine the ninth and tenth centuries change places.
-Through all changes the Empire kept its maritime province in the Tauric
-Chersonêsos. ♦Cherson annexed, 829-842; | taken by Vladimir, 988.♦
-There the allied city of _Cherson_, more formally annexed to the Empire
-in the ninth century, was taken by the Russian Vladimir in the interval
-between the two great Bulgarian wars.
-
-♦The Empire in Asia.♦
-
-In Asia the Imperial frontier had changed but little since the first
-Saracen conquests. The solid peninsula of Asia Minor was often
-plundered by the Mussulmans, but it was never conquered. Now, in
-Asia as in Europe, came a time of advance. For eighty years, with
-some fluctuations, the Empire grew on its eastern side. The Bagdad
-caliphate was now broken up, and the smaller emirates were more
-easily overcome. ♦Asiatic conquests of Nikêphoros and John, 963-976;♦
-The wars of Nikêphoros Phôkas and John Tzimiskês restored _Kilikia_
-and _Syria_ to the list of Roman provinces, _Tarsos_, _Antioch_,
-and _Edessa_ to the list of Christian cities. ♦of Basil the Second,
-991-1022. | Beginning of the annexation of Armenia 1021; Ani, 1045;
-of Kars, 1064.♦ Basil the Second extended the Imperial power over the
-_Iberian_ and _Abasgian_ lands east of the Euxine, and began a series
-of transactions by which, in the space of forty years, all _Armenia_
-was added to the Empire on the very eve of the downfall of the Imperial
-power in Asia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦New enemies.♦
-
-For the great extension of the Empire laid it open to new enemies in
-both continents. ♦Turks. | Magyars.♦ In Asia it became the neighbour of
-the Seljuk _Turks_, in Europe of the Magyars or Hungarians, who bear
-the name of _Turks_ in the Byzantine writers of the tenth century.
-Hungary had now settled down into a Christian kingdom. ♦Revolt of
-Servia, 1040. | Loss of Belgrade, 1064.♦ A Servian revolt presently
-placed a new independent state between Hungary and Romania, but
-Belgrade remained an Imperial possession till it passed under Magyar
-rule twenty-four years later. ♦Advance of the Turks.♦ By this time the
-Empire had begun to be cut short in a far more terrible way in Asia.
-The Seljuk Turks now reached the new Roman frontier. ♦Loss of Ani,
-1064.♦ Plunder grew into conquest, and the first Turkish conquest, that
-of _Ani_, happened in the same year as the last Imperial acquisition of
-_Kars_. The Emperors now tried to strengthen this dangerous frontier
-by the erection of vassal principalities. The very name of _Armenia_
-now changes its place. ♦Lesser Armenia, 1080.♦ The new or _Lesser
-Armenia_ arose in the Kilikian mountains, and was ruled by princes of
-the old Armenian dynasty, whose allegiance to the Empire gradually died
-out. But before this time the Turkish power was fully established in
-the peninsula of Asia Minor. The plunderers had become conquerors.
-♦1071.♦ The battle of Manzikert led to formal cessions and further
-advances. ♦1074.♦ Throughout Asia Minor the Empire at most kept the
-coast; the mass of the inland country became Turkish. ♦The Sultans of
-_Roum_. | 1081.♦ But the Roman name did not pass away; the invaders
-took the name of Sultans of _Roum_. Their capital was at _Nikaia_, a
-threatening position indeed for Constantinople. But distant positions
-like Trebizond and Antioch were still held as dependencies. ♦Loss of
-Antioch, 1081.♦ Antioch was before long betrayed to the Turks.
-
-By this time the Empire was attacked by a new enemy in its European
-peninsula. ♦Normans in Corfu and Epeiros. 1081-1085.♦ The Norman
-conquerors of Apulia and Sicily crossed the Hadriatic, and occupied
-various points, both insular and continental, especially _Dyrrhachion_
-or _Durazzo_ and the island of _Korkyra_, now called by a new Greek
-name, _Koryphô_ or _Corfu_. At every point of its frontier the Empire
-had, towards the end of the eleventh century, altogether fallen
-back from the splendid position which it held at its beginning.
-♦Geographical aspect of the Empire.♦ The geographical aspect of the
-Empire was now the exact opposite of what it had been in the eighth
-and ninth centuries. Then its main strength seemed to lie in Asia. Its
-European dominion had been cut down to the coasts and islands; but its
-Asiatic peninsula was firmly held, touched only by passing ravages.
-Now the Asiatic dominion was cut down to the coasts and islands, while
-the great European peninsula was, in the greater part of its extent,
-still firmly held. Never before had the main power of the Empire been
-so thoroughly European. No wonder that in Western eyes the Empire of
-Romania began to look like a kingdom of Greece.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The states founded by the Crusaders will be dealt with elsewhere.
-♦Recovery of Asiatic territory, 1097.♦ The crusades concern us here
-only as helping towards the next revival of the Imperial power under
-the house of Komnênos. Alexios himself won back Nikaia and the other
-great cities of western Asia Minor. Some of these, as _Laodikeia_, were
-received rather as free cities of the Empire than as mere subjects.
-♦Reigns of John and Manuel.♦ The conquering reigns of John and Manuel
-again extended the Empire in both continents. ♦1097.♦ The Turk still
-ruled in the inland regions of Asia, but his capital was driven back
-from Nikaia to _Ikonion_. ♦1137.♦ The superiority of the Empire was
-restored over Antioch and Kilikian Armenia at the one end, over Servia
-at the other. ♦1148.♦ Hungary itself had to yield _Zeugmin_, _Sirmium_,
-and all Dalmatia. ♦1163-1168.♦ For a moment the Empire again took in
-the whole eastern coast of the Hadriatic and its islands; even on
-its western shore _Ancona_ became something like a dependency of the
-Eastern Cæsar.
-
-♦Falling of distant possessions.♦
-
-The conquests of Manuel were clearly too great for the real strength
-of the Empire. Some lands fell away at once. ♦Dalmatia, 1181.♦
-Dalmatia was left to be struggled for between Venice and Hungary.
-And the tendency to fall away within the Empire became strengthened
-by increased intercourse with the feudal ideas of the West. Cyprus,
-Trebizond, old Greece itself, came into the hands of rulers who were
-rather feudal vassals than Roman governors. We have seen how Cyprus
-fell away. Its Poitevin conqueror presently gave it to Guy of Lusignan.
-♦Latin kingdom of Cyprus, 1192.♦ Thus, before the Latin conquest of
-Constantinople, a province had been torn from the Eastern Empire to
-become a Latin kingdom. The Greek-speaking lands were now beginning
-largely to pass under Latin rule. In Sicily the Frank might pass for a
-deliverer; in Corfu and Cyprus he was a mere foreign invader.
-
-♦The third Bulgarian kingdom, 1187.♦
-
-Meanwhile the Empire was again cut short to the north by a new
-Bulgarian revolt, which established a third Bulgarian kingdom, but a
-kingdom which seems to have been as much Vlach or Rouman as strictly
-Bulgarian. The new kingdom took in the old Bulgarian land between
-Danube and Hæmus, and it presently spread both to the west and to the
-south. ♦Other Slavonic revolts.♦ The Bulgarian revolt was followed by
-other movements among the Thracian and Macedonian Slaves, which did not
-lead to the foundation of any new states, but which had their share in
-the general break-up of the Imperial power. ♦Increased Greek character
-of the Empire.♦ The work of Basil and Manuel was now undone, but its
-undoing had the effect of making the Empire more nearly a Greek state
-than ever. It did not wholly coincide with the Greek-speaking lands:
-the Empire had subjects who were not Greeks, and there were Greeks who
-were not subjects of the Empire. But the Greek speech and the new Greek
-nationality were dominant within the lands which were still left to the
-Empire. The Roman name was now merely a name: Roman and Greek meant
-the same thing. Whatever was not Greek in European Romania was mainly
-Albanian and Vlach. The dominion of the Empire in the peninsula was
-mainly confined to the primitive races of the peninsula. ♦The Slavonic
-states.♦ The great element of later times, the Slavonic settlers, had
-almost wholly separated themselves from the Empire, establishing their
-independence, but not their unity. They formed a group of independent
-powers which had simply fallen away from the Empire; it was by the
-powers of the West that the Empire itself was to be broken in pieces.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Latin conquest of Constantinople, 1204.♦
-
-The taking of Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade was the work of an
-alliance between the now independent commonwealth of Venice and a body
-of Western crusaders who, along with the states which they founded, may
-be indifferently called _Latins_ or _Franks_. ♦Act of Partition.♦ A
-regular act of partition was drawn out, by which the Empire was to be
-divided into three parts. One was to be assigned to a Latin _Emperor
-of Romania_, another of the pilgrims as his feudatories, a third to
-the commonwealth of Venice. But the partition was never carried out. A
-large part of the Empire was never conquered; another large part was
-not assigned by the act of partition. In fact the scheme of partition
-is hardly a geographical fact at all. The real partition to which the
-Latin conquest led was one of quite another kind, a partition of the
-Empire among a crowd of powers, Greek, Frank, and Venetian, more than
-one of which had some claim to represent the Empire itself.
-
-♦Latin Empire of Romania.♦
-
-These were the Latin Empire of _Romania_, and the Greek Empire which
-maintained itself at _Nikaia_, and which, after nearly sixty years of
-banishment, won back the Imperial city. In the crusading scheme the
-Latin Emperor was to be the feudal superior of the lesser princes who
-were to establish themselves within the Empire. For his own Imperial
-domain he was to have the whole of the Imperial possessions in Asia,
-with a Thracian dominion stretching as far north as _Agathopolis_.
-Hadrianople, with a narrow strip of territory stretching down to the
-Propontis, was to be Venetian. The actual result was very different.
-♦Its extent.♦ The Latin Emperors never got any footing in Asia
-beyond parts of the themes bordering on the Propontis, reaching from
-Adramyttion to the mouth of the Sangarios. In Europe they held the
-eastern part of Thrace, with a fluctuating border towards Bulgaria on
-the north, and to the new Latin and Greek states which arose to the
-west. Their dominion also took in _Lêmnos_, _Lesbos_, _Chios_, and some
-others of the Ægæan islands.
-
-But the Latin Empire of Romania was not the only Empire which arose
-out of the break-up of the old East-Roman power. Two, for a time
-three, Greek princes bore the Imperial title; there was also a Latin
-king. It will be convenient for a while to leave out of sight both
-Asia and southern Greece, and to look to the revolutions of Thrace,
-Macedonia, northern Greece, and what we may now begin to call
-_Albania_. The immediate result of the Latin conquest was to divide
-these lands between three powers, two Latin and one Greek. ♦Kingdom of
-Thessalonikê. 1204-1222. | Despotat of Epeiros.♦ Besides the Empire of
-Romania, there was the Latin kingdom of _Thessalonikê_, and the Greek
-_despotat_[27] of _Epeiros_ held by the house of Angelos. Of these the
-Thessalonian kingdom was the most short-lived, and there can be little
-doubt that its creation was the ruin of the Latin Empire. It cut off
-the Emperor from his distant vassals in Greece, whose vassalage soon
-became nominal. It gave him, in successive reigns, a powerful neighbour
-who knew his own power, and a weak neighbour, who fell before the Greek
-advance sooner than himself. But the beginnings of the kingdom, under
-its first king Boniface, were promising. His power stretched over
-Thessaly, now known as _Great Vlachia_, and he received the homage of
-the Frank princes further to the south. But within twenty years from
-its foundation, Frank rule had ceased in Macedonia. ♦Thessalonikê again
-Greek.♦ Thessalonikê was again a Greek and an Imperial city, and its
-recovery by the Greeks split the Latin Empire asunder.
-
-♦The Epeirot despotat.♦
-
-This blow came from the west. It was the Nicene Empire which did in
-the end win back the Imperial city; but, for some years after the
-Latin conquest, things looked as if the restoration of the Greek power
-in Europe was designed for Epeiros. The first despot Michael paid a
-nominal homage to all the neighbouring powers, Greek and Frank, in
-turn; but in truth he was the lord of an independent and growing state.
-His power began in the Epeirot land west of Pindos. ♦1208-1210.♦ For
-a moment he held in Peloponnêsos Corinth, Nauplia, and Argos. Durazzo
-and Corfu were won from Venice. ♦1215.♦ The Epeirot power advanced also
-to the east. ♦1222. | 1225.♦ Thessalonikê was taken; its ruler took
-the Imperial title; Hadrianople followed, and the new Empire stretched
-across the peninsula from sea to sea, and took in Thessaly to the
-south. But the Thessalonian Empire was hardly more long-lived than the
-Thessalonian kingdom. It was first dismembered among the princes of
-the ruling house. ♦Separation of Epeiros and Thessalonia. 1237.♦ The
-original Epeirot despotat, along with Corfu, parted away from the new
-Macedonian power, to survive it by many years. But by this time the
-championship of the Greek speech and faith against the Latin lords of
-Constantinople had passed to the foremost of the Greek powers which
-had grown up in Asia, to the Empire of Nikaia.
-
-These Greek powers were two, which arose at the same time, but
-by different processes and with different destinies. ♦The Empire
-of Trebizond, 1204-1461.♦ The Empire of _Nikaia_ was the truer
-continuation of the old East-Roman power; the Empire of _Trapezous_ or
-_Trebizond_ was the last independent fragment of Roman dominion and
-Greek culture. The Trapezuntine Empire was not in strictness one of the
-states which arose out of the Latin partition. One of the parts of the
-Empire which showed most disposition to fall away was independently
-seized by a rival Emperor, at the very moment of the Latin conquest.
-Alexios Komnênos occupied Trebizond, an occupation largely wrought by
-Iberian help, as if the Empire, already dismembered by the Christians
-of the West, was to be further dismembered by the Christians of the
-further East. ♦Extent of the Komnenian dominion.♦ The dominions of
-Alexios, enlarged by his brother David to the west, at first took in
-the whole south coast of the Euxine from the Sangarios eastward, broken
-by the city of _Amisos_, which contrived to make itself virtually
-independent, and by the neighbouring Turkish settlement at _Samsoun_.
-But this dominion was only momentary. The eastern part alone survived
-to form the later Empire of Trebizond; the western part, the government
-of David, soon passed to the rising power of Nikaia.
-
-♦Empire of Nikaia. 1206-1261.♦
-
-The founder of that power was Theodore Laskaris, in whom the succession
-of the Eastern Empire was held to be continued. ♦1214.♦ Ten years
-after the taking of Constantinople, a treaty fixed his border towards
-the small Latin dominion in Asia. ♦1220. | 1240.♦ Six years later the
-Latins kept only the lands north of the gulf of Nikomêdeia; sixteen
-years later they held only the Asiatic coast of the Bosporos. ♦1247.♦
-Seven years later Chios, Lêmnos, Samos, Kôs, and other islands were
-won back by the growing Greek state. ♦The Nicene Empire in Europe.
-1235.♦ But, long before this, the Nicene Empire had become an European
-power. The Thracian Chersonêsos was first won, the work beginning
-at _Kallipolis_. ♦1242. | 1246.♦ Presently the Thessalonian Emperor
-sank to the rank of a despot under him of Nikaia; four years later
-Thessalonikê was incorporated with the Nicene dominions. ♦1245-1256.♦
-A series of Bulgarian campaigns carried the Imperial frontier, first
-to the Hebros—already the Slavonic _Maritza_—and then to the foot of
-Hæmus. ♦1254-1259.♦ A series of Epeirot campaigns won a Hadriatic
-seaboard, and made _Durazzo_ for a while again a city of the Empire.
-♦1259.♦ The Nicene power in these regions was confirmed by the victory
-of Pelagonia, won over the combined forces of Epeiros, Achaia, and
-Sicily. ♦1260.♦ The next year _Selymbria_ was won from the Latins, and
-the Frank Empire was cut down to so much territory as could be guarded
-from the walls of Constantinople. ♦Recovery of Constantinople, 1261.♦
-At last the recovery of Constantinople changed the Empire of Nikaia
-into the revived Byzantine Empire of the Palaiologoi.
-
-That Empire still lasted a hundred and ninety years, and we must
-carefully distinguish between its European and its Asiatic history.
-The Asiatic border fell back almost as soon as the seat of rule was
-restored to Europe. ♦Advance of the Empire in Europe.♦ In Europe the
-revived Empire kept the character of an advancing power till just
-before the entrance of the Ottoman into Europe, in some parts till just
-before the fall of Constantinople. Many events helped to weaken the
-real power of the Empire, which did not affect its geography. ♦1302.♦
-Such were the earlier Turkish inroads and the destroying visit of
-the Catalans. ♦Advance in Peloponnêsos.♦ The land in which advance
-was most steady was Peloponnêsos, where, at the time of the recovery
-of Constantinople, the Empire did not hold a foot of ground. ♦1262.♦
-_Misithra_, _Monembasia_, and _Maina_ were the fruits of the day of
-Pelagonia. For a while the Imperial frontier was stationary, but from
-the beginning of the fourteenth century it steadily advanced. It
-advanced perhaps all the more after Peloponnêsos became an Imperial
-dependency, or an appanage for princes of the Imperial house, rather
-than an immediate possession of the Empire. ♦1404.♦ Early in the
-fifteenth century the greater part of the peninsula, including Corinth,
-was again in Greek hands. ♦1430.♦ At last, twenty-three years only
-before the Turkish conquest of Constantinople, all Peloponnêsos, except
-the points held by Venice, was under the superiority of the Empire.
-
-♦Advance in Macedonia and Epeiros.♦
-
-In more northern parts the advance of the Empire, though chequered
-by more reverses, went on steadily till the growth of the Servian
-power in the middle of the fourteenth century. ♦1308.♦ The frontier
-varied towards Servia, Bulgaria, Epeiros, and the Angevin power which
-established itself on the Hadriatic coast. Even under Andronikos the
-Second the Imperial dominion was extended over the greater part of
-Thessaly or _Great Vlachia_. ♦1318-1339.♦ Later still, all Epeiros,
-_Jôannina_ and _Arta_—once _Ambrakia_—were won. At the moment of the
-great Servian advance, the Empire held the uninterrupted seaboard from
-the Euxine to the Pagasaian Gulf, as well as its Hadriatic seaboard
-from the Ambrakian gulf northward. But the Frank principalities
-still cut off the main body of the Empire from its possessions in
-Peloponnêsos.
-
-♦Losses of the Empire in Asia.♦
-
-In Asia there is another tale to tell. There the frontier of the Empire
-steadily went back from the recovery of Constantinople. A few points
-gained or lost to European powers go for little. ♦1260.♦ _Smyrna_
-passed for a while to Genoa. ♦The Knights of Saint John, 1309-1315.♦
-The Knights of Saint John won _Rhodes_, _Kôs_, and other islands, but
-they did not become a power on the mainland of Asia till the Empire
-had almost withdrawn from that continent. ♦Advance of the Turks.♦ The
-Imperial power steadily crumbled away before the advance of the Turk,
-first the Seljuk and then the Ottoman. The small Turkish powers into
-which the Sultanate of Roum had now split up began to encroach on the
-Greek dominion in Asia as soon as its centre was transferred to Europe.
-By the end of the thirteenth century, the Imperial possessions in Asia
-had again shrunk up to a narrow strip on the Propontis, from the Ægæan
-to the Euxine. Losses followed more speedily when the Turkish power
-passed from the Seljuk to the Ottoman. ♦1326-1338.♦ _Brusa_, _Nikaia_,
-_Nikomêdeia_, were all lost within twelve years. By the middle of the
-fourteenth century, the Emperors kept nothing in Asia, save a strip
-of land just opposite Constantinople, and the outlying cities of
-_Philadelphia_ and _Phôkaia_, their allies rather than their subjects.
-
-The Ottoman was now all but ready to pass into Europe, and the way
-was made easier for him by the rise and fall of an European power
-which again cut short the Empire in its western provinces. ♦The Empire
-falls back towards Servia and Bulgaria. | 1331.♦ While the Imperial
-frontier was advancing in Epeiros and Thessaly, it fell back towards
-Servia, and advanced towards Bulgaria only to fall back again. ♦Loss
-of Philippopolis, 1344.♦ _Philippopolis_, so often lost and won, now
-passed away for ever. ♦Conquest. Stephen Dushan.♦ And now came the
-great momentary advance of _Servia_ under Stephen Dushan, which wrested
-from the Empire a large part of its Thracian, Macedonian, Albanian,
-and Greek possessions. ♦Extent of the Empire.♦ At the middle of the
-fourteenth century, the Empire, all but banished from Asia, kept no
-unbroken European dominion out of Thrace. Its other possessions were
-isolated. It kept Thessalonikê and Chalkidikê, with a small strip of
-Macedonia as far as _Berrhoia_ and _Vodena_. It kept a small Thessalian
-territory about _Lamia_ or _Zeitouni_. There was the Peloponnesian
-province, fast growing into importance; there was _Lesbos_ and a few
-other islands. ♦1355.♦ On Stephen’s death his dominion broke in pieces,
-but the Empire did not win back its lost lands. For the Ottoman was
-already in Europe, ready, in the space of the next hundred years, to
-swallow up all that was left.
-
-♦1336.♦
-
-As in the recovery of Romania by the Greeks of Nikaia, so in the final
-conquest of Romania by the Turks of Brusa, Constantinople itself
-was—with the exception of the Peloponnesian appanage—the last point
-of the Empire to fall. The Turk, like the Greek, made his way in by
-Kallipolis; like the Greek, he hemmed in the Imperial city for years
-before it fell into his hands. ♦Loss of Hadrianople, 1361. | 1366.♦
-In seven years from his first landing, Hadrianople had become the
-European capital of the Turk; the Empire was his tributary, keeping,
-besides its outlying possessions, only the land just round the city.
-The romantic expedition of Amadeo of Savoy gave back to the Empire its
-Euxine coast as far as _Mesêmbria_. ♦Loss of Philadelphia, 1374-1391.♦
-Before the end of the century Philadelphia was lost in Asia, and the
-Imperial dominion in Europe hardly reached beyond the city itself and
-the Peloponnesian province. Thessalonikê and the Thessalian province
-were both lost for a while. ♦Effects of Timour’s invasion, 1401.♦
-Bajazet was on the point of doing the work of Mahomet, when the Empire
-was saved for another half-century by the invasion of Timour and the
-consequent break-up of the Ottoman power. During the Ottoman civil
-wars, the outlying points of the Empire were restored and seized again
-more than once. ♦1424.♦ At last the boundaries of the Empire were fixed
-by treaty between Sultan Mahomet and the Emperor Manuel, much as they
-had stood sixty years before. The coast of the Propontis to Selymbria,
-the coast of the Euxine to Mesêmbria, Thessalonikê and Chalkidikê,
-the Peloponnesian province, the smaller Thessalian province, the
-overlordship of Lesbos, Ainos, and Thasos, was all that was left.
-Further losses soon followed. ♦1426.♦ Thessalonikê passed from the
-Empire within two years. ♦1453.♦ At last, as all the world knows, the
-Imperial city itself fell, and the name of the Eastern Roman Empire was
-blotted out of European geography. ♦1460.♦ Six years later came the
-conquest of Peloponnêsos, and the whole of European Greece passed into
-the hands of foreign masters.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦States growing out of the Empire.♦
-
-Having thus sketched the changes in the extent of the Eastern Roman
-Empire during a period of six hundred and fifty years, we have now to
-trace the geography of the states which, within that time, grew up
-within its borders or upon its frontiers. These fall naturally into
-four groups. ♦The Slavonic states.♦ First come the national states
-which were formed by throwing off the dominion of the Empire. These are
-mainly the Slavonic powers to the north, Bulgaria, Servia, Croatia, and
-the later states which arose out of their divisions and combinations.
-♦Hungary. | Rouman states.♦ And with these, different as was their
-origin, we must, for our purposes, place both the _Hungarian_ kingdom
-which annexed so many of the Slavonic lands, and the _Rouman_ states,
-so closely connected with Hungarian history, which arose by migrations
-out of the Empire. ♦The Greek states.♦ Another group consists of the
-Greek states which split off from the Empire before or at the Latin
-conquest, and which were not recovered by the Greek Emperors of Nikaia
-and Constantinople. Both these classes of states belong strictly to
-Eastern Christendom. Catholic Hungary ruling over Orthodox Slaves
-forms a link between the East and the West; so do those Slaves who
-themselves belong to the Latin Church. ♦Latin states with the Empire.♦
-Another link is supplied by a third group of states, namely, those
-parts of the Empire which, either at or before the Latin conquest,
-came under Latin rule. This class is not confined to the Frank powers
-in Romania or to the Eastern settlements of Venice and Genoa. ♦Kingdom
-of Sicily. | Kingdom of Jerusalem.♦ From our point of view it takes in
-the Norman kingdom of Sicily and the crusading kingdom of Jerusalem
-with its fiefs. In all these cases, territory which had formed part
-of the Eastern Empire came under Latin rule. And in all these cases,
-Latin masters bore rule over alien subjects, Greek, Slave, Syrian,
-or any other. None of the Latin powers were national states, like
-the Slavonic or even like the Greek powers. But the foreign masters
-of these lands were at least European and Christian. The last class
-consists of powers which lie beyond the range of European and Christian
-civilization. ♦Turkish dynasties.♦ These are the Turkish dynasties
-which arose within the Empire. ♦The Ottomans.♦ Of these only the last
-and greatest, the dynasty of _Othman_, became geographically European,
-and swallowed up nearly all the lands which had belonged to the Empire
-in Europe, together with much which lay beyond its bounds. Here we
-have, not only the absence of national being, but the rule of the
-Asiatic over the European, of the Mussulman over the Christian. ♦The
-New States.♦ Lastly, we come to the partial redressing of this wrong by
-the re-establishment of independent Greek and Slavonic states in our
-own century.
-
-These seem to make four natural groups, and it is needful to bear
-in mind their nature and relations to each other. But it will be
-more convenient to speak of the several states thus formed in an
-order approaching more nearly to the order of their separation from
-the Empire. And first comes a power which parted off so early, and
-which became so thoroughly a part of Western Europe, that it needs
-an effort to grasp the fact that its right place is among the powers
-which had their beginning in separation from the Imperial throne of
-Constantinople.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Kingdom of Sicily._
-
-♦The Norman power in Italy and Sicily.♦
-
-This is the power which, in the course of the eleventh century, was
-formed by the Norman adventurers in southern Italy and in Sicily. It
-was not wholly formed at the expense of the Eastern Empire. But all
-its insular, and the greater part of its continental, territory, was
-either won from the Eastern Empire and its vassals, or else had once
-formed part of that Empire. Its kings also more than once established
-their power, for a longer or shorter time, in the Imperial lands east
-of the Hadriatic. With the Western Empire and the Kingdom of Italy the
-Sicilian kingdom had in its beginnings nothing to do, though it was
-afterwards somewhat enlarged at their expense.
-
-♦Possessions of the Empire in Italy.♦
-
-When the Norman conquests in Italy began, early in the eleventh
-century, the Eastern Empire still kept the coast of both seas from the
-further side of the peninsula of _Gargano_ to the head of the gulf
-of _Policastro_. The Imperial duchies of Naples, Gaeta, and Amalfi,
-lying to the north of this point, were cut off by the duchies of
-_Benevento_, _Capua_, and _Salerno_, over which the Empire had at the
-most a very precarious superiority. ♦Advance of the Normans.♦ Within
-a hundred years, all these lands, together with the island of Sicily,
-were brought under Norman rule. Thus grew up a new European power,
-sometimes forming one kingdom, sometimes two, sometimes held alone,
-sometimes together with other kingdoms. This power supplanted alike
-the Eastern Empire, the Saracen powers of Sicily, and the Lombard
-princes of southern Italy. It started from two points, two distinct
-Norman settlements, of which the later outshone the earlier. ♦County
-of Aversa, 1021.♦ The earliest Norman territorial settlement was the
-county of _Aversa_, held in vassalage of the Imperial duchy of Naples.
-♦Principality of Capua, 1062-1068.♦ Forty years later its counts became
-possessed of the principality of _Capua_, of which they received a
-papal confirmation which implied a denial of all dependence on either
-Empire. The more lasting duchy of _Apulia_ began later under the
-adventurers of the house of Hauteville. ♦County of Apulia, 1042.♦ Their
-first stage is marked by the foundation of the county of Apulia, with
-_Melfi_ as its capital, under William of-the-Iron-arm. This took in
-the peninsula of Gargano and the lands immediately to the south of it.
-♦Investiture by Pope Leo, 1053.♦ The next stage is when Leo the Ninth
-invested Count Humfrey, or rather the Normans as a body, with all that
-they could conquer in Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily. ♦Robert Wiscard
-Duke, 1059. | Completion of the Apulian duchy, 1077.♦ The first of
-several takings of _Tarentum_, and the assumption of the ducal title by
-Robert Wiscard, mark another stage. Less than twenty years later the
-Eastern Empire kept nothing but the duchy of Naples; _Benevento_ had
-passed to the Popes. The rest of the lands both of the Empire and of
-the Lombard princes were now very unequally divided between two Norman
-lords, the Duke of Apulia and the Prince of Capua. ♦Robert Wiscard in
-Epeiros, 1081-1085.♦ The Byzantine power west of the Hadriatic being
-thus overthrown, Robert Wiscard for the first time pushed the Norman
-arms into the Eastern peninsula itself. For the last few years of
-his life he held the islands of Corfu and Kephallênia, with Durazzo
-and the coast to the south, and even inland as far as _Kastoria_ and
-_Trikkala_. ♦1147-1150.♦ His power was renewed for a moment by his son
-Bohemond, and in the middle of the next century Corfu was again for a
-short time held by King Roger.
-
-♦Norman Conquest of Sicily, 1060-1093.♦
-
-For by that time the island of Sicily was a kingdom of Western
-Christendom. The second time of Mussulman rule over the whole island
-was short. In the space of thirty years Count Roger won the great
-island alike from Islam and from Eastern Christendom. ♦Taking of
-Messina, 1061; | of Palermo, 1072; | of Syracuse, 1086; | of Noto,
-1091;♦ Greek Messina was first won; after a while Saracen Palermo
-followed; Syracuse was won much later; the last Saracen post in the
-island to hold out was _Noto_ in the south-eastern corner. ♦of Malta,
-1091.♦ _Malta_, the natural appendage of Sicily, was soon added. The
-first Norman capital was _Messina_. Duke Robert, as overlord of his
-brother Count Roger, kept Palermo and the surrounding district in his
-own hands. It was not till the next century that the Count of Sicily
-won full possession of the city. ♦Palermo capital of Sicily.♦ Palermo
-then became again, as it had been under the Saracens, the head of
-Sicily.
-
-The ruler of Sicily also became a potentate on the Italian mainland.
-First the half, then the whole, of Calabria formed part of his
-dominions. ♦Roger the Second, 1105-1154. | King, 1130.♦ The third Great
-Count, the first King, of Sicily, Roger the Second, gradually won the
-whole possessions of his family on the mainland. ♦Capua, 1132-1136.♦
-To these he presently added the Norman principality of Capua, first as
-a dependent territory, then as fully incorporated with his dominions.
-♦Naples, 1138.♦ He next won the last possession in the West which was
-still held by the Eastern Empire, the city of Naples. ♦The Abruzzi,
-1140.♦ He then pressed beyond the bounds both of the Eastern Empire
-and of the early Norman conquests by the annexation of the _Abruzzi_.
-He then, as we have seen, extended his power for a moment east of the
-Hadriatic. Meanwhile he was more successful against the common enemies
-of Eastern and Western Christendom. ♦Conquests in Africa, 1135-1137.♦
-As Sicily had twice been conquered from Africa, Africa now began to be
-conquered from Sicily. ♦1160.♦ Roger held a considerable dominion on
-the African coast including _Mehadia_, _Bona_, and other points, which
-were lost under his son William.
-
-Thus was founded a kingdom which has, perhaps oftener than any other
-European state, been divided and united and handed over from one
-dynasty of strangers to another, but whose boundaries, strictly so
-called, have hardly changed at all. For the only immediate neighbour
-of the Sicilian king was his ecclesiastical overlord. The question was
-whether the king of the mainland should be also king of the island.
-But the successive dynasties which reigned both over the whole kingdom
-and over its divided parts were for a long time eager to carry out the
-policy of their first founder, by conquests east of the Hadriatic.
-♦Epeirot conquests of William the Good, 1185.♦ Before the fall of the
-old Empire, William the Good began again to establish an Epeirot and
-insular dominion by the conquest of Durazzo, Corfu, Kephallênia, and
-Zakynthos. ♦Kingdom of Margarito, 1186. | 1338.♦ But these outlying
-dominions were granted in fief to the Sicilian Admiral Margarito,[28]
-who, himself bearing the strange title of _King of the Epeirots_,
-founded a dynasty which, with the title of Count Palatine, held
-_Kephallênia_, _Zakynthos_, and _Ithakê_ into the fourteenth century.
-Thus these lands, like Cyprus and Trebizond, were cut off from the
-Empire just before its fall, and the revolutions of Sicily cut them off
-equally from the Sicilian kingdom. ♦Epeirot dominion of Manfred, 1258.♦
-A more lasting power in these regions began under Manfred, who received
-with his Greek wife Corfu, Durazzo, and a strip of the Albanian coast,
-with the title of _Lord of Romania_. ♦Of Charles of Anjou, 1266-69.
-| 1272-1276.♦ This dominion passed to his conqueror Charles of Anjou,
-who further established a feudal superiority over the Epeirot despotat.
-♦1282.♦ But his plans were cut short by the revolution of the Vespers.
-♦History of Durazzo, 1322. | Duchy of Durazzo, 1333-1360. | 1378.♦
-Durazzo was lost and won more than once; but it came back to the
-Angevin house, to become a separate Angevin duchy, till it fell before
-the growth of the Albanian powers. Another branch held _Lepanto_—once
-_Naupaktos_—which lasted longer. ♦1373-1386.♦ Corfu and Butrinto became
-immediate possessions of the Neapolitan crown till they found more
-lasting masters at Venice.
-
-This Eastern dominion of the two Sicilian crowns, besides their
-influence of which we shall have presently to speak in southern Greece,
-tends to keep up the connexion of the Sicilian kingdoms with the Empire
-out of which they sprang. But it can hardly be called a geographical
-enlargement of the kingdoms themselves. ♦Acre occupied by Charles of
-Anjou.♦ Still less can that name be given to the short occupation of
-_Acre_ by Charles of Anjou in his character of one of the many Kings of
-Jerusalem. ♦Malta granted to the Knights, 1530.♦ The Sicilian kingdoms
-themselves cannot be said to have gained or lost territory till Charles
-the Fifth granted Malta to the Knights of Saint John, till Philip the
-Second added the _Stati degli Presidi_ to the Two Sicilies. The great
-revolution of all has taken place in our own day. The name of Sicily
-has for the first time been wiped from the European map. The island of
-Hierôn and Roger has sunk to form seven provinces of a prince who has
-not deigned to take the crown or the title of that illustrious realm.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Crusading States._
-
-♦Comparison between Sicily and the crusading states.♦
-
-The Sicilian kingdom has much in common with the states formed by
-the crusaders in Asia and Eastern Europe. Both grew out of lands won
-by Western conquerors, partly from the Eastern Empire itself, partly
-from Mussulman holders of lands which had belonged to the Eastern
-Empire. But the order of the two processes is different. The Sicilian
-Normans began by conquering lands of the Empire, and then went on
-to win the island which the Saracens had torn from the Empire. The
-successive crusades first founded Christian states in the lands which
-the Mussulmans had won from the Empire, and then partitioned the Empire
-itself. The first crusaders undertook to hold their conquest as fiefs
-of the Eastern Empire. This condition was only very partially carried
-out; but the mere theory marks a stage in the relations between the
-Eastern Empire and the Latin powers of Palestine which has nothing
-answering to it in the case of Sicily.
-
-♦Kingdom of Jerusalem and Frank principalities in Syria.♦
-
-First among these powers come the _Kingdom of Jerusalem_ and the other
-Frank principalities which arose out of the first crusade. ♦Cyprus.♦
-The kingdom of _Cyprus_, which in some sort continued the Kingdom of
-Jerusalem, forms a link between the true crusading states and those
-which arose out of the partition of the Empire in the fourth crusade.
-♦Armenia.♦ And closely connected with this was the kingdom of _Kilikian
-Armenia_ whose foundation we have already mentioned.[29] This last was
-an Eastern state which became to some extent Latinized. But the Syrian
-states, Cyprus, and the Latin powers which arose out of the partition
-of the Empire, all agree in being colonies of Western Europe in Eastern
-lands, states where the Latin settlers appear as a dominant race over
-the natives, of whatever blood or creed.
-
-♦The Crusaders cut off the Mussulmans from the sea.♦
-
-The great geographical result of the first crusade was to cut off the
-Mussulman powers from the seas of Asia and Eastern Europe. In the first
-years of the twelfth century the Christian powers, Byzantine, Armenian,
-and Latin, held the whole coast of Asia Minor and Syria. ♦Extent of
-the Kingdom of Jerusalem.♦ The Kingdom of Jerusalem, at its greatest
-extent, stretched along the coast from _Berytos_ to _Gaza_. To the
-east it reached some way beyond Jordan and the Dead Sea, with a strip
-of territory reaching southward to the eastern gulf of the Red Sea. To
-the north lay two Latin states which, in the days of Komnenian revival,
-acknowledged the superiority of the Eastern Emperor. ♦Tripolis.
-| Antioch.♦ These were the county of _Tripolis_, reaching northwards
-to the Syrian _Alexandretta_, and the more famous principality of
-_Antioch_. ♦640. | 968. | 1081. | 1098. | 1268.♦ That great city, lost
-to Christendom in the first days of Saracen conquest, won back to
-the Empire in the Macedonian revival, lost to the Turk, won back by
-the Frank, remained a Christian principality long after the fall of
-Jerusalem, and did not pass again under Mussulman rule till late in the
-thirteenth century. ♦Edessa.♦ North-east of Antioch lay the furthest
-of the Latin possessions, the inland county of _Edessa_. ♦1128-1173.♦
-This was the first to be lost; it fell under the power of the Turkish
-Attabegs of Syria. ♦Loss of the lands beyond Jordan.♦ They cut short
-the kingdom of Jerusalem, taking away the territory east of Jordan. On
-their ruin arose the mightier power of Saladin, lord alike of Egypt
-and Syria. ♦Jerusalem taken by Saladin, 1187.♦ He took Jerusalem, and
-the kingdom which still bore that name was cut down to the lands just
-round Tyre. ♦Jerusalem recovered by Frederick the Second, 1228.♦ The
-crusades which followed won back _Acre_ and various points, and at
-last the diplomacy of Frederick the Second won back from the Egyptian
-Sultan Tyre, Sidon, and the Holy City itself. A strip of coast running
-inland at two points, so as to take in Tiberias and Nazareth at one
-end, Jerusalem and Bethlehem at the other, formed the Eastern realm of
-the lord of Rome and Sicily. ♦1239-1243. | Final loss of Jerusalem,
-1244.♦ Lost and won again by the Christians, Jerusalem was finally won
-for Islam by the invasion of the Chorasmians from the shores of the
-Caspian. But for nearly fifty years longer the points on the coast
-were lost and won, as the Mussulman powers or fresh crusaders from
-Europe had the upper hand. ♦Fall of Acre, 1291.♦ With the fall of
-_Acre_, the Latin dominion on the Syrian mainland came to an end. The
-land won by the Western Christians from the Mussulman went back to the
-disciples of the Prophet. The land won by the Western Christian from
-the Eastern, and the land where the Eastern Christian still maintained
-his independence, held out longer.
-
-♦Cyprus.♦
-
-These were the kingdoms of _Cyprus_ and _Armenia_. ♦Famagosta Genoese.♦
-The frontier of Cyprus hardly admitted of geographical change, unless
-it were when, for a part of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,
-the city and haven of _Famagosta_ passed to Genoa. ♦Connexion between
-Cyprus and Jerusalem.♦ The kings of Cyprus however claimed the crown of
-Jerusalem, and sometimes, before the whole Syrian coast was lost, they
-really held this or that piece of territory on the mainland. ♦Armenia
-acknowledges the Western Emperor, 1190.♦ Meanwhile the Armenian kingdom
-in some sort entered the Western world, when its king, after receiving
-one confirmation from the Eastern Emperor, thought it wise to receive
-another from the Western Emperor also. ♦1342.♦ The kingdom, though
-sadly cut short by its Mussulman neighbours, lived on under native
-princes till the middle of the fourteenth century. ♦Connexion between
-Armenia and Cyprus, 1393.♦ Then the fragments of the kingdom passed,
-first to a branch of the Cypriot royal family, and then to the reigning
-king of Cyprus. But the first joint reign was the last. ♦End of Armenia
-and Cyprus, 1489.♦ The remnant of independent Armenia was swallowed up
-by the Mameluke lords of Syria, while Cyprus lingered on till Saint
-Mark and his commonwealth became the heirs of its last king.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The kingdom of Cyprus forms a link between the Latin states in Syria
-and those which arose in Romania after the crusading capture of
-Constantinople. And these last again fall into two classes. ♦Frank
-principalities in Greece. | Possessions of the maritime commonwealths.♦
-There are the Frank principalities on the mainland of Greece, and
-there are the lands, chiefly insular, which fell to the lot of the
-maritime commonwealths of the West and of their citizens. Among these
-the first place belongs to the great commonwealth which had now cast
-off all traces of allegiance to the Empire. ♦Genoa.♦ _Genoa_, which had
-no share in the original partition of the Empire, obtained several
-points of Imperial territory, both for the commonwealth itself and for
-particular Genoese citizens. ♦Venice.♦ But the part played by Genoa
-in the East is small beside the great and abiding dominion of Venice.
-No result of the partition was greater than the field which it gave
-to Venetian growth. ♦Comparison between the two.♦ The position of the
-two commonwealths is different. Genoa was a mere stranger in the East;
-Venice was in a manner at home. Once an outlying possession of the
-Empire, her really great historical position is due to her share in its
-overthrow.
-
-
-§ 4. _The Eastern Dominion of Venice and Genoa._
-
-We have already seen the origin of the Venetian state, and the
-beginning of Venetian rule over the Slavonic coasts of the Hadriatic.
-♦Connexion of the Dalmatian and Greek dominion of Venice.♦ The Eastern
-dominion of Venice now began, and, in a strictly geographical view, her
-Istrian and Dalmatian dominion cannot be separated from her Albanian
-and purely Greek dominion. But Venice did not become a great European
-power till she passed from the Slavonic lands whose connexion with the
-Empire was nominal or precarious into the Albanian and Greek lands
-which were among its immediate possessions. ♦Effect of the partition
-on Venice.♦ The greatness of Venice dates from that partition of the
-Empire which was the surest proof that she had wholly cast aside her
-Byzantine allegiance. ♦Comparison between Venice and Sicily.♦ In this
-point of view the history of Venice may be compared and contrasted
-with the history of Sicily. In each case, a part of the dominions of
-the Eastern Rome grew into a separate power; that power passed, so
-to speak, from Eastern Europe to Western, and, in its new Western
-character, it appeared as a conqueror in the Eastern lands. But, as
-Venice and Sicily parted from the Empire in different ways, so their
-later relations to the Empire were widely different. The Sicilian state
-began in actual conquests made by foreign invaders at the expense of
-the Empire. Venice was a dependency of the Empire which gradually
-drifted into independence. Thus Sicily became more thoroughly Western
-than Venice. The attempts of the kings, both of the whole Sicilian
-kingdom and of its divided parts, to establish an Eastern dominion were
-attacks from without, and were not really lasting. ♦Venice inherits
-the position of the Empire.♦ But Venice, whose princes were lords of
-one fourth and one eighth of the Empire of Romania,[30] took up in
-some sort the position of the Empire itself. If she destroyed one
-bulwark against the Mussulman, she set up another. As long as Venice
-was really a great power, her main interests lay east of the Hadriatic.
-♦Importance of the fourth crusade in Venetian history.♦ The fourth
-crusade was her turning point. It was at once the beginning of her
-Greek dominion and the recovery of her Dalmatian dominion.
-
-♦Territory assigned to Venice by the Act of Partition.♦
-
-The scheme of partition gave to Venice a vast dominion, insular and
-continental. She was to be mistress of the Hadriatic and Ionian seas.
-To her were assigned, not only the islands off the west coast of the
-Empire, but the whole western coast itself, from the north of Albania
-to the southern point of Peloponnêsos. She was to have some points
-in the Ægæan, among them _Oreos_ and _Karystos_ at the two ends of
-Euboia. She was to have her quarter of the capital, with a Thracian
-and an Asiatic dominion, including, according to some versions, the
-strange allotment of _Lazia_ at the east of the Euxine[31]. ♦Her actual
-possessions.♦ The actual possessions of Venice in the East have a
-very different look. Much of the territory which was assigned to the
-republic never became hers, while she obtained large possessions which
-were not assigned to her. ♦Her dominion primarily Hadriatic.♦ But the
-main point, the dominion of the Hadriatic, was never forgotten, though
-some both of her earliest and of her latest conquests lay beyond its
-necessary range.
-
-♦Possessions not assigned by the partition. | Crete. 1206-1669.♦
-
-Among those possessions of Venice which were not assigned to her in the
-act of partition was her greatest and most lasting possession of all,
-the island of _Crete_. ♦1645-1669.♦ This she won almost at the first
-moment of the conquest, and she kept it for more than four centuries
-and a half, till the war of _Candia_ handed over all Crete, save two
-fortresses, to the Ottoman. ♦Acquisition of Cyprus. 1489.♦ Before
-this loss, Saint Mark had won and lost another great island which lay
-altogether beyond the scheme of the Latin conquerors of Constantinople.
-Late in the fifteenth century the republic succeeded the Latin kings
-in the possession of _Cyprus_. ♦Loss of Cyprus, 1571.♦ But this was
-held for less than a century. Cyprus, like Crete and Sicily, was a
-special scene of struggle between European and barbarian powers. But it
-shared the fate, not of Sicily but of Crete, and became the solid prize
-of the Ottoman, when Christendom won the barren laurels of Lepanto.
-♦Occupation of Thessalonikê, 1426-1430.♦ Another possession which lay
-out of the usual course of Venetian dominion was the short occupation
-of _Thessalonikê_. Bought of a Greek despot, it was after four years
-taken by the Turk. Had Thessalonikê been kept, it might have passed as
-a late compensation to the republic for the early loss of Hadrianople
-and her other Thracian territory.
-
-♦Venetian power both Dalmatian and Greek.♦
-
-But the true scene of Venetian enterprise in the East is primarily
-the Hadriatic, and next to that, the coasts and islands of the Ægæan.
-She remained both a Dalmatian and a Greek power down to the moment of
-her overthrow, and, at the moment of her overthrow, it was not eighty
-years since she had ceased to be a Peloponnesian and an Ægæan power.
-The Greek dominion of Venice was an enlargement of her Dalmatian
-dominion. ♦Taking of Zara, 1202.♦ It is significant that Zara was
-taken—not for the first or the last time—on the way to the taking of
-Constantinople. ♦Hadriatic dominion of Venice.♦ Already mistress, or
-striving to be mistress, of the northern part of the eastern coast of
-the Hadriatic, the partition of the Empire opened to Venice the hope
-of becoming mistress of the southern part. Mistress of the whole coast
-she never was at any one moment; one point was gained and another lost.
-But extension in those lands was steadily aimed at for more than seven
-hundred years, and the greater part of the eastern Hadriatic coast has
-been, at one time or another, under Venetian rule.
-
-The story of Venetian dominion in these parts cannot be kept apart
-from the story of the neighbouring Slavonic lands. The states of
-Servia and Croatia were from the beginning the inland neighbours
-of the Dalmatian coast cities. ♦Servian districts on the coast.♦
-The river Tzettina may pass as the boundary between the Servian and
-Croatian states. _Pagania_ on the Narenta, _Zachloumia_ between the
-Narenta and Ragusa, _Terbounia_, represented by the modern _Trebinje_,
-the coast district of the _Canali_, _Dioklea_, taking in the modern
-Montenegro with the coast as far as the Drin—_Skodra_ or _Scutari_ on
-its lake, the harbours of _Spizza_, _Antivari_, and _Dulcigno_, were
-all originally Servian. ♦The Dalmatian cities.♦ The Dalmatian coast
-cities, _Dekatera_ or _Cattaro_, _Raousion_ or _Ragusa_, _Tragourion_
-or _Traü_, _Diadora_, _Jadera_, or _Zara_, formed a Roman fringe
-on what had become a Slavonic body. It was not even a continuous
-fringe, as the Slaves came down to the sea at more than one point.
-♦Pagania.♦ _Pagania_ above all, the land of the heathen Narentines,
-cut Roman Dalmatia into two marked parts. ♦The Islands.♦ It even took
-in most of the great islands, _Curzola_—once _Black Korkyra_—_Meleda_,
-_Lesina_—once _Pharos_—and others. At the separation of the two Empires
-the Croatian power was strongest in those lands. ♦Croatia under Charles
-the Great, 806-810.♦ The wars of Charles the Great left the coast
-cities to the Eastern Empire, while inland Dalmatia and Croatia passed
-under Frankish rule. ♦825-830.♦ Presently Croatia won its independence
-of the Western Empire, while the coast cities were practically lost by
-the Eastern. ♦Settlement under Basil the Macedonian, 868-878.♦ Under
-Basil the Macedonian the Imperial authority was admitted, in name at
-least, both by the cities and by the Croatian prince. ♦First Venetian
-Conquest, 995-997.♦ More than a century later came the first Venetian
-conquest, which was looked on at Venice as a deliverance of the cities
-from Croatian rule. The pagan power on the Narenta was destroyed,
-and the Duke of Venice took the title of _Duke of Dalmatia_. But all
-this involved no formal separation from the Empire.[32] ♦The cities
-under Croatia, 1052. | Dalmatian Kingdom, 1062.♦ Such a separation
-may be held to have taken place in the middle of the next century,
-when the cities again passed under Croatian rule, and when the taking
-of the title of _King of Dalmatia_ by Croatian Kresimir may pass for
-an assertion of complete independence. ♦Magyar Kingdom of Croatia,
-1091; | of Dalmatia, 1102.♦ But the kingdoms, first of Croatia, then
-of Dalmatia, were presently swallowed up by the growing power of the
-Magyar. Then comes a time in which this city and that passes to and
-fro between Venice and Hungary. ♦Croatia and Dalmatia restored to the
-Empire, 1171. | Dalmatia passes to Hungary.♦ Under Manuel Komnênos the
-whole of Croatia and Dalmatia was fully restored to the Empire; but ten
-years later the cities again passed to Hungary. This was their final
-separation from the Empire, and by this time Venice had thrown off all
-Byzantine allegiance.
-
-♦Struggle for the dominion of Dalmatia.♦
-
-From this time the history of Croatia forms part of the history of
-the Hungarian kingdom. The history of Dalmatia becomes part of the
-long struggle of Venice for Hadriatic dominion. For five hundred years
-the cities and islands of the whole Hadriatic coast were lost and won
-over and over again in the strifes of the powers of the mainland.
-These were in Dalmatia the Hungarian and Bosnian Kings; more to the
-south they were the endless powers which rose and fell in Albania and
-northern Greece. In after times the Ottoman took the place of all.
-And many of the cities were able, amid the disputes of their stronger
-neighbours, to make themselves independent commonwealths for a longer
-or shorter time. ♦Independence of Ragusa;♦ _Ragusa_, above all, kept
-her independence during the whole time, modified in later times by a
-certain external dependence on the Turk. ♦of Polizza.♦ And the almost
-invisible inland commonwealth of _Polizza_—a Slavonic San Marino—kept
-its separate being into the present century.
-
-♦Fluctuations between Venice and Hungary, 1315.♦
-
-The crusading conquest of Zara was the beginning of this long
-struggle. The frontier fluctuated during the whole of the thirteenth
-century; early in the fourteenth the whole coast was again Venetian.
-Meanwhile the republic was striving to make good her position further
-south. The Epeirot despotat long hindered her establishment either
-on the coasts or the islands of northern Greece. ♦Final conquest of
-Durazzo and Corfu, 1206. | 1216.♦ Durazzo, the central point between
-the older and the newer Venetian range, was won, along with Corfu, in
-the earliest days of the conquest; but they were presently lost, to
-come back again in after times. ♦History of Corfu.♦ The famous island
-of Korkyra or Corfu has a special history of its own. No part of Greece
-has been so often cut off from the Greek body. Under Pyrrhos and
-Agathoklês, no less than under Michael Angelos and Roger, it obeyed an
-Epeirot or a Sicilian master. It was among the first parts of Greece to
-pass permanently under Roman dependence. ♦Second Venetian conquest of
-Corfu, 1386-1797.♦ At last, after yet another turn of Sicilian rule, it
-passed for four hundred years to the great commonwealth. In our own day
-Corfu was not added to free Greece till long after the deliverance of
-Attica and Peloponnêsos. But, under so many changes of foreign masters,
-the island has always remained part of Europe and of Christendom.
-Alone among the Greek lands, Corfu has never passed under barbarian
-rule. ♦1716. | 1800.♦ It has seen the Turk only, for one moment as an
-invader, for another moment as a nominal overlord.
-
-♦Greek advance of Venice.♦
-
-The second Venetian occupation of Corfu was the beginning of a great
-advance among the neighbouring islands. But, during the hundred
-and eighty years between the two occupations, the main fields of
-Venetian action lay more to the north and more to the south. The Greek
-acquisitions of the republic at this time were in Peloponnêsos and the
-Ægæan islands. ♦Modon and Coron, 1206.♦ On the mainland she won, at
-the very beginning of Latin settlement in the East, the south-western
-peninsula of Peloponnêsos, with the towns of _Methônê_ and
-_Kôrônê_—otherwise _Modon_ and _Coron_—which she held for nearly three
-hundred years. ♦History of Euboia.♦ Among the Ægæan islands Venice
-began very early to win an influence in the greatest of their number,
-that of _Euboia_, often disguised under the specially barbarous name
-of _Negropont_.[33] The history of that island, the endless shiftings
-between its Latin lords and the neighbouring powers of all kinds, is
-the most perplexed part of the perplexed Greek history of the time.
-♦Complete occupation of Euboia, 1390.♦ Venice, mixed up in its affairs
-throughout, obtained in the end complete possession, but not till after
-the second occupation of Corfu. ♦Turkish conquest of Euboia, 1470.♦ The
-island was kept till the Turkish conquest eighty years later. Several
-other islands were held by the republic at different times. ♦Loss of
-the Ægæan islands, 1718.♦ Of these _Tênos_ and _Mykonos_ were not
-finally lost till Venice was in the eighteenth century confined to the
-western seas.
-
-Between the first and the second occupation of Corfu, the Venetian
-power in Dalmatia had risen and fallen again. ♦Peace of Zara, 1358.
-| Dalmatia Hungarian.♦ By the peace of Zara, Lewis the Great of Hungary
-shut out Venice altogether from the Dalmatian coasts, and, as Dalmatian
-King, he required the Venetian Duke to give up his Dalmatian title.
-♦New advance of Venice.♦ Later in the century Venice again gained
-ground, and her Dalmatian, Albanian, and Greek possessions began to
-draw near together, and to form one whole, though never a continuous
-whole. ♦1378-1455. | Recovery of Dalmatia.♦ In the space of about
-eighty years, amid many fluctuations towards Hungary, Bosnia, and
-Genoa—a new claimant called into rivalry by the war of Chioggia—Venice
-again became mistress of the greater part of Dalmatia. Some districts
-however formed part of the Duchy of _Saint Sava_, and Hungary kept part
-of the inland territory, with the fortress of _Clissa_. The point where
-the Hadriatic coast turns nearly due south may be taken as the boundary
-of the lasting and nearly continuous dominion of the Republic; but for
-the present the Venetian power went on spreading far south of that
-point. ♦Advance in Albania and Greece, 1392.♦ On the second occupation
-of Corfu followed the acquisition of _Durazzo_, _Alessio_, and of the
-Albanian _Skodra_ or _Scutari_. ♦1401. | 1407.♦ _Butrinto_ and the
-ever memorable _Parga_ put themselves under Venetian protection, and
-_Lepanto_ was ceded by a Prince of Achaia. ♦1388.♦ In Peloponnêsos the
-Messenian towns were still held, and to them were now added _Argos_
-and its port of _Nauplia_, known in Italian as _Napoli di Romania_.
-♦1408-1415. | 1419. | 1423.♦ _Patras_ was held for a few years,
-_Monembasia_ was won, and the isle of _Aigina_, which might almost pass
-for part of Peloponnêsos. On the other side of Greece, the possession
-of Corfu led to the acquisition of the other so-called Ionian
-Islands. ♦The Western Islands. 1449.♦ The prince of _Kephallênia_, of
-_Zakynthos_ or _Zante_, and of _Leukadia_ or _Santa Maura_, found it to
-his interest, for fear of the advancing Ottoman, to put his dominions
-under the overlordship of Saint Mark.
-
-♦Venice the champion against the Turk.♦
-
-This marks an epoch in the history of Venice and of Europe. The
-championship of Christendom against the Turk now passes from the New
-Rome to the hardly less Byzantine city in the Lagoons. The short
-occupation of Thessalonikê may pass for the beginning of the struggle.
-Later in the fifteenth century, Venice and the Turk were meeting at
-every point. ♦Loss of Argos, 1463.♦ In Peloponnêsos, _Argos_ was first
-lost to the Turk; at the same moment he appeared far to the north, and
-gradually occupied the Bosnian and Hungarian districts of Dalmatia.
-♦1505-1699.♦ Throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
-the inland districts and the smaller towns were lost over and over
-again, but the Republic always kept the chief coast cities, _Zara_,
-_Sebenico_, and _Spalato_. ♦Losses of Venice.♦ Meanwhile, to the south
-of Dalmatia, the Venetian power went back everywhere, except in the
-western islands. ♦1474-1478.♦ On the mainland _Croja_, the city of
-Scanderbeg, was held for a while. ♦1479.♦ But both Croja and Skodra
-were won by Mahomet the Conqueror, and the treaty which ended this
-war left to the Republic nothing on the coast of Albania and Northern
-Greece, save _Durazzo_, _Antivari_, and _Butrinto_. ♦1500.♦ The treaty
-which followed the next war took away _Durazzo_, _Butrinto_, and
-_Lepanto_. ♦The Western Islands, 1481-1483.♦ A series of revolutions
-in the islands of which the Republic already held the overlordship
-placed them under her immediate dominion, to be struggled for against
-the Turk. ♦1485. | 1502.♦ By the next peace _Zakynthos_ was kept, on
-payment of a tribute to the Sultan; _Kephallênia_ passed to the Turk,
-to be won back seventeen years later, and then to be permanently kept.
-♦1502-1504.♦ _Leukadia_ was at the same time won for a moment and
-lost again. ♦Loss of the Peloponnesian fortresses, 1502. | 1540.♦ In
-Peloponnêsos _Modon_ and _Koron_ were lost along with _Durazzo_ and
-_Lepanto_, and the great naval war with Suleiman cost the Republic her
-last Peloponnesian possessions, _Nauplia_ and _Monembasia_, together
-with all her Ægæan islands, except _Tênos_ and _Mykonos_. The strictly
-Greek dominion of Venice was now for a hundred and forty years confined
-to the islands, and, after the loss of Cyprus and Crete, almost wholly
-to the Western islands. But after the loss of Crete came a revival
-of the Venetian power, like one of the old revivals of the Empire.
-♦Venetian conquest of Peloponnêsos, 1685-1699.♦ The great campaigns
-of Francesco Morosini, confirmed by the peace of Carlowitz, freed all
-Peloponnêsos from the Turk, and added it to the dominion of Saint Mark.
-
-The same treaty confirmed Venice in the possession of the greater part
-of Dalmatia. ♦Loss of Peloponnêsos, 1715-1718.♦ The next war cost her
-the whole of Peloponnêsos, her two Cretan fortresses, and her two
-remaining Ægæan islands. She now withdrew wholly to the western side
-of Greece, where she had again won _Leukadia_ and _Butrinto_, and
-had enlarged her dominion by the acquisition of _Prevesa_. ♦Extent
-of Venetian dominion in Greece in the last century.♦ During the last
-century the Venetian possessions in Greece consisted of the seven
-so-called Ionian islands, with the continental posts of _Butrinto_,
-_Prevesa_, and _Parga_.
-
-♦Venetian territory in Dalmatia.♦
-
-The Dalmatian territory of the Republic during the same time consisted
-of a considerable inland district in the north-east, and of the whole
-coast down to _Budua_, except where the territory of independent
-Ragusa broke the continuity of her rule. ♦Ragusan frontier.♦ Ragusa
-was so jealous of the mightier commonwealth that she preferred the
-Turk as a neighbour. At two points of the coast, at _Klek_ at the
-bottom of the gulf formed by the long peninsula of Sabbioncello, and
-again at _Sutorina_ on the _Bocche_, the Ottoman territory came down
-to the sea, so as to isolate the dominion of Ragusa from the Venetian
-possessions on either side. Such was the frontier of the two Hadriatic
-commonwealths down to the days when, first Venice and then Ragusa,
-passed away.
-
-♦Possession of Venetian cities.♦
-
-Meanwhile, besides the direct possessions of the Venetian commonwealth,
-there were other lands within the former dominions of the Eastern
-Empire which were held by Venetian lords, as vassals either of the
-republic or of the Empire of Romania. It would be endless to trace out
-the revolutions of every Ægæan island; but one among the few which
-claim our notice became the seat of a dynasty which proved, next to the
-Venetian commonwealth itself, the most long-lived Latin power in the
-Greek world. ♦The Duchy of Naxos.♦ This is the duchy variously known as
-that of _Naxos_, of the _Dôdekannêsos_, and of the _Archipelago_, the
-barbarous name given to the Ægæan or _White Sea_.[34] ♦1207. | 1566.♦
-Founded in the early years of Latin settlement by the Venetian Marco
-Sanudo, the island duchy lived on as a Latin state, commonly as a
-vassal or tributary state of some greater power, till the last half of
-the sixteenth century. ♦Annexed by the Turk, 1579. | 1617.♦ Shorn of
-many of its islands by its Ottoman overlord, granted afresh to a Jewish
-duke, it passed thirteen years later under the immediate dominion of
-the Sultan. Most of the _Kyklades_ were either parts of this duchy or
-fiefs held of it by other Venetian families. All came into the hands of
-the Turk; but some of the very smallest remained merely tributary, and
-not fully annexed, into the seventeenth century.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Settlements of Genoa and of Genoese citizens.♦
-
-The year which saw the Naxian duchy pass from Latin to Hebrew hands saw
-the fall of the most remarkable of the Genoese settlements in the Greek
-lands. These settlements, like those of Venice, formed two classes,
-those which were possessions of the Genoese commonwealth itself and
-those which came into the hands of Genoese citizens. ♦1304.♦ Genoa
-had no share in the fourth Crusade; she had therefore no share in the
-division of the Empire, though, after the restoration of Byzantine
-rule, her colony of _Galata_ made her almost a sharer in the capital
-of the Empire. ♦Possessions of Genoa on the Euxine, 1461.♦ But the
-seat of direct Genoese dominion in the East was not the Ægæan but the
-Euxine. On the southern coast of that sea the republic held _Amastris_
-and _Amisos_, and in the Tauric Chersonêsos was her great colony of
-_Kaffa_. ♦1475.♦ The Euxine dominion of Genoa came to an end during the
-later half of the fifteenth century; but it outlived the Empires both
-of Constantinople and of Trebizond.
-
-The Ægæan dominion of the citizens of Genoa was longer lived than the
-Euxine dominion of Genoa herself. ♦Lesbos. 1354-1462.♦ The family of
-Gattilusio received _Lesbos_ as an Imperial fief in the fourteenth
-century, and kept it till after the fall of Constantinople. But the
-most remarkable Genoese settlement in the Ægæan was that of _Chios_.
-♦The Zaccaria at Chios. 1304-1346. | The Maona. 1346-1566.♦ First held
-by princes of the Genoese house of Zaccaria, the island, with some of
-its neighbours, passed into the hands of a Genoese commercial company
-or _Maona_, a body somewhat like our own East India Company. ♦1566.♦
-_Samos_, _Kôs_, and _Phôkaia_ on the mainland, came at different times
-under their power, and Chios did not fall under the Ottoman yoke till
-the same year as the duchy of Naxos.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One more insular dominion remains, chiefly famous as the possession,
-not indeed of a commonwealth, but of an order. ♦Revolutions of Rhodes.♦
-In a few years of the thirteenth century the island of _Rhodes_ passed
-through all possible revolutions. ♦1233.♦ In the first moment of the
-Latin conquest, it became an independent Greek principality, like
-Epeiros and Trebizond. ♦1246.♦ Then it admitted the overlordship of the
-Nicene Emperors. ♦1249.♦ Seized by Genoa, it was presently won back to
-the Empire, till seventy years later it was again seized by the Knights
-of Saint John. ♦Establishment of the Knights, 1310. | 1315.♦ From
-Rhodes as a centre, the order established its dominion over _Kôs_ and
-some other islands, and on some points of the Asiatic coast, especially
-their famous fortress of _Halikarnassos_. ♦1480. | 1522.♦ They beat
-back Mahomet the Conqueror, but they yielded to Suleiman the Lawgiver
-forty years later. ♦Their removal to Malta, 1530.♦ Banished from
-Rhodes, the order received _Malta_ from Charles the Fifth as a fief of
-his Sicilian kingdom. We are thus brought back to the island which had
-been lost to the Eastern Empire for seven hundred years. ♦1566.♦ The
-knights in their new home beat back their former conqueror Suleiman,
-and kept their island till the times of confusion. ♦Revolutions of
-Malta. | 1814.♦ Held by France, held by England, held, nominally at
-least, by its own Sicilian overlord, this fragment of the Empire of
-Leo and of the kingdom of Roger finally passed at the peace under the
-acknowledged rule of England.
-
-
-§ 5. _The Principalities of the Greek Mainland._
-
-The Greek possessions of Venice, of Genoa, and of the Knights of Saint
-John, consisted mainly of islands and detached points of coast. The
-Venetian conquest of Peloponnêsos was the only exception on a great
-scale. In this they are distinguished from the several powers, Greek
-and Frank, which arose on the Greek mainland. We have already heard,
-and we shall hear again, of the Greek despotat of Epeiros, which for
-a moment grew into an Empire of Thessalonikê. Among the Latin powers
-two rose to European importance. ♦Duchy of Athens. | Principality of
-Achaia.♦ These are the _duchy of Athens_ in central Greece—in _Hellas_,
-according to the Byzantine nomenclature—and the principality of
-_Achaia_ or _Môraia_ in Peloponnêsos. ♦Use of the name Môraia.♦ This
-last name, of uncertain origin,[35] has come, in its Italian shape,
-to be a modern name of the peninsula itself. But the name of _Môraia_
-seems strictly to belong to the domain lands of the principality, and
-never to go beyond the bounds of the principality, which at no time
-took in the whole of Peloponnêsos.
-
-Both these powers were founded in the first days of the Latin conquest,
-and the Turk did not finally annex the territories of either till after
-the fall of Constantinople. But while the Athenian duchy lived on to
-become itself the prize of Mahomet the Conqueror, the lands of the
-Achaian principality had already gone back into Greek hands. ♦Lordship
-of Athens. 1204-1205.♦ The lordship of Athens, founded by Otho de la
-Roche, was first a fief of the kingdom of Thessalonikê, then of the
-Empire of Romania. ♦The Duchy.♦ But it was by the grant of Saint Lewis
-of France that the title of _Great Lord_[36] was exchanged for that of
-_Duke_. ♦1260. | The Catalan Conquest, 1311.♦ The duchy fell into the
-hands of the Catalan Great Company, who in central Greece grew from
-mere ravagers into territorial occupiers. ♦The Sicilian Dukes.♦ They
-brought with them the Thessalian land of _Neopatra_, and transferred
-the nominal title of _Duke of Athens and Neopatra_ to princes of the
-Sicilian branch of the House of Aragon. Thus the two claimants of the
-Sicilian crown were brought face to face on old Greek ground. ♦Dukes
-of the house of Acciauoli.♦ The duchy next passed to the Florentine
-house of Acciauoli, which already held Corinth, Megara, Sikyôn, and the
-greater part of Argolis. But their Peloponnesian dominion passed to
-the Byzantine lords of the peninsula, and Neopatra fell into the hands
-of the Turk. ♦1390.♦ The Athenian duchy itself, taking in Attica and
-Boiôtia, lived on, the vassal in turn of the Angevin king at Naples, of
-the Greek despot of Peloponnêsos, and of the Ottoman Sultan. ♦Ottoman
-conquest. 1456-1460. | 1466. | 1687.♦ Annexed at last to the Ottoman
-dominions, Athens remained in bondage till our own day, save only two
-momentary occupations by Venice, one soon after the first conquest, the
-other in the great war of Morosini.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Salôna and Bodonitza. The Principality of Achaia.♦
-
-The smaller principalities of _Salôna_ and _Bodonitza_ play their part
-in the history of the Athenian duchy; but we turn to the chief Latin
-power of Peloponnêsos, the principality of Achaia. The shiftings of its
-dynasties and feudal relations are endless; its geographical history is
-simpler. The peninsula was, at the time of the Latin conquest, already
-beginning to fall away from the Empire. ♦1205.♦ King Boniface of
-Thessalonikê had to win the land from its Greek lord Leôn Sgouros. The
-princes of the house of Champlitte and Villehardouin were his vassals.
-They had to struggle with the Venetian settlement in Messênia, and with
-the Greek despot of Epeiros, who, oddly enough, held Corinth, Argos,
-and Nauplia. ♦1210-1212.♦ These last towns were won by the Latins, and
-became an Achaian fief in the hands of Otho of Athens. ♦Its greatest
-extent. 1248.♦ Before the end of half a century, the conquest of the
-whole peninsula, save the Venetian possessions, was completed by the
-taking of _Monembasia_. Things looked as if, now that the Latin power
-was waning at Constantinople, a stronger Latin power had arisen in
-Peloponnêsos. A crowd of Greek lands, Zakynthos, Naxos, Euboia, Athens,
-even Epeiros and Thessalonikê, acknowledged at one time or another the
-supremacy of Achaia. But Latin Achaia, like Latin Constantinople, had
-to yield to revived Greek energy. ♦Recovery of lands in Peloponnêsos
-by the Empire 1262.♦ The Empire won back the three Lacedæmonian
-fortresses,[37] and presently made _Kalabryta_ in northern Arkadia a
-Greek outpost. ♦1263.♦ Here the Greek advance stopped for a while.
-
-♦Angevin overlordship. 1278.♦
-
-Before the end of the century the Frank principality lost its
-independence. It passed into vassalage to the Angevin crown, and
-was held, sometimes by the Neapolitan kings themselves, sometimes
-by princes of their house—some of them nominal Emperors of
-Romania—sometimes by princes of Savoy, who carried the Achaian name
-into Northern Italy.[38] ♦Dismemberment of the principality. 1337.♦
-In the course of the fourteenth century the principality crumbled
-away. ♦1356.♦ _Patras_ became an ecclesiastical principality under the
-overlordship of the Pope of the Old Rome. Argos and its port became
-a separate lordship. ♦1358.♦ Both of these passed for a longer or a
-shorter time under the power of Venice. Corinth and the north-east
-corner of the peninsula passed to the Acciauoli. ♦Byzantine advance.
-1348-1383.♦ Meantime the Byzantine province grew. For some while,
-under despots of the house of Kantakouzênos, it might almost pass for
-an independent Greek state. ♦1381. | 1387. | 1442.♦ Notwithstanding
-the inroads of the Navarrese, the second Spanish invaders of Greece,
-and the first appearance of the Ottoman, the Greek power advanced,
-till it took in all Peloponnêsos save the Venetian towns. ♦Conquests
-of Constantine Palaiologos.♦ The last Constantine even appeared as a
-conqueror at Athens and in central Greece. ♦1458-1460.♦ Then came
-more Ottoman inroads, dismemberment, Albanian colonization, final
-annexation by the Turk. ♦Successive Turkish conquests of Peloponnêsos.♦
-But the last conqueror has been twice driven to conquer Peloponnêsos
-afresh. The first revolt under Venetian support was crushed a few
-years after the first conquest. ♦1463-1540. | 1670. | 1685.♦ Then the
-Turk gradually gathered in the Venetian ports, and the whole peninsula
-was his, save so far as _Maina_ kept on a kind of wild independence
-almost down to the last Venetian conquest. The complete and unbroken
-possession of all Peloponnêsos by the Ottoman has never filled up the
-whole of any one century.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Despotat of Epeiros.♦
-
-We have seen how the despotat of Epeiros parted away from the momentary
-Empire of Thessalonikê. The despots, like their neighbours, often found
-it convenient to acknowledge the overlordship of some other power,
-Venice, Nikaia, Sicily, or Achaia. The boundaries of their dominions
-were greatly cut short by the advance of the restored Empire and by
-the cessions to Manfred of Sicily. ♦Dismemberment of the despotat.♦ A
-state was left which took in old Epeiros, Akarnania, and Aitôlia, save
-the points on the coast which were held by other powers. _Arta_, the
-old _Ambrakia_, was, as in the days of Pyrrhos, its head. ♦1271-1318.
-| 1309.♦ Another branch reigned in _Great Blachia_ or Thessaly, with
-its capital at _Neopatra_, a capital presently lost to the Catalan
-invaders. ♦1318. | 1339. | Servian conquest. 1331-1355.♦ Next the
-greater part of Thessaly, and then Epeiros itself, were recovered by
-the Empire, and then all gradually passed under the Servian power. On
-the break-up of that power came a time of utter confusion and endless
-shiftings, which has however one marked feature. ♦Advance of the
-Albanians.♦ The Albanian race now comes fully to the front. Albanian
-settlers press into all the southern lands, and Albanian principalities
-stand forth on a level with those held by Greek and Latin lords.
-
-♦Kings of Albania of the house of Thopia, 1358-1392.♦
-
-The chief Albanian power which arose within the bounds of the despotat
-was the house of _Thopia_ in northern Epeiros. ♦1366.♦ They called
-themselves _Kings of Albania_; they won Durazzo from the Angevins,
-and their power lasted till that duchy passed to Venice. ♦Servian
-dynasty in Epeiros. 1359.♦ To the south of them, in southern Epeiros,
-Akarnania, and Aitolia, reigned a Servian dynasty, whose prince Stephen
-Urosh added Thessaly to his dominions, and called himself _Emperor of
-the Serbs and Greeks_.[39] ♦1363.♦ His western dominion passed from
-him. A Servian despot ruled at _Jôannina_, and an Albanian despot at
-_Arta_. ♦Kingdom of Thessaly. | Turkish conquest. | 1393.♦ But Thessaly
-went on as a kingdom, taking in the greater part of the land anciently
-so called,[40] a kingdom which was the first Hellenic land to pass
-under the power of the Turk. ♦1396.♦ Neopatra and Salôna followed,
-and the Ottoman power stretched to the Corinthian gulf, and parted
-asunder the still independent states of Western Greece from Attica and
-Peloponnêsos.
-
-In Epeiros the Servian and Albanian despots had both to yield to
-Italian houses. ♦Buondelmonti in Northern Epeiros.♦ Northern Epeiros
-passed to the Florentine house of _Buondelmonte_. ♦The house of Tocco.♦
-To the south arose a dynasty of greater interest, the Beneventan house
-of _Tocco_, the last independent princes in Western Greece. ♦1357.♦
-They first, as counts palatine, held Kephallênia and Zakynthos as a
-fief of the Latin Empire. ♦1362.♦ Then they won Leukadia with the ducal
-title. ♦1394.♦ They next began a continental dominion, first for a
-moment in Peloponnêsos, then more lastingly in the lands near their
-island duchy. ♦1405-1418.♦ Duke Charles of Leukadia gradually won all
-Epeiros save the Venetian posts; and he, his wife, and his heirs were
-called Despot of Romania, King of Epeiros, and even Empress of the
-Romans.[41] ♦Its effects.♦ This dynasty, though not long-lived on the
-mainland, is of real and abiding importance in the history of the Greek
-nation. The advance of the Albanians was checked; their settlements
-were thrust further north and further south, while the Beneventan
-dominions became and remained purely Greek. ♦Venetian and Turkish
-occupation. 1430.♦ Soon after the death of Duke Charles, the Turk won
-Jôannina and the greater part of Epeiros; but his son kept _Arta_ and
-its neighbourhood for nineteen years as a vassal of Venice. ♦1449.♦
-Then the dominions of Duke _Charles_ became the Turkish province of
-_Karlili_. ♦1449-1479. | 1481-1483.♦ The house of Tocco kept its island
-possessions for thirty years longer. Then they too passed to the
-Turk, to be recovered for a moment by their own Duke, and then to be
-struggled for between Turk and Venetian.
-
-♦Northern Albania.♦
-
-Meanwhile the strictly Albanian lands, from the Akrokeraunian point
-northwards, were subdued by the Turk, were freed, and subdued again.
-♦1414. | Turkish conquest. 1431.♦ Early in the fifteenth century the
-Turk won all Albania, except the Venetian posts. ♦Revolt. 1448.♦
-Seventeen years later came a revolt and a successful defence of
-the country, whose later stages are ennobled by the name of George
-Kastriota of Croja, the famous Scanderbeg. ♦Death of Scanderbeg. 1467.♦
-His death gave his land back to the Ottoman, while Croja itself was for
-a while held by Venice. The whole Greek and Albanian mainland was now
-divided between Turk and Venetian.
-
-♦The Empire of Trebizond.♦
-
-Lastly, we must not forget that Greek state which outlived all the
-rest. Far away, on the furthest bounds of the elder Empire, the Empire
-of _Trebizond_ had the honour of being the last remaining fragment
-of the Eastern Roman power. The rule of the Grand Komnênos survived
-the fall of Constantinople; it survived the conquest of Athens and
-Peloponnêsos.
-
-♦Origin of the Empire. 1204.♦
-
-We have seen the origin and early history of this power. After its
-western dominions passed to the Nicene Emperors and Sinôpê to the Turk,
-the Trapezuntine Empire was confined to the eastern part of the south
-coast of the Euxine, stretching over part of Iberia, and keeping the
-Imperial possessions in the Tauric Chersonêsos. Sometimes independent,
-sometimes tributary to Turks or Mongols, the power of Trebizond lived
-on for nearly eighty years as a distinct and rival Roman Empire.
-♦Agreement between Constantinople and Trebizond, 1281.♦ Then, when
-Constantinople was again in Greek hands, John Komnênos of Trebizond was
-content to acknowledge Michael Palaiologos as Emperor of the Romans,
-and to content himself with the style of ‘Emperor of all the East, of
-Iberia, and of _Perateia_.’ This last name means the _province beyond
-the sea_, in the Tauric Chersonêsos or _Crim_. We thus see that the
-style of ‘Emperor of the East,’ which it is sometimes convenient to
-give to him of Constantinople, strictly belongs to him of Trebizond.
-The new Empire of the East suffered many fluctuations of territory,
-chiefly at the hands of the neighbouring Turkomans. _Chalybia_,
-the land of iron, was lost; the coast-line was split asunder; the
-Empire bowed to Timour. ♦Turkish conquest of Trebizond; 1461.♦ But
-the capital and a large part of the coast bore up to the last, and
-did not pass under the Ottoman yoke till eight years after the fall
-of Constantinople. ♦of Perateia. 1472.♦ The outlying dependency of
-_Perateia_ or _Gothia_ was not conquered till eleven years later still.
-As the Tauric Chersonêsos had sheltered the last Greek commonwealth, it
-sheltered also the last Greek principality.
-
-
-§ 6. _The Slavonic States._
-
-The Greek and Frank states of which we have just been speaking arose,
-for the most part they directly arose, out of the Latin partition of
-the Empire. ♦Effects of the partition of the Empire on the Slavonic
-states.♦ On the Slavonic powers the effect of that partition was
-only indirect. Servia and Bulgaria had begun their second career of
-independence before the partition. The partition touched them only so
-far as the splitting up of the Empire into a number of small states
-took away all fear of their being again brought under its obedience. In
-Croatia and Dalmatia all trace of the Imperial power passed away. The
-Magyar held the inland parts; the question was whether the Magyar or
-the Venetian should hold the coast.
-
-♦Servia and Bulgaria.♦
-
-The chief independent Slavonic powers were those of _Servia_ and
-_Bulgaria_. Of these, Servia represents the unmixed Slave, as unmixed,
-that is, as any nation can be; Bulgaria represents the Slave brought
-under some measure of Turanian influence and mixture. The history of
-the purer race is the longer and the more brilliant. The Servian people
-made a longer resistance to the Turk than the Bulgarian people; they
-were the first to throw off his yoke; one part of them never submitted
-to his yoke at all. ♦Extent of Servia.♦ The oldest Servia, as we have
-seen, stretched far beyond the bounds of the present principality,
-and had a considerable Hadriatic sea-board, though interrupted by the
-Roman cities. Among the Zupans or princes of the many Servian tribes,
-the chief were the northern Grand-Zupans of _Desnica_ on the Drina,
-and the southern Grand-Zupans of _Dioklea_ or _Rascia_, so called from
-their capital _Rassa_, the modern _Novi-Bazar_. This last principality
-was the germ of the historical kingdom of Servia. ♦Relations to the
-Empire.♦ But till the fall of the old Empire, the Imperial claims
-over Servia were always asserted and were often enforced. ♦1018.♦
-Indeed common enmity to the Bulgarian, the momentary conqueror of
-Servia,[42] formed a tie between Servia and the Empire down to the
-complete incorporation of Servia by Basil the Second. ♦1040. | Conquest
-by Manuel Komnênos; 1148.♦ The successful revolt of Servia made room
-for more than one claimant of Servian dominion and kingship; but
-the Imperial claims remained, to be enforced again in their fulness
-by Manuel Komnênos. At last the Latin conquest relieved Servia from
-all danger on the part of Constantinople; Servia stood forth as an
-independent power under the kings of the house of Nemanja.
-
-♦Relations towards Hungary.♦
-
-They had to struggle against more dangerous enemies to the north in
-the Kings of Hungary. ♦Loss of Bosnia.♦ Even before the last Imperial
-conquest, the Magyars had cut away the western part of Servia, the land
-beyond the Drina, known as _Bosnia_ or _Rama_. Under the last name it
-gave the Hungarian princes one of their royal titles. ♦1286.♦ This
-land was more than once won back by Servia; but its tendency was to
-separation and to growth at the cost of Servia. ♦1326.♦ In the first
-half of the fourteenth century, Bosnia was enlarged by the Servian
-lands bordering on the Dalmatian coast, the lands of _Zachloumia_ and
-_Terbounia_, which were never permanently won back. So the lands on the
-Save, between the Drina and the Morava, taking in the modern capital
-of Belgrade, passed, in the endless shiftings of the frontier, at one
-time to Bulgaria and at another to Hungary. ♦Servian advance eastward
-and southward.♦ Servia, thus cut short to the north and west, was
-driven to advance southward and eastward, at the expense of Bulgaria
-and of the powers which had taken the place of the Empire on the
-lower Hadriatic coast. From the latter part of the thirteenth century
-onwards, Servia grew to be the greatest power in the south-eastern
-peninsula. ♦Her seaboard. 1296.♦ Shorn of her old Hadriatic seaboard,
-she gained a new and longer one, stretching from the mouths of Cattaro
-to Durazzo. ♦1319-1322.♦ Durazzo itself twice fell into Servian hands;
-but at the time of the highest power of Servia that city remained an
-Angevin outpost on the Servian mainland. ♦Reign of Stephen Dushan,
-1331-1355.♦ That highest power was reached in the reign of Stephen
-Dushan, who spread his dominions far indeed at the cost of Greeks and
-Franks, at the cost of his old Slavonic neighbours and of the rising
-powers of Albania. In the new Servian capital of _Skopia_, _Skoupi_,
-or _Skopje_, the Tzar Stephen took an Imperial crown as _Emperor of
-the Serbs and Greeks_. ♦1346. | The Servian Empire.♦ The new Empire
-stretched uninterruptedly from the Danube to the Corinthian gulf. At
-one end Bosnia was won back; at the other end the Servian rule was
-spread over Aitôlia and Thessaly, over Macedonia and Thrace as far as
-_Christopolis_. It only remained to give a head to this great body, and
-to make New Rome the seat of the Servian power.
-
-♦Break up of the Servian power, 1355.♦
-
-But the Servian tzardom broke in pieces at the death of the great
-Servian Tzar; and before he died, the Ottoman was already in Europe. In
-fact the historical result of the great advance of Servia was to split
-up the whole of the Greek and Slavonic lands, and to leave no power of
-either race able to keep out the barbarian. We have seen how the titles
-of Stephen’s Empire lived for a generation in the Greek part of his
-dominions.[43] In Macedonia and Thrace several small principalities
-sprang up, and a power arose at Skodra of which we shall have to speak
-again. To the north Bosnia fell away, and carried Zachloumia with it.
-♦Later Kingdom of Servia.♦ Servia itself comes out of the chaos as a
-separate kingdom, a kingdom wholly cut off from the sea, but stretching
-southward as far as _Prisrend_, and again holding the lands between the
-Drina and the Morava. ♦Conquests and deliverances of Servia. 1375.♦ The
-Turk first took _Nish_, and brought the kingdom under tribute. ♦1389.♦
-The overthrow at Kossovo made Servia wholly dependent. ♦1403.♦ With
-the fall of Bajazet it again became free for a generation. ♦1438.♦
-Then the Turk won the whole land except Belgrade. ♦1442. | 1444.♦ Then
-the campaign of Huniades restored Servia as a free kingdom; the event
-of Varna again brought her under tribute. ♦1459.♦ At last Mahomet the
-Conqueror incorporated all Servia, except Belgrade, with his dominions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Kingdom of Bosnia.♦
-
-
-The history of _Bosnia_, as a really separate power, holding its own
-place in Europe, begins with the break-up of the momentary Servian
-Empire. ♦Its origin, 1376.♦ The Ban Stephen Tvartko became the first
-king of the last Bosnian dynasty, under the nominal superiority of the
-Hungarian crown. Thus, at the very moment of the coming of the Turk, a
-kingdom of Latin creed and associations became the first power among
-the south-eastern Slaves. For a while it seemed as if Bosnia was going
-to take the place which had been held by Servia. ♦Greatest extent of
-Bosnia, 1382.♦ The Bosnian kingdom at its greatest extent took in all
-the present Bosnia and Herzegovina, with, it would seem, all Dalmatia
-except Zara, and the north-west corner of Servia stretching beyond
-the Drina. But the Bosnian power was broken at Kossovo as well as
-that of Servia. ♦Loss of Jayce, 1391.♦ In the time of confusion which
-followed, Jayce in the north-west corner became a power connected with
-both Hungary and Bosnia, while the Turk established himself in the
-extreme south. The Turk was driven out for a while, but the kingdom
-was dismembered to form a new Latin power. ♦Duchy of Saint Saba or
-Herzegovina. 1440.♦ The Lord of the old Zachloumia, a Bosnian vassal,
-transferred his homage to the Austrian king of the Romans, and, became
-sovereign Duke of _Saint Sava_, perhaps rather of _Primorie_. Thus
-arose the state of _Herzegovina_, that is the _Duchy_, commemorating in
-its half-German name the relation of its prince to the Western Empire.
-But neither kingdom nor duchy was long-lived. ♦1449.♦ Within ten years
-after the separation of Herzegovina the Turk held western Bosnia.
-♦Turkish conquest of Bosnia, 1463;♦ Fourteen years later he subdued
-the whole kingdom. ♦of Herzegovina, 1483.♦ The next year the duchy
-became tributary, and twenty years after the conquest of Bosnia it was
-incorporated with the now Turkish province of Bosnia. But in the long
-struggle between Venice and the Turk various parts of its territory,
-especially the coast, came under the power of the Republic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile one small Slavonic land, one surviving fragment of the great
-Servian dominion, maintained its independence through all changes.
-
-In the break-up of the Servian Empire, a small state, with Skodra for
-its capital, formed itself in the district of Zeta, reaching northwards
-as far as Cattaro. ♦Dominion of the house of Balsa at Skodra. | Loss
-of Skodra, 1394.♦ For a moment its princes of the house of _Balsa_
-spread their power over all Northern Albania; but the new state was
-cut short on all sides by Bosnia, Venice, and the Turk, and Skodra
-itself was sold to Venice. In the middle of the fifteenth century, the
-state took a more definite shape, though with a smaller territory,
-under a new dynasty, that of Tzernojevich. ♦Beginning of Montenegro,
-1456.♦ This independent remnant answered to the modern _Tzernagora_
-or _Montenegro_, with a greater extent to the east and with a small
-seaboard taking in Antivari. ♦Establishment of Tzetinje, 1488.♦ Its
-capital _Zabljak_ was more than once lost and won from the Turk; at
-the end of the century it was found hopeless to defend the lower
-districts, and prince and people withdrew to the natural fortress of
-the Black Mountain with its newly founded capital of Tzetinje. ♦The
-Vladikas, 1499. | Lay princes, 1851.♦ The last prince of the dynasty
-resigned his power to the metropolitan bishop, and Montenegro remained
-an independent state under its Vladikas or hereditary prelates, till
-their dominion was in our own time again exchanged for that of temporal
-princes. During all this time the territory of Montenegro was simply
-so much of the mountain region as could maintain its independence
-against the ceaseless attacks of the Turk. Yet Montenegro, as the ally
-of England and Russia, bore her part in the great European struggle,
-and won for herself a haven and a capital at Cattaro. ♦1813. | 1858.♦
-Her allies stood by while Cattaro was filched by the Austrian; and,
-more than forty years later, when a definite frontier was first traced,
-Western diplomacy so traced it as to give the Turk an inlet on both
-sides to the unconquered Christian land. ♦Montenegrin conquests,
-1876-1877.♦ In the latest times the Montenegrin arms set free a large
-part of the kindred land of Herzegovina, and won back a considerable
-part of the lost territory to the east, including part of the old
-seaboard as far as _Dulcigno_. ♦1878.♦ Then Western diplomacy drew
-another frontier, which forbade any large incorporation of the kindred
-Slavonic districts, while a small extension was allowed in that part of
-the lost ancient territory which had become Albanian. Of three havens
-won by Montenegro in the war, _Dulcigno_ has been given back to the
-Turk. ♦Spizza.♦ Austria has been allowed to filch _Spizza_, as she had
-before filched Ragusa and Cattaro. The third haven, that of _Antivari_,
-was left to those who had won it under such restrictions as armed wrong
-knows how to impose on the weaker power of right.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The continued independence of Montenegro enables the Servian branch
-of the Slavonic race to say that their nation has never been wholly
-enslaved. ♦The third Bulgarian kingdom.♦ The case has been different
-with Bulgaria. We have seen the origin of the third Bulgarian, or
-rather _Vlacho-Bulgarian_, kingdom which won its independence of the
-Empire in the last years of the twelfth century. From that time to
-the Turkish conquest, one or more Bulgarian states always existed.
-And throughout the thirteenth century, the Bulgarian kingdom, though
-its boundaries were ever shifting, was one of the chief powers of the
-south-eastern peninsula.
-
-The oldest Bulgaria between Danube and Hæmus was the first to throw
-off the Byzantine dominion, and the last to come under the power of
-the Turk. ♦Bulgarian advance. 1197-1207.♦ But the new Bulgarian power
-grew fast, and for a while called back the days of Simeon and Samuel.
-Under Joannice the frontier stretched far to the north-west, over
-lands which gradually passed to Servia, taking in Skupi, Nish, and
-even Belgrade. ♦Dominion of John Asan. 1218-1241.♦ Under the Tzar John
-Asan the new Bulgaria, the kingdom of _Tirnovo_, reached its greatest
-extent. The greater part of Thrace, Philippopolis and the whole land of
-_Rhodopê_ or _Achridos_, Hadrianople itself, Macedonia too stretching
-away to Samuel’s Ochrida and to _Albanon_ or Elbassan, were all under
-his rule. If his realm did not touch the Hadriatic or the Ægæan, it
-came very near to both; but Thessalonikê at least always remained to
-its Frank and Greek lords.[44] But this great power, like so many other
-powers of its kind, did not survive its founder. ♦Decline of Bulgaria.
-1246-1257.♦ The revived Greek states, the Nicene Empire and the Epeirot
-despotat, cut the Bulgarian realm short. The disputes of an older and
-of a later time went on.[45] ♦Shiftings of the frontier.♦ There was
-undisputed Bulgaria north of Hæmus, an ever-shifting frontier south of
-it. The inland Philippopolis, and the coast towns of _Anchialos_ and
-_Mesêmbria_, passed backwards and forwards between Greek and Bulgarian.
-♦Philippopolis finally Bulgarian. 1344-1366.♦ The last state of things,
-immediately before the common overthrow, gave Philippopolis to Bulgaria
-and the coast towns to the Empire.
-
-♦Wars with Hungary. 1260.♦
-
-An attempt at extension of the north by an attack on the Hungarian
-Banat of _Severin_, the western part of modern Wallachia, led only to a
-Hungarian invasion, to a temporary loss of _Widdin_, and the assumption
-of a Bulgarian title by the Magyar king. ♦Cuman dynasty in Bulgaria.
-1280.♦ Presently a new Turanian dynasty, this time of Cuman descent,
-reigned in Bulgaria, and soon after, the kingdom passed for the moment
-under a mightier overlord in the person of Nogai Khan. ♦Break-up of
-the kingdom. 1357.♦ In the fourteenth century the kingdom broke up.
-♦Principality of Dobrutcha.♦ The despot _Dobroditius_—his name has many
-spellings—formed a separate dominion on the seaboard, stretching from
-the Danube to the Imperial frontier, cutting off the King of Tirnovo
-from the sea. Part of his land preserves his memory in its modern
-name _Dobrutcha_. Presently we hear of three Bulgarias, the central
-state at Tirnovo, the sea-land of Dobroditius, and a north-western
-state at Widdin. ♦1362. | 1365-1369.♦ By this time the Ottoman inroads
-had begun; Philippopolis was lost, and Bulgarian princes were blind
-enough to employ Turkish help in a second attack on Severin, which
-led only to a second temporary loss of Widdin. ♦1382. | 1388.♦ The
-Turk now pressed on; Sofia was taken; the whole land became a Turkish
-dependency. ♦Conquest by Bajazet, 1393.♦ After Kossovo the land was
-wholly conquered, save only that the northern part of the land of
-Dobroditius passed to Wallachia. Bulgaria passed away from the list
-of European states both sooner and more utterly than Servia. Servia
-still had its alternations of freedom and bondage for sixty years. In
-after times large parts of it passed to a rule which, if foreign, was
-at least European. In later days Servia was the first of the subject
-nations to win its freedom. But the bondage of Bulgaria was never
-disturbed from the days of Bajazet to our own time.
-
-
-§ 7. _The Kingdom of Hungary._
-
-The origin of the Hungarian kingdom and the reasons for dealing with
-along with the states which arose out of the break-up of the Eastern
-Empire have already been spoken of.[46] ♦Character of the Hungarian
-kingdom.♦ The Finnish conquerors of the Slave, admitted within the
-pale of Western Christendom, founding a new Hungary on the Danube and
-the Theiss while they left behind them an older Hungary on the Kama,
-have points of contact at once with Asia and with both Eastern and
-Western Europe. ♦Its position in south-eastern Europe.♦ But, as closely
-connected in their history with the nations of the south-eastern
-peninsula, as sharers in the bondage and in the deliverance of Servia,
-Greece, and Bulgaria, in our geographical survey they claim a place
-where they may be looked at strictly as part of the south-eastern world.
-
-♦Effects of the Magyar invasion.♦
-
-It has been already noticed[47] that the main geographical work of the
-Magyar was to cut off that south-eastern world, the world where the
-Greek and the Slave, struggling for its supremacy, were both swallowed
-up by the Ottoman, from the Slavonic region between the Carpathians
-and the Baltic. ♦Great Moravia. 884-894.♦ At the moment of the Magyar
-inroad, the foundation of the _Great-Moravian_ kingdom, the kingdom
-of Sviatopluk, made it more likely than it has ever been since that
-the Slaves of the two regions might be united into a single power.
-That kingdom, stretching to Sirmium, marched on the north-western
-dependencies of the Eastern Empire, while on the north it took in the
-Chrobatian land which was afterwards Little Poland. Such a power might
-have been dangerous to both Empires at once; but the invaders whom the
-two Emperors called in proved far more dangerous than Great Moravia
-could ever have been. The Magyars, Ogres, or Hungarians, the Turks
-of the Imperial geographer,[48] were called in by his father Leo to
-check the Bulgarians, as they were called in by Arnulf in the West to
-check the new power of Moravia. They passed, from the north rather than
-from the east, into the land which was disputed between Moravian and
-Bulgarian. ♦906. Relations between Hungary and Germany.♦ The Moravian
-power was overthrown, and the Magyars, stepping into its place, became
-constant invaders of both Empires and their dependent lands. But to the
-west, the victories of the Saxon kings put a check to their inroads,
-and, save some shiftings on the Austrian march, the frontier of Germany
-and Hungary has been singularly abiding.
-
-♦The two Chrobatias separated by the Magyars.♦
-
-While the Magyar settlement placed a barrier between the two chief
-regions of the Slavonic race as a whole, it specially placed a barrier
-between the two divisions of the _Croatian_ or _Chrobatian_ people,
-those on the Vistula and those on the Drave and Save. ♦1025.♦ The
-northern _Chrobatia_ still reached south of the Carpathians, and it
-was not until the eleventh century that the Magyar kingdom, by the
-acquisition of its southern part, gained a natural frontier which,
-with some shiftings, served to part it off from the Slavonic powers to
-the north of it. To the south-east an uncultivated and wooded tract
-separated the Magyar territory from the lands between the Carpathians
-and the lower Danube which were still held by the Patzinaks.
-♦Geographical position of the Magyars.♦ The oldest Magyar settlement
-thus occupied the central part of the modern kingdom, on the Theiss and
-the middle Danube. There the Turanian invaders formed a ruling and
-central race, within a Slavonic fringe at each end. There were northern
-and southern Croats, _Slovaks_ to the north, and _Ruthenians_ to the
-north-west, towards the kindred land of _Halicz_ or _Red Russia_.
-
-♦Hungary a kingdom: its growth.♦
-
-Hungary, ranking from the beginning of the eleventh century as a
-kingdom of Latin Christendom, presently grew in all directions. We have
-just seen its advance at the expense of the northern Chrobatian land.
-Its advance at the expense of the southern branch of that race, and of
-the other Slavonic lands which owed more or less of allegiance to the
-Eastern Empire, was still more marked. ♦Hungary and Croatia.♦ All these
-lands at one time or another gave royal titles to the King of Hungary,
-King also of Croatia, of Dalmatia, of Rama, even of Bulgaria. But in
-most of these lands the Hungarian kingship was temporary or nominal; in
-Croatia alone, though the frontier has often shifted, Hungarian rule
-has been abiding. Croatia has never formed an independent state since
-the first Hungarian conquest; it has never been fully wrested from
-Hungary since the days of Manuel Komnênos. In those days it was indeed
-a question whether Hungary itself had not an overlord in the Eastern
-Emperor. After the great Bulgarian revolt that question could never be
-raised again. But the Hungarian frontier was ever shifting towards the
-former lands of the Empire, Venetian, Servian, and Bulgarian. ♦Kingdom
-of Slavonia. 1492.♦ One part of the old Croatian kingdom, the land
-between Save and Drave, was cut off to form, first an appanage, then an
-annexed kingdom, by the special name of _Slavonia_, a name shared by it
-with lands on the Baltic, perhaps on the Ægæan.
-
-But, from the first days of its conversion, the Hungarian realm
-began to advance in other directions, in lands which had formed no
-part of the Empire since the days of Aurelian. ♦Transsilvania or
-_Siebenbürgen_. | 1004.♦ Before their Chrobatian conquest, the Magyars
-passed the boundary which divided them from the Patzinaks, and won the
-land which from its position took the name of _Transsilvania_.[49]
-Colonists were invited to settle in the thinly inhabited land. One
-chief settlement was of the Low-Dutch speech from Saxony and Flanders.
-♦Various colonies.♦ Another element was formed by the Turanian
-_Szeklers_, whose Latin form of _Siculi_ might easily mislead. Another
-migration brought back the name and speech of the Old Rome to the first
-land from which she had withdrawn her power.
-
-♦Origin of the Roumans.♦
-
-The legendary belief in the unbroken life of the Roman name and speech
-in the lands north of the Danube is merely a legendary belief.[50]
-There can be no reasonable doubt that the present principality of
-Roumania and the Rouman lands beyond its borders derived their present
-population and language from a settlement of the Rouman people further
-south. South of the Danube, the Rouman or Vlach population, scattered
-among Greeks, Slaves, and Albanians, at many points from Pindos
-northwards, has kept its distinct nationality, but it has never formed
-a political whole. ♦Their Northern migration.♦ But a migration beyond
-the Danube enabled the Roumans in course of time to found two distinct
-principalities, and to form a chief element in the population of a
-third. There is no sign of any Rouman population north of the Danube
-before the thirteenth century. The events of that century opened a way
-for a reversal of the ordinary course of migration, for the settlement
-of lands beyond the Empire by former subjects of the Empire.
-
-♦Rouman element in the third Bulgarian kingdom.♦
-
-We have seen that the third Bulgarian kingdom, that which arose at
-the end of the twelfth century, was in its origin as much Rouman as
-Bulgarian. ♦Cumans in Dacia.♦ By this time the rule of the Patzinaks
-beyond the lower Danube had given way to that of the kindred _Cumans_.
-♦Mongolian invasion.♦ Then the storm of Mongolian invasion, which
-crushed Hungary itself for a moment, crushed the Cuman power for
-ever. But the remnant of the Cuman nation lived on within the Magyar
-realm, and gave its king yet another title, that of _King of Cumania_.
-♦Rouman settlement in the Cuman land.♦ The former Cuman land now
-lay open to new settlers, and the Rouman part of the inhabitants of
-the new Bulgaria began to cross the Danube into that land and the
-neighbouring districts. In the course of the thirteenth century they
-occupied the present Wallachia, and already formed an element in the
-mixed population of Transsilvania. A Rouman state thus began to be
-formed, which took the name by which the Roumans were known to their
-neighbours. The new _Vlachia_, _Wallachia_, stretched on both sides
-of the Aluta. ♦Little Wallachia.♦ To the west of that river, _Little
-Wallachia_ formed, as the banat of _Severin_, an integral part of the
-Hungarian kingdom. ♦Great Wallachia.♦ _Great Wallachia_ to the east
-formed a separate principality, dependent or independent on Hungary,
-according to its strength from time to time. ♦Dobrutcha.♦ And, towards
-the end of the fourteenth century, the land south of the Danube, called
-_Dobrutcha_, passed from Bulgaria to Wallachia. ♦Moldavia. c. 1341.♦
-Another Rouman migration, passing from the land of _Marmaros_ north
-of Transsilvania, founded the principality of _Moldavia_ between the
-Carpathians and the Dniester. This too stood to the Hungarian crown
-in the same shifting relation as Great Wallachia, and sometimes
-transferred its vassalage to Lithuania and Poland.
-
-♦Lewis the Great, 1342-1382;♦
-
-The greatest extension of the Hungarian dominion was in the fourteenth
-century, under the Angevin King Lewis the Great. Before his time
-the Magyar frontier had advanced and fallen back. ♦First possession
-of Halicz, 1185-1220,♦ Hungary, having a Russian population within
-its borders, had for a while enlarged its Russian dominion by the
-annexation of the Red Russian land of _Halicz_ or _Galicia_. ♦of
-Widdin, 1260-1264.♦ It had also, for a shorter time, occupied the
-Bulgarian town of Widdin. ♦Conquests of Lewis, Halicz and Vladimir,
-1342; Widdin, 1365-1369.♦ Lewis renewed both these conquests, and
-made others. Halicz was not only won again, but was enlarged by the
-neighbouring principality of _Vladimir_. The great day of Hungary was
-contemporary with the great day of Servia, but it was a longer day, and
-Hungary profited greatly by the fall of Servia. ♦1356.♦ While Lewis
-annexed Dalmatia, he also at various times established his supremacy
-over Bosnia and the Rouman principalities. That Lewis was king of
-Poland by a personal union did not affect Hungarian geography. ♦Red
-Russia restored to Poland, 1390.♦ But the separation of the crowns at
-his death led presently to the restoration of the Red Russian provinces
-to Poland. ♦Pledging of Zips, 1412.♦ Somewhat later, under Sigismund,
-a territory within the Hungarian border, part of the county of _Zips_
-or _Czepusz_, was pledged to Poland, and continued to be held by that
-power.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile the Ottoman was on his march to overthrow Hungary as well
-as its neighbours, though the position of the Magyar kingdom made it
-the last to be devoured and the first to be delivered. The Turkish
-inroads as yet barely grazed the strictly Hungarian frontier. ♦First
-Turkish invasion. 1391.♦ The first Turkish invasion of Hungary, the
-first Turkish exaction of tribute from Wallachia, came in the same year
-in which Sigismund established his supremacy over Bosnia. ♦Battle of
-Nikopolis. 1396. | Campaign of Huniades 1443. | Battle of Varna. 1444.♦
-The defeat of Nikopolis confirmed the Turkish supremacy in Wallachia,
-a supremacy which was again won for Hungary in the great campaign
-of Huniades, and was again lost at Varna. ♦Disputes for Dalmatia.♦
-Meanwhile the full possession of Dalmatia did not outlive the reign of
-Lewis. Henceforth Hungary is merely one competitor among others in the
-ceaseless shiftings of the Dalmatian frontier.
-
-♦Hungary under Matthias Corvinus. 1458-1490.♦
-
-Later in the fifteenth century came another day of Hungarian greatness
-under the son of Huniades, Matthias Corvinus. ♦1477. | 1485.♦ Its most
-distinguishing feature was the extension of the Magyar power to the
-west, over Bohemia and its dependencies, and even over the Austrian
-archduchy. ♦1467.♦ In the south-eastern lands Wallachia and Moldavia
-again became Hungarian dependencies. ♦1463.♦ _Jayce_ was won back
-from the Turk, now lord of Bosnia, and, Belgrade being now Hungarian,
-the frontier towards the Ottoman was fixed till the time of his great
-advance northwards.
-
-♦Loss of Belgrade. 1521.♦
-
-The first stage of Ottoman conquest in Hungary, as distinguished from
-mere ravage, was the taking of Belgrade. ♦Battle of Mohacz. 1526.♦ With
-the battle of Mohacz, five years later, the separate history of Hungary
-ends. ♦Turkish occupation of the greater part of Hungary. | 1552-1687.♦
-That victory, followed by the disputes for the Hungarian crown between
-an Austrian archduke and a Transsilvanian palatine, enabled Suleiman
-to make himself master of the greater part of the kingdom, especially
-of the part which was most thoroughly Magyar. From the middle of
-the sixteenth century till the latter years of the seventeenth, the
-Austrian Kings of Hungary kept only a fragment of Croatia, including
-_Zagrab_ or _Agram_, and a strip of north-western Hungary, including
-_Pressburg_. The whole central part of the kingdom passed under the
-immediate dominion of the Turk, and a Pasha ruled at Buda. Besides
-this great incorporation of Hungarian soil, the Turk held three vassal
-principalities within the dominions of Lewis the Great. ♦Tributary
-principalities: Transsilvania, Wallachia, Moldavia. 1497.♦ One was
-_Transsilvania_, increased by a large part of north-eastern Hungary;
-the second was _Wallachia_; the third was _Moldavia_, which began to be
-tributary late in the fifteenth century. The Rouman lands became more
-and more closely dependent on the Turk, who took on him to name their
-princes. ♦1606.♦ Indeed, one might for a while add the Austrian kingdom
-of Hungary itself as a fourth vassal state, as it paid tribute to the
-Turk into the seventeenth century. ♦The Rouman lands disputed between
-Poland and the Turk.♦ For the superiority of the Rouman principalities
-an endless struggle went on between Poland and the Turk. At last the
-same Slavonic power stepped in to deliver Hungary and Austria also.
-♦Battle of Vienna. 1683.♦ With the overthrow of the Turk before Vienna
-began the reaction of Christendom against Islam which has gone on to
-our own day.
-
-♦Recovery of Hungary from the Turk.♦
-
-The wars which follow answer to the wars of independence in Servia and
-Greece in so far as the Turk was driven out of a Christian land. They
-differ in this, that the Turk was driven out of Greece and Servia to
-the profit of Greece and Servia themselves, while he was driven out
-of Hungary to the profit of the Austrian king. ♦Peace of Carlowitz.
-1699.♦ The first stage of the work, the war which was ended by the
-Peace of Carlowitz, won back nearly all Croatia and Slavonia, and all
-Hungary proper, except the land of _Temeswar_ between Danube, Theiss,
-and Maros. ♦Incorporation of Transsilvania. 1713.♦ Transsilvania
-became a dependency of the Hungarian kingdom, with which it was
-presently incorporated. Wallachia and Moldavia remained under Turkish
-supremacy. ♦Peace of Passarowitz. 1718.♦ The next war, ended by the
-Peace of Passarowitz, fully restored the Hungarian kingdom as part of
-Christendom. The Turk kept only a small part of Croatia. All Slavonia
-and the banat of Temeswar were won back; the frontier was even carried
-south of the Save, so as to take in a small strip of Bosnia and a
-great part of Servia, as also the Lesser Wallachia, the old banat
-of Severin. Thus, while the first stage delivered Buda, the second
-delivered Belgrade. But the next war, ended by the Peace of Belgrade,
-largely undid the work. ♦Losses by the Peace of Belgrade. 1739.♦ The
-frontier fell back to the point at which it stayed till our own day.
-From the mouth of the Unna to Orsovo, the Save and the Danube became
-the frontier. Belgrade, and all the land south of those rivers, passed
-again to the Turk, and Little Wallachia became again part of a Turkish
-dependency. ♦Final loss of Belgrade. 1789-1791.♦ At a later stage of
-the century Belgrade was again delivered and again lost.
-
-♦Acquisitions from Poland.♦
-
-The later acquisitions of the House of Austria were made in the
-character of Hungarian kings, but they did not lead to any enlargement
-of the Hungarian kingdom. Thus the claim to the Austrian acquisitions
-made at the first and third partitions of Poland, rested solely on the
-two Hungarian occupations of Red Russia. ♦Galicia and Lodomeria.♦ Under
-the softened forms of _Galicia_ and _Lodomeria_, the Red Russian lands
-of _Halicz_ and _Vladimir_, together with part of Poland itself, became
-a new kingdom of the House of Habsburg, as the greater part of the
-territory thus won still remains. ♦Acquisition of Bukovina. 1776-1786.♦
-Between the two partitions the new kingdom was increased by the
-addition of _Bukovina_, the north-western corner of Moldavia, which was
-claimed as an ancient part of the Transsilvanian principality. It was
-again only in its Hungarian character that the House of Habsburg could
-make any claim to Dalmatia. ♦Dalmatia.♦ Certainly no Austrian duke had
-ever reigned over Dalmatia, Red Russia, or the Rouman principalities.
-Yet in the present dual arrangement of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy
-the so-called _triple kingdom_ of Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia,
-is divided between the rule of Pest and the rule of Vienna. Galicia
-also counts to the Austrian, and not to the Hungarian, division of the
-monarchy. All this is perhaps in harmony with the generally anomalous
-character of the power of which they form part. ♦Spizza. 1878.♦ The
-port of _Spizza_ has been added to the Dalmatian kingdom. ♦Bosnia and
-Herzegovina.♦ It is hard to say in which of his many characters the
-Hungarian King and Austrian Archduke holds the lands of _Bosnia_ and
-_Herzegovina_, of which the Treaty of Berlin confers on him, not the
-sovereignty, but the administration. They might have been claimed by
-the Hungarian king in his ancient character of King of Rama. But the
-formal aspect of the transaction would seem rather to be that he has,
-like his predecessors in the sixteenth century, become the man of the
-Turk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Later history of Roumania.♦
-
-After the restoration of the Lesser Wallachia to the Turk and the
-addition of Bukovina to Galicia, the geographical history of the Rouman
-principalities parts off wholly from that of Hungary, and will be more
-fittingly treated in another section.
-
-
-§ 8. _The Ottoman Power._
-
-♦The Ottoman Turks.♦
-
-Last among the powers which among them supplanted the Eastern Empire,
-comes the greatest and most terrible of all, that which overthrew the
-Empire itself and most of the states which arose out of its ruins, and
-which stands distinguished from all the rest by its abiding possession
-of the Imperial city. This is the power of the Ottoman Turks. ♦Their
-special character as Mahometans.♦ They stand distinguished from all
-the other invaders of the European mainland of the Empire by being
-Mahometan invaders. The examples of Bulgaria and Hungary show that
-Turanian invaders, as such, are not incapable of being received into
-European fellowship. This could not be in the case of a Mahometan
-power, bound by its religion to keep its Christian subjects in the
-condition of bondmen. The Ottomans could not, like the Bulgarians, be
-lost in the greater mass of those whom they conquered. ♦Preservation of
-the subject nations.♦ But this very necessity helped in some measure to
-preserve the national being of the subject nations. Greeks, Servians,
-Bulgarians, have under Ottoman rule remained Greeks, Servians, and
-Bulgarians, ready to begin their national career afresh whenever the
-time for independence should come. ♦Comparison with the Saracen power
-in Spain.♦ The dominion of the Turk in Eastern Europe answers, as a
-Mahometan dominion, to the dominion of the Saracen in Western Europe.
-But in everything, save the mere reckoning of years, it has been far
-more abiding. The Mahometan dominion in southern Spain did indeed last
-two hundred years longer than Mahometan dominion has yet lasted in any
-part of Eastern Europe. But the Saracen power in the West began to fall
-back as soon as it was established, and its last two hundred years
-were a mere survival. The Ottomans underwent no considerable loss of
-territory till more than four centuries and a half after their first
-appearance in Asia, till more than three centuries after their passage
-into Europe. Constantinople has been Ottoman sixty years longer than
-Toledo was Saracen.
-
-♦Extent of the Ottoman dominion compared with the Eastern Empire.♦
-
-The Ottoman, possessor of the Eastern Rome, does in a rough way
-represent the Eastern Roman in the extent of his dominion. The
-dominions and dependencies of the Sultans at the height of their power
-took in, in Eastern Europe, in Asia, and in Africa, nearly all that had
-formed part of the Empire of Justinian, with a large territory, both in
-Europe and Asia, which Justinian had not held. Justinian held nothing
-north of the Danube; Suleiman held, as sovereign or as overlord, a vast
-dominion from Buda to Azof. On the other hand, no part of the dominions
-of Justinian in Western Europe, save one city for one moment, ever came
-under Ottoman rule. The Eastern Empire in the year 800 was smaller than
-even the present reduced dominion of the Turk. The Eastern Empire,
-at its height in the eleventh century, held in Europe a dominion far
-smaller than the dominion of the Turk in the sixteenth century, far
-larger than his dominion now. But in the essential feature of Byzantine
-geography, the possession of Constantinople and of the lands on each
-side of the Bosporos and Hellespont, the Ottoman Sultan took the place
-of the Eastern Emperor, and as yet he keeps it.
-
-♦Effects of the Mongolian advance.♦
-
-The history of the Eastern Empire, and that of the Ottomans in
-connexion with it, was largely affected by the movements of the Mongols
-in the further East. Mongolian pressure weakened the Seljuk Turks, and
-so allowed the growth of the Nicene Empire. Mongolian invasions also
-led indirectly to the growth of the Ottoman power, and at a later time
-they gave it its greatest check. ♦Origin of the Ottomans.♦ The Ottomans
-grew out of a Turkish band who served the Seljuk Sultan against the
-Mongols. As his vassals, they began to be a power in Asia and to harry
-the coasts of Europe. They passed into Europe, and won a great European
-dominion far more quickly than they had won their Asiatic dominion.
-This is the special characteristic of the Ottoman power. Asiatic in
-everything else, it is geographically European; most of its Asiatic and
-all its African dominion was won from an European centre. ♦Break-up and
-reunion of the Ottoman power.♦ Already a power in Europe, but not yet
-in possession of the Imperial city, the new Ottoman power was for a
-moment utterly broken in pieces by the second flood of Mongol invasion.
-That the shattered dominion came together again is an event without
-a parallel in Eastern history. The restored Ottoman power then won
-Constantinople, and from Constantinople, as representing the fallen
-Empire, it won back the lost dominion of the Empire. ♦Its permanence.♦
-The permanence of the Ottoman power, when Constantinople was once won,
-is in no way wonderful. Even the unreclaimed Asiatic, when he was once
-seated on the throne of the New Rome, inherited his share of Rome’s
-eternity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦First settlements of the Ottomans.♦
-
-The first settlements of the Ottoman Turks were on the banks of the
-_Sangarios_, which gave them from the beginning a threatening position
-towards Europe. ♦1299.♦ By the end of the thirteenth century they were
-firmly established in that region. In the first half of the fourteenth
-they became the leading power in Western Asia. ♦Conquest of Brusa.
-1326-1330.♦ _Brusa_, the Asiatic capital, won in the last days of
-the Emir Othman, has a manifest eye towards Europe. ♦Of Nikaia and
-Nikomêdeia. 1330-1338.♦ _Nikaia_ and _Nikomêdeia_ followed, and the
-Ottoman stepped geographically into the same position towards the
-revived Greek Empire which the Nicene princes had held towards the
-Latin Empire. ♦Entry into Europe. 1354. | Conquest of Hadrianople.
-1361.♦ In the last days of the Emir Othman came their passage into
-Europe, and a few more years saw Amurath in his European capital of
-Hadrianople, completely hemming Constantinople in. ♦Ottoman advance.♦
-The second half of the fourteenth century was a time of the most
-speedy Ottoman advance, and the amount of real advance is by no means
-represented by the change on the map. We have seen in the case of
-Servia, of Greece, and of Hungary, that the course of Turkish invasion
-commonly went through three stages. There was first the time of mere
-plunder. Then came the tributary stage, and lastly, the day of complete
-bondage. ♦Bajazet first Sultan, 1389-1402.♦ Under Bajazet, the first
-Ottoman prince who bore the title of Sultan, the immediate Ottoman
-dominion in Europe stretched from the Ægæan to the Danube. It took in
-all Bulgaria, all Macedonia, Thessaly, and Thrace, save only Chalkidikê
-and the district just round Constantinople. Servia and Wallachia were
-dependent states, as indeed was the Empire itself. Central and southern
-Greece, Bosnia, Hungary, even Styria, were lands open to plunder.
-
-♦Battle of Angora. 1402.♦
-
-This great dominion was broken in pieces by the victory of Timour
-at Angora. It seemed that the empire of the Ottoman had passed away
-like the empire of the Servian. ♦Break up of the Ottoman power.♦
-The dominion of Bajazet was divided among his sons and the princes
-of the dispossessed Turkish dynasties. The Christian states had a
-breathing-time, and the sons of Bajazet were glad to give back to the
-Empire some important parts of its lost territories. ♦Reunited under
-Mahomet. 1413.♦ The Ottoman power came together again under Mahomet
-the First; but for nearly half a century its advance was slower than
-in the half-century before. The conquests of Mahomet and of Amurath
-the Second lay mainly in the Greek and Albanian lands. ♦Conquest of
-Thessalonikê. 1430.♦ The Turk now reached the Hadriatic, and the
-conquest of Thessalonikê gave him a firmer hold on the Ægæan. Towards
-Servia and Hungary he lost and he won again; he hardly conquered.
-♦Mahomet the Conqueror. 1451-1481.♦ It was the thirty years of Mahomet
-the Conqueror which finally gave the Ottoman dominion its European
-position. ♦Conquest of Constantinople. 1453.♦ From his first and
-greatest conquest of the New Rome, he gathered in what remained, Greek,
-Frank, and Slave. The conquest of the Greek mainland, of Albania and
-Bosnia, the final conquest of Servia, made him master of the whole
-south-eastern peninsula, save only the points held by Venice and the
-unconquered height of the Black Mountain. He began to gather in the
-Western islands, and he struck the first great blow to the Venetian
-power by the conquest of Euboia. Around the Euxine he won the Empire of
-Trebizond and the points held by Genoa. The great mass of the islands
-and the few Venetian points on the coast still escaped. ♦Extent of his
-dominion.♦ Otherwise Mahomet the Conqueror held the whole European
-dominions of Basil the Second, with a greater dominion in Asia than
-that of Manuel Komnênos. From the Danube to the Tanais and beyond it,
-he held a vast overlordship, over lands which had obeyed no Emperor
-since Aurelian, over lands which had never obeyed any Emperor at all.
-At last the Mussulman lord of Constantinople seemed about to win back
-the Italian dominion of its Christian lords. ♦Taking of Otranto, 1480.♦
-In his last days, by the possession of Otranto, Mahomet ruled west of
-the Hadriatic.
-
-It might have been deemed that the little cloud which now lighted on
-Otranto would grow as fast as the little cloud which a hundred and
-thirty years before had lighted on Kallipolis. But Bajazet the Second
-made no conquests save the points which were won from Venice. ♦Conquest
-of Syria and Egypt. 1516-17.♦ Selim the First, the greatest conqueror
-of his line against fellow Mahometans, had no leisure, while winning
-Syria and Egypt, to make any advance on Christian ground. ♦Conquests
-of Suleiman. 1520-1566.♦ But under Suleiman the Lawgiver, not only the
-overlordship but the immediate rule of Constantinople under its Turkish
-Sultans was spread over wide European lands which had never obeyed its
-Christian Emperors. ♦His African overlordship.♦ Then too its Mussulman
-lords won back at least the nominal overlordship of that African
-seaboard which the first Mussulmans had rent away from the allegiance
-of Constantinople. The greatest conquest of Suleiman was made in
-Hungary; but he also made the Ægæan an Ottoman sea. The early years of
-his reign saw the driving of the Knights from Rhodes, and the winning
-of their fortress of Halikarnassos, the last European possession on
-Asiatic ground. His last days saw the annexation of the Naxian duchy;
-at an intermediate stage Venice lost her Peloponnesian strongholds.
-♦Algiers. 1519.♦ In Africa the Turk received the commendation of
-_Algiers_ and of _Tunis_. ♦Tunis conquered by Charles the Fifth.
-1531. | 1535.♦ But Tunis, won for Christendom by the Imperial King of
-the Two Sicilies, was lost and won again, till it was finally won for
-Islam by the second Selim. _Tripolis_, granted to the Knights, also
-passed to Suleiman. ♦1574.♦ Under Selim _Cyprus_ was added; the fight
-of Lepanto could neither save nor recover it; but the advance of the
-Turk was stopped. ♦Decline of the Ottoman power.♦ The conquests of the
-seventeenth century were small compared with those of earlier days,
-and, before that century was out, the Ottoman Terminus had begun to go
-back.
-
-♦Greatest extent of the Ottoman power.♦
-
-Yet it was in the last half of the seventeenth century that the
-Ottoman Empire reached its greatest geographical extent. ♦Conquest of
-Crete. 1641-1669. | of Podolia. 1672-1676.♦ _Crete_ was now won; a
-few years later _Kamienetz_ and all _Podolia_ were ceded to the Turk
-by Poland. This was not absolutely his last European acquisition, but
-it was his last acquisition of a great province. The Ottoman dominion
-now covered a wider space on the map than it had done at any earlier
-moment. Suleiman in all his glory had not reigned over Cyprus, Crete,
-and Podolia. The tide now turned for ever. ♦The Ottoman frontier falls
-back.♦ From that time the Ottoman has, like his Byzantine predecessor,
-had his periods of revival and recovery, but on the whole his frontier
-has steadily gone back.
-
-♦Ottoman loss of Hungary. 1683-1699.♦
-
-The first great blow to the integrity and independence of the
-Ottoman Empire was dealt in the war which was ended by the Peace of
-Carlowitz. We have seen how Hungary and Peloponnêsos were won back
-for Christendom; so was Podolia. We have seen too how at the next
-stage the Turk gained at one end and lost at the other, winning back
-Peloponnêsos, winning Mykonos and Tênos, but losing on the Save and the
-Danube. The next stage shows the Ottoman frontier again in advance;
-in our own day we have seen it again fall back. And the change which
-has given Bosnia and Herzegovina to the master of Dalmatia, Ragusa,
-and Cattaro has, besides throwing back the frontier of the Turk,
-redressed a very old geographical wrong. ♦Union of inland and maritime
-Illyricum.♦ Ever since the first Slavonic settlements, the inland
-region of northern Illyricum has been more or less thoroughly cut off
-from the coast cities which form its natural outlets. Whatever may be
-the fate of those lands, the body is again joined to the mouth, and the
-mouth to the body, and we can hardly fancy them again severed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The same arrangements which transferred the ‘administration’ of Bosnia
-and Herzegovina to the King of Hungary and Dalmatia, have transferred
-another part of the Ottoman dominion to a more distant European power
-on terms which are still less easy to understand. ♦Cyprus. 1878.♦ The
-Greek island of _Cyprus_ has passed to English rule; but it is after
-a fashion which may imply that the conquest of Richard of Poitou is
-held—not, it is to be hoped, by the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland,
-but possibly by the Empress of India—as a tributary of the Ottoman
-Sultan.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the former half of the eighteenth century the shiftings of
-the Ottoman territory to the north were all on the side of Austria
-or Hungary. ♦Relations of the Turk towards Russia.♦ But a new enemy
-of the Turk appeared towards the end of the seventeenth century, one
-who was, before the end of the eighteenth, to stand forth as his
-chief enemy. ♦Loss and recovery of Azof. 1696-1711.♦ Under Peter the
-Great _Azof_ was won by Russia and lost again. Sixty years later
-great geographical changes took place in the same region. ♦Treaty of
-Kainardji. 1774. | Independence of Crim.♦ By the Treaty of Kainardji,
-the dependent khanate of _Crim_—the old Tauric Chersonêsos and the
-neighbouring lands—was released from the superiority of the Sultan.
-♦Russian annexation of Crim. 1783.♦ This was a natural step towards
-its annexation by Russia, which thus again made her way to the Euxine.
-♦Of Jedisan. 1791.♦ The Bug was now the frontier; presently, by the
-Russian annexation of _Oczakow_ and the land of Jedisan, it fell back
-to the Dniester. By the treaty of Bucharest the frontier alike of the
-dominion and of the overlordship of the Turk fell back to the Pruth and
-the lower Danube. ♦Of Bessarabia. 1812. | Shiftings of the Moldavian
-frontier.♦ Russia thus gained _Bessarabia_ and the eastern part of
-_Moldavia_. ♦Treaty of Hadrianople. 1829.♦ By the Treaty of Hadrianople
-she further won the islands at the mouth of the Danube. ♦Treaty of
-Paris, 1856;♦ The Treaty of Paris restored to Moldavia a small part
-of the lands ceded at Bucharest, so as to keep the Russian frontier
-away from the Danube. ♦of Berlin, 1878.♦ This last cession, with the
-exception of the islands, was recovered by Russia at the Treaty of
-Berlin. But changes of frontier in those regions no longer affect the
-dominion of the Turk.
-
-
-§ 9. _The Liberated States._
-
-♦Lands liberated from the Ottoman.♦
-
-The losses which the Ottoman power has undergone at the hands of its
-independent neighbours, Russia, Montenegro, and Austria or Hungary,
-must be distinguished from the liberation of certain lands from Turkish
-rule to form new or revived European states. We have seen that the
-kingdom of Hungary and its dependent lands might fairly come under this
-head, and we have seen in what the circumstances of their liberation
-differ from the liberation of Greece or Servia or Bulgaria. But it is
-important to bear in mind that the Turk had to be driven from Hungary,
-no less than from Greece, Servia, and Bulgaria. If the Turk has ruled
-at Belgrade, at Athens, and at Tirnovo, he has ruled at Buda no less.
-All stand in the same opposition to Tzetinje, where he has never ruled.
-
-As the Servian people was the only one among the south-eastern nations
-of which any part maintained its abiding independence, so the enslaved
-part of the Servian people was the first among the subject nations to
-throw off the yoke. ♦The Ionian Islands.♦ But the first attempt to form
-anything like a free state in south-eastern Europe was made among a
-branch of the Greek nation, in the so-called _Ionian Islands_. But the
-form which the attempt took was no lessening of the Turkish dominion,
-but its increase. ♦Ceded to France. 1797.♦ By the peace of Campoformio,
-the islands, with the few Venetian points on the mainland, were to
-pass to France. ♦Septinsular Republic under Ottoman overlordship.
-1798.♦ By the treaty of the next year between Russia and the Turk,
-the points on the mainland were to be handed over to the Turk, while
-the islands were to form a commonwealth, tributary to the Turk, but
-under the protection of Russia. ♦The Venetian outposts given to the
-Turk.♦ Thus, besides an advance of the Turk’s immediate dominion on
-the mainland, his overlordship was to be extended over the islands,
-including Corfu, the one island which had never come under his power.
-♦Surrender of Parga. 1819.♦ The other points on the mainland passed,
-not so much to the Sultan as to his rebellious vassal Ali of Jôannina;
-but _Parga_ kept its freedom till five years after the general peace.
-♦All Albania and continental Greece under the Turk.♦ Thus the Turk made
-his last encroachment on Christendom, and held for a moment the whole
-of the Greek and Albanian mainland. ♦The Ionian Islands under English
-protection. 1815.♦ The islands meanwhile, tossed to and fro during the
-war between France and England, were at the peace again made into a
-nominal commonwealth, but under a form of British protection which it
-is not easy to distinguish from British sovereignty. Still a nominally
-free Greek state was again set up, and the possibility of Greek freedom
-on a larger scale was practically acknowledged.
-
-♦The Greek War of Independence. 1821.♦
-
-It was only for a very short time that the Turk held complete
-possession of all Albania and continental Greece. Two years after the
-betrayal of Parga began the Greek War of Independence. ♦Extent of
-the Greek nation.♦ The geographical disposition of the Greek nation
-has changed very little since the Latin conquest of Constantinople;
-it has changed very little since the later days of old Hellas. At
-all these stages some other people has held the solid mainland of
-south-eastern Europe and of western Asia, while the Greek has been the
-prevailing race on the coasts, the islands, the peninsular lands, of
-both continents, from Durazzo to Trebizond. ♦General Greek revolt.♦
-Within this range the Greeks revolted at every point where they were
-strong enough to revolt at all. ♦Extent of the liberated territory.♦
-But it was only in the old Hellenic mainland, and in Crete and others
-of the Ægæan islands, that the Greeks were able to hold their ground.
-♦1829-1833.♦ Of these lands some parts were allowed by Western
-diplomacy to keep their freedom. ♦Kingdom of Greece.♦ A _Kingdom of
-Greece_ was formed, taking in Peloponnêsos, Euboia, the Kyklades, and
-a small part of central Greece, south of a line drawn from the gulf
-of Arta to the gulf of Volo. But the Turk was allowed to hold, not
-only the more distant Greek lands and islands, but Epeiros, Thessaly,
-and Crete. ♦Ionian islands added to Greece. 1864.♦ The kingdom was
-afterwards enlarged by the addition of the Ionian islands, whose
-nominal Septinsular Republic was merged in the kingdom. ♦Treaty of
-Berlin. 1878.♦ By the Treaty of Berlin, Crete, which had twice risen,
-was thrust back into bondage, but parts of Thessaly and Epeiros were
-ordered to be set free and to be added to the kingdom. ♦Its promises
-unfulfilled.♦ But even this small instalment of Greek emancipation has
-not yet been carried out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦First revolt and deliverance of Servia. 1805-1812.♦
-
-Between the first and the second establishment of the Ionian
-commonwealth, Servia had been delivered and had been conquered again.
-The first revolt made Servia a tributary principality. ♦Second revolt
-and deliverance. 1817-1829.♦ It was then won back by the Turk and
-again delivered. ♦1826-1829.♦ Its freedom, modified by the payment of
-tribute and by the presence of Turkish garrisons in certain towns, was
-decreed by the peace of Akerman, and was carried out by the treaty of
-Hadrianople. ♦Withdrawal of Turkish garrisons. 1867.♦ Fifty years after
-the second establishment of the principality, its practical freedom
-was made good by the withdrawal of the Turkish garrisons. ♦Servia
-independent with an enlarged territory. 1878.♦ The last changes have
-made Servia, under a native dynasty, an independent state, released
-from all tribute or vassalage. The same changes have given Servia a
-slight increase of territory. ♦Servian territory left to the Turk.♦
-But the boundary is so drawn as to leave part of the old Servian land
-to the Turk, and carefully to keep the frontiers of the Servian and
-Montenegrin principalities apart. That is to say, the Servian nation
-is split into four parts—Montenegro, free Servia, Turkish Servia, and
-those Servian lands which are, some under the ‘administration,’ some
-under the acknowledged rule, of the King of Hungary and Dalmatia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Rouman principalities.♦
-
-While Servia and Greece were under the immediate rule of the Turk,
-the Rouman lands of _Wallachia_ and _Moldavia_ always kept a certain
-measure of separate being. The Turk named and deposed their princes,
-but they never came under his direct rule. ♦Union of Wallachia and
-Moldavia. 1861.♦ After the Treaty of Paris, the two principalities,
-being again allowed to choose for themselves, took the first step
-towards union by choosing the same prince. Then followed their complete
-union as the _Principality of Roumania_, paying tribute to the Turk,
-but otherwise free. ♦Independence of Roumania. 1878.♦ The last changes
-have made Roumania, as well as Servia, an independent state. Its
-frontier towards Russia, enlarged at Paris, was cut short at Berlin.
-♦Change of its frontier.♦ But this last treaty restored to it the
-land of _Dobrutcha_ south of the Danube, thus giving the new state a
-certain Euxine sea-board. Thus the Roumans, the Romance-speaking people
-of Eastern Europe, still a scattered remnant in their older seats,
-have, in their great colony on the Danube, won for themselves a place
-among the nations of Europe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lastly, while Servia and Roumania have been wholly freed from the
-yoke, a part of _Bulgaria_ has been raised to that position of
-practical independence which they formerly held. ♦The Bulgaria of San
-Stefano. 1878.♦ The Russian treaty of San Stefano decreed a tributary
-principality of Bulgaria, whose boundaries came most nearly to those
-of the third Bulgarian kingdom at its greatest extent. But it was to
-have, what no Bulgarian state had had before, a considerable Ægæan
-sea-board. This would have had the effect of splitting the immediate
-dominion of the Turk in two. It would also have had the real fault
-of adding to Bulgaria some districts which ought rather to be added
-to free Greece. ♦Treaty of Berlin. | Division of Bulgaria.♦ By the
-Treaty of Berlin the Turk was to keep the whole north coast of the
-Ægæan, while the Bulgarian nation was split into three parts, in
-three different political conditions. ♦Free.♦ The oldest and latest
-Bulgarian land, the land between Danube and Balkan, forms, with the
-exception of the corner ceded to Roumania, the tributary _Principality
-of Bulgaria_. ♦Half-free.♦ The land immediately south of the Danube,
-the southern Bulgaria of history—northern Roumelia, according to the
-compass—receives the diplomatic name of _Eastern Roumelia_, a name
-which would more naturally take in Constantinople. Its political
-condition is described as ‘administrative autonomy,’ a half-way house,
-it would seem, between bondage and freedom. ♦Enslaved.♦ Meanwhile in
-the old Macedonian land, the land for which Basil and Samuel strove so
-stoutly, the question between Greek and Bulgarian is held to be solved
-by handing over Greek and Bulgarian alike to the uncovenanted mercies
-of the Turk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦General Survey.♦
-
-We may end our survey of the south-eastern lands by taking a general
-view of their geographical position at some of the most important
-points in their history. ♦800.♦ At the end of the eighth century we
-see the Eastern Empire still stretching from Tauros to Sardinia; but
-everywhere, save in its solid Asiatic peninsula, it has shrunk up into
-a dominion of coasts and islands. It still holds Sicily, Sardinia, and
-Crete, the heel and the toe of Italy, the outlying duchies of Campania,
-the outlying duchy at the head of the Hadriatic. In its great European
-peninsula it holds the whole of the Ægæan coast, a great part of the
-coasts of the Euxine and the Hadriatic. But the lord of the sea rules
-nowhere far from the sea; the inland regions are held, partly by the
-great Bulgarian power, partly by smaller Slavonic tribes fluctuating
-between independence and formal submission. ♦900.♦ At the end of the
-next century the general character of the East-Roman dominion remains
-the same, but many points of detail have changed. Sardinia and Crete
-are lost; a corner is all that is left in Sicily; but the Imperial
-power is acknowledged along the whole eastern Hadriatic coast; the
-heel and the toe have grown into the dominion of all southern Italy;
-all Greece has been won back to the Empire. But the Empire has now new
-neighbours. The Turanian Magyar is seated on the Danube, and other
-kindred nations are pressing in his wake. Russians, Slaves that is
-under Scandinavian leadership, threaten the Empire by sea. ♦1000.♦
-The last year of the tenth century shows Sicily wholly lost, but
-Crete and Cyprus won back; Kilikia and Northern Syria are won again;
-Bulgaria is won and lost again; Russian establishment on the Danube
-is put off for eight hundred years; the great struggle is going on
-to decide whether the Slave or the Eastern Roman is to rule in the
-south-eastern peninsula. ♦c. 1040.♦ At one moment in the eleventh
-century we see the dominion of the New Rome at its full height. Europe
-south of the Danube and its great tributaries, Asia to Caucasus and
-almost to the Caspian, form a compact body of dominion, stretching
-from the Venetian isles to the old Phœnician cities. The Italian and
-insular dominion is untouched; it is enlarged for a moment by Sicilian
-conquest. ♦c. 1090.♦ Another glance, half-a-century later, shows the
-time when the Empire was most frightfully cut short by old enemies
-and new. The Servian wins back his own land; the Saracen wins back
-Sicily. The Norman in Italy cuts down the Imperial dominion to the
-nominal superiority of Naples, the last of Greek cities in the West,
-as Kymê was the first. For a moment he even plants himself east of
-Hadria, and rends away Corfu and Durazzo from the Eastern world, as
-Rome rent them away thirteen centuries before. The Turk swallows up the
-inland provinces of Asia; he plants his throne at Nikaia, and leaves
-to the Empire no Asiatic dominion beyond a strip of Euxine and Ægæan
-coast. ♦c. 1180.♦ Towards the end of the twelfth century, the Empire
-is restored to its full extent in Europe; Servia and Dalmatia are won
-back, Hungary itself looks like a vassal. In Asia the inland realm
-of the Turk is hemmed in by the strong Imperial grasp of the whole
-coast-line, Euxine, Ægæan, and Mediterranean. ♦c. 1200.♦ At the next
-moment comes the beginning of the final overthrow; before the century
-is out, the distant possessions of the Empire have either fallen away
-of themselves, or have been rent away by other powers. Bulgaria,
-Cyprus, Trebizond, Corfu, even Epeiros and Hellas, have parted away,
-or are in the act of parting away. ♦1204.♦ Venice, its long nominal
-homage cast aside, joins with faithless crusaders to split the Empire
-in pieces. The Flemish Emperor reigns at Constantinople; the Lombard
-King reigns at Thessalonikê; Achaia, Athens, Naxos, give their names
-to more abiding dynasties; Venice plants herself firmly in Crete and
-Peloponnêsos. Still the Empire is not dead. The Frank, victorious
-in Europe, hardly wins a footing in Asia. Nikaia and Trebizond keep
-on the Imperial succession, and a third Greek power, for a moment
-Imperial also, holds it in Western Greece and the islands. ♦1250.♦
-Fifty years later, the Empire of Nikaia has become an European power;
-it has already outlived the Latin dominion at Thessalonikê; it has
-checked the revived power of Bulgaria; it has cut short the Latin
-Empire to the immediate neighbourhood of the Imperial city. To the
-north Servia is strengthening herself; Bosnia is coming into being;
-the Dalmatian cities are tossed to and fro among their neighbours.
-♦1300.♦ Another glance at the end of the thirteenth century shows us
-the revived East-Roman Empire in its old Imperial seat, still in Europe
-an advancing and conquering power, ruling on the three seas of its
-own peninsula, established once more in Peloponnêsos, a compact and
-seemingly powerful state, as compared with the Epeirot, Achaian, and
-Athenian principalities, or with the scattered possessions of Venice
-in the Greek lands. But the power which seems so firmly established
-in Europe has all but passed away in Asia. There the Turk has taken
-the place of the Greek, and the Greek the place of the Frank, as they
-stood a hundred years earlier. And behind the immediate Turkish enemies
-stands that younger and mightier Turkish power which is to swallow up
-all its neighbours, Mussulman and Christian. ♦c. 1354.♦ In the central
-years of the fourteenth century we see the Empire hemmed in between two
-enemies, European and Asiatic, which have risen to unexpected power
-at the same time. Part of Thrace, Chalkidikê, part of Thessaly, a few
-scattered points in Asia, are left to the Empire; in Peloponnêsos alone
-is it an advancing power; everywhere else its frontiers have fallen
-back. The Servian Tzar rules from the Danube to the Gulf of Corinth.
-The Ottoman Emir has left but a few fragments to the Empire in Asia,
-and has already fixed his grasp on Europe. ♦1400.♦ Before the century
-is ended, neither Constantinople, nor Servia, nor any other Christian
-power, is dominant in the south-eastern peninsula. The Ottoman rules
-in their stead. The Empire is cut short to a corner of Thrace, with
-Thessalonikê, Chalkidikê, and the Peloponnesian province which now
-forms its greatest possession. Instead of the great power of Servia,
-we see a crowd of small principalities, Greek, Slavonic, and Albanian,
-falling for the most part under either Ottoman or Venetian supremacy.
-The Servian name is still borne by one of them; but its prince is a
-Turkish vassal; the true representative of Servian independence has
-already begun to show itself among the mountains which look down on the
-mouths of Cattaro and the lake of Skodra. Bulgaria has fallen lower
-still; the Turk’s immediate power reaches to the Danube. Bosnia at one
-end, the Frank principalities at the other end, the Venetian islands
-in either sea, still hold out; but the Turk has begun, if not to rule
-over them, at least to harry them. Within the memory of men who could
-remember when the Empire of Servia was not yet, who could remember when
-the eagles of Constantinople still went forth to victory, the Ottoman
-had become the true master of the South-Eastern lands; whatever has
-as yet escaped his grasp remained simply as remnants ready for the
-gleaning.
-
-♦1500.♦
-
-We will take our next glance in the later years of the fifteenth
-century, a few years after the death of the great conqueror. The
-momentary break-up of the power of the Ottoman has been followed by the
-greatest of his conquests. All now is over. The New Rome is the seat of
-barbarian power. Trebizond, Peloponnêsos, Athens, Euboia, the remnant
-of independent Epeiros, Servia, Bosnia, Albania, all are gathered in.
-The islands are still mostly untouched; but the whole mainland is
-conquered, save where Venice still holds her outposts, and where the
-warrior prelates of the Black Mountain, the one independent Christian
-power from the Save to Cape Matapan, have entered on their career of
-undying glory. With these small exceptions, the whole dominion of the
-Macedonian Emperors has passed into Ottoman hands, together with a
-vast tributary dominion beyond the Danube, much of which had never
-bowed to either Rome. ♦1600.♦ At the end of another century, we see all
-Hungary, save a tributary remnant, a subject land of the Turk. We see
-Venice shorn of Cyprus and all her Peloponnesian possessions. The Dukes
-have gone from Naxos and the Knights from Rhodes, and the Mussulman
-lord of so many Christian lands has spread his power over his fellow
-Mussulmans in Syria, Egypt, and Africa. ♦1700.♦ Another century passes,
-and the tide is turned. The Turk can still conquer; he has won Crete
-abidingly and Podolia for a moment. But the crescent has passed away
-for ever from Buda and from the Western isles; it has passed away for a
-moment from Corinth and all Peloponnêsos. ♦1800.♦ At the end of another
-century we see the Turk’s immediate possession bounded by the Save
-and the Danube, and his overlordship bounded by the Dniester. His old
-rivals Poland and Venice are no more; but Austria hems in his Slavonic
-provinces; France struggles for the islands off his western shore;
-Russia watches him from the peninsula so long held by the free Goth
-and the free Greek. ♦1878.♦ Seventy-eight years more, and his shadow
-of overlordship ends at the Danube, his shadow of immediate dominion
-ends at the Balkan. Free Greece, free Servia, free Roumania—Montenegro
-again reaching to her own sea—Bulgaria parted into three, but longing
-for reunion—Bosnia, Herzegovina, Cyprus, held in a mysterious way by
-neighbouring or distant European powers—all join to form, not so much
-a picture as a dissolving view. We see in them a transitional state of
-things, which diplomacy fondly believes to be an eternal settlement of
-an eternal question, but of which reason and history can say only that
-we know not what a day may bring forth.
-
- [Long after this chapter was written, after the whole of it was
- printed, after a great part of it was revised for the press, there
- appeared the first volume of the great collection of C. N. Sathas,
- Μνημεῖα τῆς Ἑλληνικῆς Ἱσορίας, _Documents Inédits relatifs à
- l’Histoire de la Grèce au Moyen Âge_ (Paris, 1880). In his preface
- M. Sathas insists on two points. One is the Greek character of the
- Eastern Empire throughout its whole being; that it had a Greek
- side no one ever thought of denying. He brings together a good
- many occasional instances, largely from unprinted manuscripts, of
- the use of Ἕλλην and Ἑλλάς through the whole period of the Empire.
- That the name came into rhetorical use by a kind of _Renaissance_
- about the thirteenth century is undoubted. I brought together some
- few instances in my Historical Essays, iii. 246, and the whole
- history of Laonikos Chalkokondylas is one long instance. M. Sathas
- brings several others from much earlier times. But they seem to me
- to be mainly cases of the rhetorical use of an antiquated name,
- such as is common among all nations. They do not seem to affect
- the proposition that the regular national name of the Empire and
- its people was always _Roman_. M. Sathas’ other point is somewhat
- startling. It is that the Slavonic occupation of a large part of
- Greece, as to the extent of which there has been much disputing,
- but which I never before saw altogether denied, is all a mistake.
- According to him the settlers were not Slaves, but Albanians,
- called Slaves by that lax use of national names of which there
- certainly are plenty of instances. I cannot undertake either to
- accept or to refute M. Sathas’ doctrine during the process of
- revising a proof-sheet. I can only put the fact on record that one
- who has gone very deeply into the matter has come to this, to me at
- least, altogether new conclusion.]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[24] Unless we except the momentary existence of the first Septinsular
-Republic, to be spoken of below.
-
-[25] The longer form Λογγιβαρδία clave to this theme, while the Greeks
-learned to apply the contracted form Λαμπαρδοί to the Lombards of
-Northern Italy.
-
-[26] A temporary Bulgarian occupation seems clear from Einhard, Annals,
-827, 828. But on the supposed existence of a Bulgarian duchy in the
-present Hungary see Roesler, _Romänische Studien_, 201.
-
-[27] It must be remembered that δεσπότης was and is a common Byzantine
-title, with no worse meaning than _dominus_ or any of the words which
-translate it.
-
-[28] On this very singular, but very obscure, little state see our
-own Benedict (ii. 199) and Roger of Howden (iii. 161, 269), and
-the Ghibeline Annals of Placentia, Pertz, xix. 468. See also Hopf,
-_Geschichte Griechenlands_, vi. 161.
-
-[29] See above, p. 379.
-
-[30] It is well to see this familiar title in Greek. The Duke (δοὺξ
-Βενετίας) was δεσποτικῷ ἀξιώματι τιμηθεὶς, ἔχειν τε ἐξ ὅλου πρὸς τὸ
-ὅλον ὃ τὸ τῶν Φράγκων ἐκτήσατο γένος τὸ τέταρτον καὶ τοῦ τετάρτου τὸ
-ἥμισυ. George Akropolitês, 15. ed. Bonn.
-
-[31] If this is what is really meant by _Laza_ or _Lacta_ in the Act of
-Partition. Muratori, xii. 357.
-
-[32] See the Venetian Chronicle in Pertz, viii. 29, 32. After the
-Venetian conquest the Duke’s name is placed after that of the Emperor
-in religious ceremonies. But we see how slight was the real hold of
-the Empire on these distant dependencies, when we find that, on the
-submission of Croatia and Dalmatia to Basil the Macedonian, the tribute
-of the cities was assigned to the Croatian prince.
-
-[33] _Negroponte_—a wild corruption of _Euripos_—is strictly the
-name of one of the Latin baronies in Euboia, and has been carelessly
-transferred to the whole island, as Crete used often to be called
-_Candia_.
-
-[34] Ἄσπρη θάλασσα, as distinguished from the Euxine, the μαύρη θάλασσα.
-
-[35] Fallmerayer gives the name a Slavonic origin; Hopf and Hertzberg
-make Μωραία a transposition of Ῥὡμαία. Neither derivation is
-satisfactory; but either is better than the mulberry-leaf.
-
-[36] _Grand Sire_, _Megaskyr_, = μέγας κύριος. See Nikêphoros Grêgoras,
-vii. 5, vol. i. p. 239.
-
-[37] See above, p. 388.
-
-[38] See above, p. 283.
-
-[39] See below, p. 425.
-
-[40] See p. 141. It was Thessaly, less _Neopatra_ attached to Athens,
-_Pteleon_ held by Venice, _Zeitouni_ by the Empire.
-
-[41] ‘Basilissa Romæorum’ = Ῥωμαίων βασίλισσα. ‘Rom_æ_i’ is not
-uncommonly used for the Ῥωμαῐωι of the East, as distinguished from the
-‘Rom_an_orum Imperator’ of the West.
-
-[42] See above, p. 377.
-
-[43] See above, p. 420.
-
-[44] He claimed (see Jireček, _Geschichte der Bulgaren_, p. 351)
-to rule over the Greek, the Albanian, and the Servian lands, from
-Hadrianople to Durazzo.
-
-[45] The history of George Akropolitês gives a narrative of these wars
-which is worth studying, if only for its close bearing on the most
-recent events.
-
-[46] See above, p. 157.
-
-[47] See above, p. 158.
-
-[48] On the origin of the name, see Roesler, _Romänische Studien_, 159,
-218, 260. There is something strange in Constantine calling the Finnish
-Magyars Τοῠρκοι, in opposition to the really Turkish Patzinaks. His
-Τουρκία and Φραγγία are of course Hungary and Germany. De Adm. Imp. 13,
-40. pp. 81, 173. ed. Bonn.
-
-[49] Also called _Siebenbürgen_, a corruption of the name of the
-fortress of _Cibin_, which has many spellings.
-
-[50] I must have given far more faith to it than I do now when I
-wrote p. 71. Roesler’s book, _Romänische Studien_, has since put the
-whole matter in a clear light; nor can I think that his arguments are
-at all set aside by the answer of Jung, _Römer und Romanen in den
-Donauländern_. Innsbruck, 1877.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE BALTIC LANDS.
-
-
-♦Lands beyond the two Empires.♦
-
-Our survey of the two Empires and of the powers which sprang out of
-them has still left out of sight a large part of Europe, including some
-lands which formed part of the elder Empire. It is only indirectly that
-we have spoken of the extreme north, the extreme east, or the extreme
-west, of Europe. ♦_Quasi_-Imperial position of certain powers.♦ In
-all these regions powers have risen and fallen which might pass for
-shadows of the two Empires of Rome. ♦The British islands.♦ Thus in the
-north-west lie two great islands with a following of smaller ones, of
-which the elder Empire never held more than part of the greater island
-and those of the smaller ones which could not be separated from it.
-Britain passed for a world of its own, and the princes who rose to a
-_quasi_-Imperial position within that world took, by a kind of analogy,
-the titles of Empire.[51] ♦Scandinavia.♦ In the extreme north are a
-larger and smaller peninsula, with their attendant islands, which lay
-wholly beyond the elder Empire, and of which the later Western Empire
-took in only a very small part for a short time. ♦Empire of Cnut.♦
-The momentary union of these two insular and peninsular systems, of
-Britain and Scandinavia, formed more truly a third Empire of the North,
-fully the fellow of those of the East and West.[52] ♦Spain.♦ In the
-south-west of Europe again lay another great peninsula, which had
-been fully incorporated with the elder Empire, parts of which—at two
-opposite ends—had belonged to the Empire of Justinian and to the Empire
-of Charles, but whose history, as a whole, stands apart from that of
-either the Eastern or the Western Roman power. And in Spain also, as
-being, like Britain, in some sort a world of its own, the leading power
-asserted an Imperial rank. ♦Castilian Emperors.♦ As Wessex had its
-Emperors, so had Castile.
-
-♦History of the lands beyond the Empires.♦
-
-Britain, Scandinavia, and Spain, thus form three marked geographical
-wholes, three great divisions of that part of Europe which lay
-outside the bounds of either Empire at the time of the separation.
-But the geographical position of the three regions has led to marked
-differences in their history. Insular Britain is wholly oceanic.
-♦Geographical comparison of Scandinavia and Spain.♦ Peninsular Spain
-and Scandinavia have each an oceanic side; but each has also a side
-towards one of the great inland seas of Europe—Spain towards the
-Mediterranean, Scandinavia towards the northern Mediterranean, the
-Baltic. But the Baltic side of Scandinavia has been of far greater
-relative importance than the Mediterranean side of Spain. ♦Position
-of Aragon in the Mediterranean.♦ Of the three chief Spanish kingdoms
-Aragon alone has a Mediterranean history; the seaward course of Castile
-and Portugal was oceanic. Of the three Scandinavian kingdoms Norway
-alone is wholly oceanic. ♦Position of Sweden in the Baltic.♦ Denmark is
-more Baltic than oceanic; the whole historic life of Sweden lies on the
-Baltic coasts. The Mediterranean position of Aragon enabled her to win
-whole kingdoms as her dependencies. But they were not geographically
-continuous, and they never could be incorporated. Sweden, on the other
-hand, was able to establish a continuous dominion on both sides of the
-great northern gulfs, and to make at least a nearer approach to the
-incorporation of her conquests than Aragon could ever make. ♦Growth
-and decline of Sweden.♦ The history of Sweden mainly consists in the
-growth and the loss of her dominion in the Baltic lands out of her
-own peninsula. It is only in quite modern times that the union of the
-crowns, though not of the kingdoms, of Sweden and Norway has created a
-power wholly peninsular and equally Baltic and oceanic.
-
-♦Eastern and western aspects of Scandinavia.♦
-
-This eastern aspect of Scandinavian history needs the more to be
-insisted on, because there is another side of it with which we
-are naturally more likely to be struck. Scandinavian inroads and
-conquests—inroads and conquests, that is, from Denmark and Norway—make
-up a large part of the early history of Gaul and Britain. When this
-phase of their history ends, the Scandinavian kingdoms are apt to pass
-out of our sight, till we are perhaps surprised at the great part which
-they suddenly play in Europe in the seventeenth century. But both
-Denmark and Sweden had meanwhile been running their course in the lands
-north, east, and south of the Baltic. And it is this Baltic side of
-their history which is of primary importance in our general European
-view.
-
-♦The Baltic lands generally.♦
-
-It follows then that, for the purposes of our present survey, while the
-British islands and the Spanish peninsula will each claim a distinct
-treatment, we cannot separate the Scandinavian peninsulas from the
-general mass of the Baltic lands. ♦The Northern Slavonic lands.♦ We
-must look at Scandinavia in close geographical connexion with the
-region which stretches from the centre to the extreme east of Europe,
-a region which, while by no means wholly Slavonic, is best marked as
-containing the seats of the northern branch of the Slavonic race. This
-region has a constant connexion with both German and Scandinavian
-history. ♦Germanized Slavonic lands.♦ It takes in those wide lands,
-once Slavonic, which have at various times been more or less thoroughly
-incorporated with Germany, but which did not become German without
-vigorous efforts to make large parts of them Scandinavian. In another
-part of our survey we have watched them join on to the Teutonic body;
-we must now watch them drop off from the Slavonic body. ♦Northern
-Slaves under Hungary or Austria.♦ And with them we must take another
-glimpse at those among the Northern Slaves who passed under the power
-of the Magyar, and of that composite dominion which claims the Magyar
-crown among many others. These North-Slavonic lands which have passed
-to non-Slavonic rulers form a region stretching from Holstein to
-the Austrian kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria and to the Slovak and
-Ruthenian districts of Hungary. But above all, this North-Slavonic
-region takes in those two branches of the Slavonic race which have in
-turn lorded it over one another, neither of which passed permanently
-under the lordship of either Empire, but one of which owed its
-unity and national life to settlers from the Scandinavian north.
-♦Characteristics of Poland and Russia.♦ That is to say, it is the
-land of the Pole and the Russian, the land of the two branches of the
-Slavonic race which passed severally under the spiritual dominion of
-the elder and the younger Rome without passing under the temporal
-dominion of either. ♦The primitive nations.♦ And within the same
-region we have to deal with the remnant that is left of those ancient
-nations, Aryan and non-Aryan, which so long refused all obedience to
-either Church as well as to either Empire. ♦Aryan nations; Prussians
-and Lithuanians.♦ The region at which we now look takes in the land of
-those elder brethren of the European family whose speech has changed
-less than any other European tongue from the Aryan speech once common
-to all. Alongside of the Orthodox Russian, of the Catholic Pole, of the
-Swede first Catholic and then Lutheran, we have to look on the long
-abiding heathendom of the Lithuanian and the Prussian.[53] ♦Non-Aryan
-Fins.♦ And at their side we have to look on older races still, on the
-præ-Aryan nations on either side of the Bothnian and Finnish gulfs.
-The history of the eastern coast of the Baltic is the history of the
-struggle for the rule or the destruction of these ancient nations at
-the hands of their Teutonic and Slavonic neighbours.
-
-♦Central position of the North-Slavonic lands.♦
-
-The whole North-Slavonic region, north-eastern rather than central
-with regard to Europe in general, has still a central character of its
-own. It is connected with the history of northern, of western, and
-of south-eastern Europe. The falling away of so many Slavonic lands
-to Germany is of itself no small part of German history. But besides
-this, the strictly Polish and Russian area marches at once on the
-Western Empire, on the lands which fringe the Eastern Empire, on the
-Scandinavian North, and on the barbarian lands to the north-east. This
-last feature is a characteristic both of the North-Slavonic region and
-of the Scandinavian peninsula. ♦Barbarian neighbours of Russia and
-Scandinavia.♦ Norway, Sweden, Russia, are the only European powers
-whose land has always marched on the land of barbarian neighbours,
-and have therefore been able to conquer and colonize in barbarian
-lands simply by extending their own frontiers. This was done by Norway
-and Sweden as far as their geographical position allowed them; but it
-has been done on a far greater scale by Russia. ♦Russian conquest and
-colonization by land.♦ While other European nations have conquered
-and colonized by sea, Russia, the one European state of later times
-which has marched upon Asia, has found a boundless field for conquest
-and colonization by land. She has had her India, her Canada, and
-her Australia, her Mexico, her Brazil, her Java, and her Algeria,
-geographically continuous with her European territory. This fact is the
-key to much in the later history of Russia.
-
-♦Relation of the Baltic lands to the two Empires.♦
-
-With regard to the two Empires, the lands round the Baltic show us
-several relations. ♦Norway always independent.♦ In Scandinavia,
-Norway stands alone in never having had anything to do with the Roman
-power in any of its forms. ♦Relations of Sweden and Denmark to the
-Empire.♦ Sweden itself has always been equally independent; but in
-later times Swedish kings have held fiefs within the Western Empire.
-The position of Denmark has naturally caused it to have much more to
-do with its Roman or German neighbour. In earlier times some Danish
-kings became vassals of the Empire for the Danish crown; others made
-conquests within the lands of the Empire. In later times Danish kings
-have held fiefs within the German kingdom and have been members of the
-more modern Confederation. ♦The Empire and the West-Slavonic lands.♦
-The western parts of the Slavonic region became formally part of the
-Western Empire. But this was after the Empire had put on the character
-of a German state; these lands were not drawn to it from its strictly
-Imperial side. ♦Poland and the Empire.♦ Poland sometimes passed in
-early days for a fief of the German kingdom; in later days it was
-divided between the two chief powers which arose out of that kingdom.
-♦Relations of Russia to the Eastern Church and Empire.♦ Russia, on the
-other hand, the pupil of the Eastern Empire, has never been the subject
-or the vassal of either Empire. When Russia had an external overlord,
-he was an Asiatic barbarian. ♦Imperial style of Russia.♦ The peculiar
-relation between Russia and Constantinople, spiritual submission
-combined with temporal independence, has led to the appearance in
-Russia of Imperial ideas and titles with a somewhat different meaning
-from that with which they were taken in Spain and in Britain. The
-Russian prince claims the Imperial style and bearings, not so much as
-holding an Imperial position in a world of his own, as because the
-most powerful prince of the Eastern Church in some sort inherits the
-position of the Eastern Emperor in the general world of Europe.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Scandinavian Lands after the Separation of the Empires._
-
-At the end of the eighth century the Scandinavian and Slavonic
-inhabitants of the Baltic lands as yet hardly touched one another. The
-most northern Scandinavians and the most northern Slaves were still
-far apart; if the two races anywhere marched on one another, it must
-have been at the extreme south-western corner of the Baltic coast. ♦The
-Baltic still mainly held by the earlier races.♦ The greater part of
-that coast, all its northern and eastern parts, was still held by the
-earlier nations, Aryan and non-Aryan. ♦Formation of the Scandinavian
-kingdoms.♦ But, within the two Scandinavian peninsulas, the three
-Scandinavian nations were fast forming. A number of kindred tribes were
-settling down into the kingdoms of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden,[54]
-which, sometimes separate, sometimes united, have existed ever since.
-
-Of these three, Denmark, the only one which had a frontier towards the
-Empire, was naturally the first to play a part in general European
-history. ♦Formation of the Danish kingdom.♦ In the course of the tenth
-century, under the half-mythical Gorm and his successors Harold and
-Sven, the Danish kingdom itself, as distinguished from other lands held
-in after times by its kings, reached nearly its full historical extent
-in the two peninsulas and the islands between them. ♦Denmark in the
-northern peninsula.♦ _Halland_ and _Skåne_ or _Scania_, it must always
-be remembered, are from the beginning at least as Danish as Zealand and
-Jutland. ♦Frontier of the Eider. | The Danish March. 934-1027.♦ The
-Eider remained the frontier towards the Empire, save during part of the
-tenth and eleventh centuries, when the Danish frontier withdrew to the
-Dannewerk, and the land between the two boundaries formed the _Danish
-March_ of the Empire. Under Cnut the old frontier was restored.
-
-The name of _Northmen_,[55] which the Franks used in a laxer way for
-the Scandinavian nations generally, was confined to the people of
-_Norway_. ♦Formation of the kingdom of Norway.♦ These were formed into
-a single kingdom under Harold Harfagra late in the ninth century. The
-Norwegian realm of that day stretched far beyond the bounds of the
-later Norway, having an indefinite extension over tributary Finnish
-tribes as far as the White Sea. The central part of the eastern side of
-the northern peninsula, between Denmark to the south and the Finnish
-nations to the north, was held by two Scandinavian settlements which
-grew into the Swedish kingdom. ♦The Swedes and _Gauts_.♦ These were
-those of the Swedes strictly so called, and of the _Geátas_ or _Gauts_.
-This last name has naturally been confounded with that of the Goths,
-and has given the title of _King of the Goths_ to the princes of
-Sweden. _Gothland_, east and west, lay on each side of Lake Wettern.
-_Swithiod_ or _Svealand_, Sweden proper, lay on both sides of the
-great arm of the sea whose entrance is guarded by the modern capital.
-♦The Swedish kingdom.♦ The union of Svealand and Gothland made up the
-kingdom of Sweden. ♦Fluctuations towards Norway and Denmark. 1111.♦
-Its early boundaries towards both Denmark and Norway were fluctuating.
-_Wermeland_, immediately to the north of Lake Wenern, and _Jamteland_
-farther to the north, were long a debateable land. At the beginning of
-the twelfth century Wermeland passed finally to Sweden, and Jamteland
-for several ages to Norway. _Bleking_ again, at the south-east corner
-of the peninsula, was a debateable land between Sweden and Denmark
-which passed to Denmark. ♦Growth to the north.♦ For a land thus bounded
-the natural course of extension by land lay to the north, along the
-west coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. In the course of the eleventh
-century at the latest, Sweden began to spread itself in that direction
-over _Helsingland_.
-
-Sweden had thus a better opportunity than Denmark and Norway for
-extension of her own borders by land. ♦Western expeditions of the
-Danes and Northmen.♦ Meanwhile Denmark and Norway, looking to the
-west, had their great time of Oceanic conquest and colonization
-in the ninth and tenth centuries.[56] These two processes must be
-distinguished. ♦Conquests.♦ Some lands, like the Northumbrian and
-East-Anglian kingdoms in Britain and the duchy of Normandy in Gaul,
-received Scandinavian princes and a Scandinavian element in their
-population, without the geographical area of Scandinavia being
-extended. ♦Colonies.♦ But that area may be looked on as being extended
-by colonies like those of _Orkney_, _Shetland_, _Faroe_, the islands
-off the western coast of Scotland, _Man_, _Iceland_, _Greenland_. Some
-of these were actually discovered and settled for the first time by the
-Northmen. ♦Settlements in Ireland.♦ The settlements on the east coast
-of Ireland, Dublin, Waterford, Wexford, may also pass as outposts of
-Scandinavia on Celtic ground. Of these outlying Scandinavian lands,
-some of the islands, specially Iceland, have remained Scandinavian; the
-settlements on the mainland of Britain and Ireland, and on the islands
-nearest to them, have been merged in the British kingdoms or have
-become dependencies of the British crown.
-
-♦Expedition to the east.♦
-
-Against this vast range of Oceanic settlement there is as yet little to
-set in the form of Baltic conquest on the part of Norway and Denmark.
-Norway indeed hardly could become a Baltic power. ♦Danes in Samland.
-950.♦ But there was a Danish occupation of _Samland_ in Prussia in the
-tenth century, which caused that land to be reckoned among the kingdoms
-which made up the Northern Empire of Cnut.[56] ♦Jomsburg. 935-1043.♦
-There is also the famous settlement of the _Jomsburg_ Wikings at the
-mouth of the Oder. But the great eastern extension of Danish power came
-later. Nor did the lasting Swedish occupation of the lands east of
-the gulf of Bothnia begin till the twelfth century. But there is no
-doubt that, long before this, there were Swedish inroads and occasional
-Swedish conquests in other parts of the Baltic lands. ♦Swedish conquest
-of Curland.♦ Thus _Curland_ is said to have been won for a while by
-Sweden, and to have been again won back by its own Lettic people.[57]
-The ninth century indeed saw a wonderful extension of Scandinavian
-dominion far to the east and far to the south. But it was neither
-ordinary conquest nor ordinary settlement. No new Scandinavian people
-was planted, as in Orkney and Iceland. Nor were Scandinavian outposts
-planted, as in Ireland. ♦Scandinavians in Russia.♦ But Scandinavian
-princes, who in three generations lost all trace of their Scandinavian
-origin, created, under the name of _Russia_, the greatest of Slavonic
-powers. The vast results of their establishment have been results on
-the history and geography of the Slaves; on Scandinavian geography it
-had no direct effect at all. Still it forms a connecting link between
-the Scandinavian lands west and north of the Baltic and the Slavonic
-region to the east and south of that sea.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Lands East and South of the Baltic at the Separation of the
-Empires._
-
-♦Slaves between Elbe and Dnieper.♦
-
-At the beginning of the ninth century the inland region stretching from
-the Elbe a little beyond the Dnieper was continuously held by various
-Slavonic nations. Their land marched on the German kingdom at one end,
-and on various Finnish and Turkish nations at the other. ♦Their lack
-of sea-board.♦ But their sea-board was comparatively small. Wholly cut
-off from the Euxine, from the northern Ocean, and from the great gulfs
-of the Baltic, their only coast was that which reaches from the modern
-haven of Kiel to the mouth of the Vistula. And this Slavonic coast was
-gradually brought under German influence and dominion, and has been in
-the end fully incorporated with the German state. It follows then that,
-in tracing the history of the chief Slavonic powers in this region,
-of Bohemia, Poland, and Russia, we are dealing with powers which are
-almost wholly inland. At the time of the separation of the Empires,
-there was no one great Slavonic power in these parts. One such, with
-Bohemia for its centre, had shown itself for a moment in the seventh
-century. ♦Bohemian kingdom of Samo. 623.♦ This was the kingdom of
-Samo, which, if its founder was really of Frankish birth, forms an
-exact parallel to Bulgaria and Russia, also Slavonic powers created by
-foreign princes.[58] ♦Great-Moravia. 884.♦ The next considerable power
-which arose nearly on the same ground was the Great Moravian kingdom of
-Sviatopluk, which passed away before the advance of the Magyars. Before
-its fall the Russian power had already begun to form itself far to the
-north-east. ♦Four Slavonic groups.♦ Looking at the map just before the
-beginning of the momentary Moravian and the lasting Russian power,
-the North-Slavonic nations fall into four main historical groups.
-♦North-western group; thoroughly Germanized.♦ There are, first, the
-tribes to the north-west, whose lands, answering roughly to the modern
-Mecklenburg, Pomerania, Brandenburg, and Saxony, have been thoroughly
-Germanized. ♦South-western group under German supremacy♦ Secondly,
-there are the tribes to the south-west in _Bohemia_, _Moravia_, and
-_Lusatia_, which were brought under German dominion or supremacy, but
-from which Slavonic nationality has not in the same sort passed away.
-_Silesia_, connected in different ways with both these groups, forms
-the link between them and the third group. ♦Central group; Polish.♦
-This is formed by the central tribes of the whole region, lying between
-the Magyar to the south and the Prussian to the north, whose union
-made up the original Polish kingdom. ♦Eastern group; Russian.♦ Lastly,
-to the east lie the tribes which joined to form the original Russian
-state. Looking at these groups in our own time, we may say that from
-the first of them all signs of Slavonic nationality have passed away.
-The second and third, speaking roughly, keep nationality without
-political independence. The fourth group has grown into the one great
-modern power whose ruling nationality is Slavonic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With regard to the first group, we have now to trace from the
-Slavonic side the same changes of frontier which we have already
-slightly glanced at from the German side. ♦Polabic group.♦ In the
-land between the Elbe and the Oder, taking the upper course of those
-rivers as represented by their tributaries the Saale and the Bober,
-we find that division of the Slaves which their own historian marks
-off as _Polabic_.[59] These again fall under three groups. ♦Sorabi.♦
-First, to the south, in the modern Saxony, are the _Sorabi_, the
-northern Serbs, cut off for ever from their southern brethren by the
-Magyar inroad. ♦Leuticii.♦ To the north of them lie the _Leuticii_,
-_Weleti_, _Weletabi_, or _Wiltsi_, and other tribes stretching to
-the Baltic in modern Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. ♦Obotrites:♦
-In the north-west corner, in Mecklenburg and eastern Holstein, were
-the _Obotrites_, _Wagri_, and other tribes. ♦their relations to the
-Empire.♦ Through the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries the relations
-between these lands and the Western Empire was not unlike the relation
-of the southern Slaves to the Eastern Empire during the same ages. Only
-the Western Emperors never had such a rival on their immediate border
-as the Bulgaria of Simeon or Samuel. ♦Fluctuations of tribute and
-independence. 921-968.♦ The Slavonic tribes on the north-eastern border
-of the Western Empire were tributary or independent, according as the
-Empire was strong or weak. Tributary under Charles the Great, tributary
-again under the great Saxon kings, they had an intermediate period
-of independence. The German dominion, which fell back in the latter
-part of the tenth century, was again asserted by the Saxon dukes and
-margraves in the eleventh and twelfth. ♦Final conquest.♦ Long before
-the end of the twelfth century the work was done. The German dominion,
-and with it the Christian religion, had been forced on the Slaves
-between Elbe and Oder.
-
-♦Conquest of the Sorabi.♦
-
-The Serbs between Elbe and Saale seem to have been the earliest and the
-most thoroughly conquered. They never won back their full independence
-after the victories of the first Saxon kings. The Serbs between Elbe
-and Bober, sometimes tributary to the Empire, were also sometimes
-independent, sometimes under the superiority of kindred powers like
-Poland or Bohemia. ♦Meissen.♦ The lands included in the mark of
-_Meissen_ were thoroughly Germanized by the twelfth century. ♦Lusatia.♦
-But in the lands included in the mark of _Lusatia_ the Slavonic speech
-and nationality still keep a firm hold.
-
-♦The Leuticians.♦
-
-The Leutician land to the north was lost and won over and over again.
-♦927-1157.♦ _Branibor_, the German _Brandenburg_, was often taken
-and retaken during a space of two hundred years. ♦983.♦ Late in the
-tenth century the whole land won back its freedom. ♦1030-1101.♦ In the
-eleventh it came under the Polish power. ♦1134-1157.♦ At last, the
-reign of Albert the Bear finally added to Germany the land which was to
-contain the latest German capital, and made Brandenburg a German _mark_.
-
-In the land lying on that narrow part of the Baltic which bore the
-special name of the _Slavonic Gulf_, the alternations of revolt and
-submission, from the ninth century to the twelfth, were endless. Here
-we can trace out native dynasties, one of which has lasted to our own
-day. ♦Kingdom of Sclavinia.♦ The mark of the Billungs[60] alternates
-with the _kingdom of Sclavinia_, and the kingdom of Sclavinia
-alternates between heathen and Christian princes. ♦Przemyslaf.
-1161. | House of Mecklenburg.♦ At last, in the twelfth century, the
-last heathen King of the Wends became the first Christian Duke, the
-founder of the house of Mecklenburg. Part of this region, Western
-Pomerania and the island of _Rügen_, became, both in this and in later
-times, a special borderland of Germany and Scandinavia. ♦Rügen under
-Denmark. 1168-1325.♦ Rügen and the neighbouring coast became a Danish
-possession in the twelfth century, and so remained into the fourteenth.
-♦1214-1223.♦ The kingdom of Sclavinia itself became Danish for a short
-season. A Scandinavian power appeared again in the same region in the
-seventeenth century. With these exceptions, the history of these lands
-from the twelfth century onward, is that of members of the German
-kingdom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was otherwise with the second group, with the Slaves who dwelled
-within the fence of the Giant Mountains, and with their neighbours
-to the north-east, on the upper course of the Oder as well as on the
-Wag and the northern Morava. ♦Kingdom of Bohemia.♦ Here a Slavonic
-kingdom has lived on to this day, though it early passed under German
-supremacy, and though it has been for ages ruled by German kings.
-♦928.♦ _Bohemia_, the land of the _Czechs_, tributary to Charles
-the Great, part of the kingdom of Sviatopluk, became definitely a
-German fief through the wars of the Saxon kings. But this did not
-hinder Bohemia from becoming, later in the century, an advancing and
-conquering power, the seat of a short-lived dominion, like those of
-Samo and Sviatopluk. ♦Moravians and Slovaks.♦ To the east of the Czechs
-of Bohemia lie the _Moravians_ and _Slovaks_, that branch of the
-Slavonic race which formed the centre of the kingdom of Sviatopluk,
-and which bore the main brunt of the Magyar invasion. ♦Magyar conquest
-of Moravia. 906-955.♦ A large part of the Slaves of this region fell
-permanently under Magyar rule; so did Moravia itself for a season.
-Since then Bohemia and Moravia have usually had a common destiny.
-♦Advance of Bohemia. 973-999.♦ Later in the century the Czechish
-dominion reached to the Oder, and took in the Northern _Chrobatia_ on
-the upper Vistula. This dominion passed away with the great growth
-of the Polish power. ♦Bohemia and Moravia under Poland. 1003-1004.
-| 1003-1029.♦ Bohemia itself for a moment, Moravia for a somewhat longer
-time, became Polish dependencies, and the Magyar won a further land
-between the Wag and the Olzava. Later events led to another growth of
-Bohemia, in more forms than one, but always as a member of the Roman
-Empire and the German kingdom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The Polish kingdom.♦
-
-While our second group thus passed under German dominion without
-ceasing to be Slavonic, among the third group a great Slavonic power
-arose whose adhesion to the Western Church made it part of the general
-Western world, but which was never brought under the lasting supremacy
-of the Western Empire. ♦Its relations to Germany.♦ Large parts of the
-old Polish lands have passed under German rule; some parts have been
-largely Germanized. But Poland, as a whole, has never been either
-Germanized or brought under lasting German rule. Holding the most
-central position of any European state, Poland has had to struggle
-against enemies from every quarter, against the Swede from the Baltic
-and the Turk from the Danube. ♦Rivalry of Poland and Russia.♦ But the
-distinguishing feature of its history has been its abiding rivalry with
-the Slavonic land to the east of it. The common history of Poland and
-Russia is a history of conquest and partition, wrought by whichever
-power was at the time the stronger.
-
-♦The Lechs or Poles.♦
-
-Our first glimmerings of light in these parts show us a number of
-kindred tribes holding the land between Oder and Vistula, with the
-coast between the mouths of those rivers. East of the Vistula they
-are cut off from the sea by the Prussians; but in the inland region
-they stretch somewhat to the east of that river. To the west the
-Oder and Bober may be taken as their boundary. ♦White Chrobatia.♦
-But the upper course of these rivers is the home of another kindred
-people, the northern branch of the Chrobatians or Croats, whose land
-of _White Chrobatia_ stretched on both sides of the Carpathians.
-These Slaves of the central and lower Oder and Vistula would seem to
-be best distinguished as _Lechs_; _Poland_ is the name of the land
-rather than of the people. ♦Polish tribes.♦ _Mazovia_, _Cujavia_,
-_Silesia_—the German _Schlesien_—with the sea land, _Pomore_,
-_Pommern_, or _Pomerania_, mark different districts held by kindred
-tribes. ♦Beginning of the Polish kingdom at Gnesen.♦ In the tenth
-century a considerable power arose for the first time in these regions,
-having its centre between the Warta and the Vistula, at _Gniezno_ or
-_Gnesen_, the abiding metropolitan city of Poland. ♦931-992. Conversion
-of Poland.♦ The extent of the new power under the first Christian
-prince Mieczïslaf answered nearly to the later Great Poland, Mazovia,
-and Silesia. ♦Tributary to the Empire. 963. | 973.♦ But the Polish
-duke became a vassal of the Empire for his lands west of Warta, and
-suffered some dismemberments to the advantage of Bohemia. ♦Conquests
-of Boleslaf. 996-1025.♦ Under his son Boleslaf, Poland rose to the
-same kind of momentary greatness as Moravia and Bohemia had already
-done. The dominions of Boleslaf took in, for longer or shorter times,
-Bohemia, Moravia, Lusatia, Silesia, Pomerania, Prussia, part of
-Russia, and part of that middle Slavonic land which became the mark of
-Brandenburg, the districts of _Barnim_ and _Custrin_. Of this great
-dominion some parts fell away during the life of Boleslaf, and other
-parts at his death. ♦Effects of his reign.♦ But he none the less
-established Poland as a power, and some of his conquests were abiding.
-♦Chrobatia becomes _Little Poland_.♦ Western Pomerania, Silesia, Barnim
-and Custrin, were kept for a longer or shorter time; and Chrobatia
-north of the Carpathians—the southern part fell to the Magyar at his
-death—remained, under the name of _Little Poland_, as long as Poland
-lasted at all. It supplied the land with its second capital, _Cracow_.
-From this time Poland ranked sometimes as a kingdom, sometimes as a
-duchy.[61] ♦Internal divisions.♦ Constant divisions among members of
-the ruling house, occasional admissions of the outward supremacy of
-the Empire, did not destroy its national unity and independence.
-♦The Polish state survives.♦ A Polish state always lived on. And from
-the end of the thirteenth century, it took its place as an important
-European kingdom, holding a distinctive position as the one Slavonic
-power at once attached to the Western Church and independent of the
-Western Empire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Relations of Russia to the Eastern Church.♦
-
-To the east of the Lechs and Chrobatians lay that great group of
-Slavonic tribes whose distinctive historical character is that they
-stood in the same relation to Eastern Christendom in which Poland
-stands to Western. Disciples of the Eastern Church, they were never
-vassals of the Eastern Empire. ♦Teutonic influence among eastern and
-western Slaves.♦ The Western Slaves were brought under Christian
-and under Teutonic influences by the same process, a process which
-implied submission, or attempted submission, to the Western Empire or
-to some of its princes. The Eastern Slaves were also brought under
-both Christian and Teutonic influences, but in wholly different
-shapes. The Teutonic influence came first. ♦Russia created by the
-Scandinavian settlement.♦ It did not take the form of submission to any
-existing Teutonic power; it was the creation of a new Slavonic power
-under Teutonic rulers. Christianity did not come till those Teutonic
-influences had died away, except in their results, and, coming from
-the Eastern centre of Christendom, it had the effect of keeping its
-disciples aloof from both the Christian and the Teutonic influences of
-the West. ♦The name _Russian_.♦ A group of Slavonic tribes, without
-losing their Slavonic character, grew up to national unity, and took up
-a national name from Scandinavian settlers and rulers, the Warangians
-or _Russians_ of the Swedish peninsula.[62]
-
-♦Origin of Russia. 862. | First seat at Novgorod. Russian advance.♦
-
-The Russian power began by the Scandinavian leaders obtaining, in the
-latter half of the ninth century, the dominion of the most northern
-members of the Slavonic race, the Slaves of _Novgorod_ on the Ilmen.
-Thence they pushed their dominion southwards. ♦Extent of the eastern
-Slavonic lands.♦ East and north-east of the Lechs and Chrobatians lay
-a crowd of Slavonic tribes stretching beyond the Dnieper as far as the
-upper course of the Oka. Cut off from the Baltic by the Fins and Letts,
-they were cut off from the Euxine by various Turanian races in turn,
-first Magyars, then Patzinaks. To the south-east, from the Dnieper
-to the Caspian, lay the _Chazar_ dominion, to which the Slaves east
-of Dnieper were tributary. To the north-east lay a crowd of Finnish
-tribes, among which is only one Finnish power of historic name, the
-kingdom of _Great_ or _White Bulgaria_ on the Volga. ♦Union of the
-eastern Slaves. 862-912.♦ Within this region, in the space of fifty
-years, the various Slavonic tribes joined in different degrees of unity
-to form the new power, called _Russian_ from its Scandinavian leaders.
-♦Advance against Chazars and Fins.♦ The tribes who were tributary to
-the Chazars were set free, and the Russian power was spread over a
-certain Finnish area on the Upper Volga and its tributaries, nearly as
-far north as Lake Bielo. ♦Second centre at Kief.♦ The centres of the
-new power were, first _Novgorod_, and then _Kief_ on the Dnieper.
-
-♦The rulers of Russia become Slavonic. | 957-972.♦
-
-How early the Scandinavian rulers of the new Slavonic power became
-themselves practically Slavonic is shown by the name of the prince
-Sviatoslaf, of whom we have already heard in the Danubian Bulgaria.
-♦Russian enterprise. Euxine.♦ Already had Russian enterprise taken
-the direction which it took in far later days. It was needful for
-the developement of the new Russian nation to have free access to the
-Euxine. From this they were cut off by a strange fate for nine hundred
-years. But from the very beginning more than one attempt was made on
-Constantinople, though the _Tzargrad_, the Imperial city, could be
-reached only by sailing down the Dnieper through an enemy’s country.
-♦Conquests on the Caspian. | Vladimir takes Cherson.♦ Sviatoslaf also
-appears as a conqueror in the lands by the Caucasus and the Caspian,
-and Vladimir, the first Christian prince, won his way to baptism by an
-attack on the Imperial city of Cherson.
-
-♦Isolation of Russia.♦
-
-The oldest Russia was thus, like the oldest Poland, emphatically
-an inland state; but it was far more isolated than Poland. Its
-ecclesiastical position kept it from sharing the history of the Western
-Slaves. Its geographical position kept it from sharing the history
-of the Servians and Bulgarians. ♦Russian lands west of Dnieper.♦ And
-it must not be forgotten that the oldest Russia was formed mainly of
-lands which afterwards passed under the rule of Poland and Lithuania.
-_Little Russia_, _Black Russia_, _White Russia_, _Red Russia_, all came
-under foreign rule. The Dnieper, from which Russia was afterwards cut
-off, was the great central river of the elder Russia; of the Don and
-the Volga she held only the upper course. The northern frontier barely
-passed the great lakes of Ladoga and Onega, and the Gulf of Finland
-itself. It seems not to have reached what was to be the Gulf of Riga,
-but some of the Russian princes held a certain supremacy over the
-Finnish and Lettish tribes of that region.
-
-♦Russian principalities. 1054. | Supremacy of Kief;♦
-
-In the course of the eleventh century, the Russian state, like that of
-Poland, was divided among princes of the reigning family, acknowledging
-the superiority of the great prince of _Kief_. ♦of the Northern
-Vladimir, 1169.♦ In the next century the chief power passed from Kief
-to the northern _Vladimir_ on the Kiasma. ♦Susdal Russian.♦ Thus
-the former Finnish land of _Susdal_ on the upper tributaries of the
-Volga became the cradle of the second Russian power. ♦Commonwealths
-at Novgorod and Pskof.♦ _Novgorod the Great_ meanwhile, under
-elective princes, claimed, like its neighbour _Pskof_, to rank among
-commonwealths. Its dominion was spread far over the Finnish tribes to
-the north and east; the White Sea, and, far more precious, the Finnish
-Gulf, had now a Russian seaboard. It was out of Vladimir and Novgorod
-that the Russia of the future was to grow. ♦The principalities.♦
-Meanwhile a crowd of principalities, _Polotsk_, _Smolensk_, the
-_Severian Novgorod_, _Tchernigof_, and others, arose on the Duna and
-Dnieper. ♦Commonwealth of Viatka. 1174. | Halicz or Galicia. 1186.♦ Far
-to the east across the commonwealth of _Viatka_, and on the frontiers
-of Poland and Hungary arose the principality of _Halicz_ or _Galicia_,
-which afterwards grew for a while into a powerful kingdom.
-
-♦The Cumans. 1114.♦
-
-Meanwhile in the lands on the Euxine the old enemies, Patzinaks and
-Chazars, gave way to the _Cumans_,[63] known in Russian history as
-_Polovtzi_ and _Parthi_. They spread themselves from the Ural river to
-the borders of Servia and Danubian Bulgaria, cutting off Russia from
-the Caspian. ♦1223. | Mongol invasion.♦ In the next century Russians
-and Cumans—momentary allies—fell before the advance of the _Mongols_,
-commonly known in European history as _Tartars_. Known only as ravagers
-in the lands more to the west, over Russia they become overlords for
-two hundred and fifty years. ♦Russia tributary to the Mongols.♦ All
-that escaped absorption by the Lithuanian became tributary to the
-Mongol. ♦1240.♦ Still the relation was only a tributary one; Russia was
-never incorporated in the Mongol dominion, as Servia and Bulgaria were
-incorporated in the Ottoman dominion. ♦Russia represented by Novgorod.♦
-But Kief was overthrown; Vladimir became dependent; Novgorod remained
-the true representative of free Russia in the Baltic lands.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The earlier races on the Baltic.♦
-
-But besides the Slaves of Poland and Russia, our survey takes in also
-the ancient races by which both Poland and Russia were so largely
-cut off from the Baltic. Down to the middle of the twelfth century,
-notwithstanding occasional Polish or Scandinavian occupations, those
-races still kept their hold of the whole Baltic north-eastwards from
-the mouth of the Vistula. ♦Fins in Livland and Esthland.♦ The non-Aryan
-Fins, besides their seats to the north, still kept the coast of
-_Esthland_ and _Lifland_, in Latin shape _Esthonia_ and _Livonia_, from
-the Finnish Gulf to the Duna and slightly beyond, taking in a small
-strip of the opposite peninsula. ♦The Lettic nations.♦ The inland part
-of the later Livland was held by the _Letts_, the most northern branch
-of the ancient Aryan settlers in this region. ♦Curland. | Samogitia.
-| Lithuania.♦ Of this family were the tribes of _Curland_ in their own
-peninsula, of _Samigola_ or _Semigallia_, the _Samaites_ of _Samogitia_
-to the south, the proper _Lithuanians_ south of them, the _Jatwages_,
-_Jatwingi_—in many spellings—forming a Lithuanian wedge between the
-Slavonic lands of Mazovia and Black Russia. ♦Prussia.♦ The Lithuanians,
-strictly so called, reached the coast just north of the Niemen; from
-the mouth of the Niemen to the mouth of the Vistula the coast was
-held by the _Prussians_. Of these nations, Aryan and non-Aryan, the
-Lithuanians alone founded a national dominion in historic times. The
-history of the rest is simply the history of their bondage, sometimes
-of their uprooting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Survey in the twelfth century.♦
-
-Taking a general survey of the lands round the Baltic about the middle
-of the twelfth century, we see the three Scandinavian kingdoms, the
-first fully formed states in these regions, all living and vigorous
-powers, but with fluctuating boundaries. Their western colonies are
-still Scandinavian. East and south of the Baltic they have not got
-beyond isolated and temporary enterprises. The Slavonic nations on the
-middle Elbe have fallen under German dominion; to the south Bohemia
-and its dependencies keep their Slavonic nationality under German
-supremacy. Poland, often divided and no longer conquering, still keeps
-its frontier, and its position as the one independent Slavonic power
-belonging to the Western Church. Russia, the great Eastern Slavonic
-power, has risen to unity and greatness under Scandinavian masters,
-and has again broken up into states connected only by a feeble tie.
-The submission of Russia to barbarian invaders comes later than our
-immediate survey; but the weakening of the Russian power both by
-division and by submission is an essential element in the state of
-things which now begins. ♦Teutonic advance, German and Scandinavian.♦
-This is the spread in different ways of Teutonic dominion, German and
-Scandinavian, over the southern and eastern coasts of the Baltic,
-largely at the expense of the Slaves, still more largely at the expense
-of the primitive nations, Aryan and non-Aryan.
-
-
-§ 3. _The German Dominion on the Baltic._
-
-♦Time of Teutonic conquest.♦
-
-In the first half of the twelfth century, no Teutonic power, German or
-Scandinavian, had any lasting hold on any part of the eastern coast of
-the Baltic or its gulfs, nor had any such power made any great advances
-on the southern coast. Early in the fourteenth century the whole of
-these coasts had been brought into different degrees of submission to
-several Teutonic powers, German and Scandinavian. ♦German influence
-stronger than Scandinavian.♦ Of the two influences the German has been
-the more abiding. Scandinavian dominion has now wholly passed away from
-these coasts, and it is only in the lands north of the Finnish Gulf
-that it can be said to have ever been really lasting. ♦Extent of German
-dominion.♦ But German influence has destroyed, assimilated, or brought
-to submission, the whole of the earlier inhabitants, from Wagria to
-Esthland. In our own day the whole coast, from the isle of Rügen to the
-head of the gulf of Bothnia, is in the possession of two powers, one
-German, one Slavonic. ♦German influence abiding.♦ But German influence
-abides beyond the bounds of German rule. Not only have Pomerania
-and Prussia become German in every sense, but Curland, Livland, and
-Esthland, under the dominion of Russia, are still spoken of as German
-provinces.
-
-This great change was brought about by a singular union of mercantile,
-missionary, and military enterprise. ♦Beginning of Swedish conquest in
-Finland. 1155.♦ The beginning came from Scandinavia, when the Swedish
-King Saint Eric undertook the conquest and conversion of the proper
-Finland, east of the Gulf of Bothnia. Here, in the space of about a
-century, a great province was added to the Swedish kingdom, a province
-whose eastern boundary greatly shifted, but the greater part of which
-remained Swedish down to the present century. To the south of the Gulf
-of Finland the changes of possession have been endless. The settled
-dominion of Sweden in those lands comes later; Danish occupation,
-though longer, was only temporary. ♦German conquest in Livland.♦ Soon
-after the beginning of Swedish conquest in Finland began the work of
-German mercantile enterprise, followed fifty years later by German
-conquest and conversion, in Livland and the neighbouring lands. This
-hindered the growth of any native power on those coasts. ♦Its effect on
-Lithuania and Russia.♦ Even Lithuania in the days of its greatness was
-cut off from the sea. Whatever tendencies towards Russian supremacy had
-arisen in those parts were hindered from growing into Russian dominion.
-♦The Military Orders.♦ The Knights of the Sword in Livland were
-followed by the Teutonic Knights in Prussia, and the two orders became
-one. ♦Danish advance.♦ Further west, the latter part of the twelfth
-and the beginning of the thirteenth century saw a great, but mostly
-short-lived, extension of Danish power over both German and Slavonic
-lands. ♦The Scandinavian kingdoms.♦ While the coasts are thus changing
-hands, the relations of Scandinavian kingdoms to one another are ever
-shifting. ♦Polish gains and losses.♦ Poland is ever losing territory
-to the west, and, still more after the beginning of its connexion with
-Lithuania, ever gaining it to the east. ♦The _Hansa_.♦ And, alongside
-of princes and sovereign orders, this time is marked by the appearance
-of the first germs of the great German commercial league, which,
-without becoming a strictly territorial power, exercised the greatest
-influence on the disposal of power among all its neighbours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Scania Swedish. 1332-1360.♦
-
-In Scandinavia itself the chief strictly geographical change was a
-temporary transfer to Sweden in the fourteenth century of the Danish
-lands within the northern peninsula. ♦Union of Calmar. 1396.♦ At
-the end of that century came the union of Calmar, the principle of
-which was that the three kingdoms, remaining separate states, should
-be joined under a common sovereign. But this union was never firmly
-established, and the arrangements of the three crowns were shifting
-throughout the fifteenth century; a lasting state of things came only
-with the final breach of the union in the sixteenth century. ♦Sweden
-separated, Denmark and Norway united. 1520.♦ From that time, Sweden,
-under the house of Vasa, forms one power; Denmark and Norway, under the
-house of Oldenburg, form another.
-
-♦Loss of oceanic colonies.♦
-
-With regard to the more distant relations of the three kingdoms, this
-period is marked by the gradual withdrawal of Scandinavian power from
-the oceanic lands. ♦Iceland and Greenland united to Norway. 1261-1262.♦
-The union of Iceland and Greenland with Norway was the union of one
-Scandinavian land with another. But Greenland, the most distant
-Scandinavian land, vanishes from history about the time of the Calmar
-union. The Scandinavian settlements in and about the British Islands
-all passed away. ♦Ireland.♦ The Ostmen of Ireland were lost in the mass
-of the Teutonic settlers who passed from England into Ireland. ♦The
-Western Isles. Man. 1264.♦ The Western Isles were sold to Scotland; Man
-passed under Scottish and English supremacy. ♦Orkney pledged. 1468.♦
-Orkney and Shetland were pledged to the Scottish crown; and, though
-never formally ceded, they have become incorporated with the British
-kingdom.
-
-♦Swedish advance in Finland. | 1248-1293.♦
-
-East of the Gulf of Bothnia Swedish rule advanced. Attempts at conquest
-both in Russia and in Esthland failed, but _Finland_ and _Carelia_ were
-fully subdued, and the Swedish power reached to Lake Ladoga. ♦Esthland
-Danish. 1238-1346.♦ Denmark made a more lasting, but still short-lived,
-settlement in Esthland. ♦Short-lived greatness of Denmark.♦ The growth
-of Denmark at the other end of the Baltic lands began earlier and was
-checked sooner. But at the beginning of the thirteenth century things
-looked as if Denmark was about to become the chief power on all the
-Baltic coasts.
-
-♦Holstein.♦
-
-South of the boundary stream of the Eider the lands which make up
-the modern Holstein formed three settlements, two Teutonic and one
-Slavonic. ♦Ditmarschen.♦ To the west lay the free Frisian land of
-_Ditmarschen_. ♦Holstein.♦ In the middle were the lands of the Saxons
-beyond the Elbe—the _Holtsætan_—with _Stormarn_ immediately on the
-Elbe. ♦Wagria.♦ On the Baltic side lay the Slavonic land of _Wagria_,
-which at the beginning of the twelfth century formed part of the
-kingdom of _Sclavinia_, a kingdom stretching from the haven of Kiel to
-the islands at the mouth of the Oder. ♦Danish conquest of Sclavinia.
-1168-1189.♦ In these lands began the eastern advance of Denmark in the
-latter half of the twelfth century. All Sclavinia was won, with at
-least a supremacy over the Pomeranian land as far as the Riddow. Thus
-far the Danish conquests, won mainly over Slaves, continue the chain
-of occasional Scandinavian occupation on those coasts, from the tenth
-century to the nineteenth. In another point of view, the Christian
-advance, the overthrow of the chief centre of Slavonic heathendom in
-Rügen, carries on the work of the Saxon Dukes. ♦Danish advance in
-Germany.♦ But in the first years of the next century began a Danish
-occupation of German ground. Holstein, and Lübeck itself, were won;
-a claim was set up to the free land of Ditmarschen; and all these
-conquests were confirmed by an Imperial grant.[64] ♦1214.♦ The Danish
-kings now took the title of _Kings of the Slaves_, afterwards of the
-_Vandals_ or _Wends_. ♦Fall of the Danish power. 1223-1227.♦ But
-this dominion was soon broken up by the captivity of the Danish king
-Waldemar. The Eider became again the boundary. ♦Denmark keeps Rügen,
-till ceded 1325, 1438.♦ Of her Slavonic dominion Denmark kept only an
-outlying fragment, the isle of Rügen and the neighbouring coast. This
-remained Danish for a hundred years longer, nominally for a hundred
-years longer still.
-
-The next changes tended to draw the lands immediately on each side
-of the Eider into close connexion with one another. ♦Duchy of South
-Jutland. 1232.♦ The southern part of the Danish peninsula, from the
-Eider to the Aa, became a distinct fief of the Danish crown, held by a
-Danish prince under the name of the duchy of _South-Jutland_—_Jutia_
-or _Sunder-Jutia_. ♦United with Holstein. 1325.♦ In the next century
-this duchy and the county of Holstein are found in the hands of
-the same prince, and it is held that his grant of the Danish duchy
-contained a promise that it should never be united with the Danish
-crown. ♦Duchy of Sleswick.♦ Henceforth South-Jutland begins to be
-spoken of as the _duchy of Sleswick_. But of the lands held together,
-Sleswick remained a fief of Denmark, while Holstein remained a fief
-of the Empire. ♦Fluctuations of Sleswick and Holstein.♦ The duchy was
-several times united to the crown and again granted out. ♦1424.♦ At
-one moment of union the Roman King Sigismund expressly confirmed the
-union, and acknowledged Sleswick as a Danish land. ♦1448.♦ At the
-next grant of the duchy, its perpetual separation from the crown is
-alleged to have been again confirmed by Christian the First. ♦1460.♦
-Yet Christian himself, already king of the three kingdoms, was
-afterwards elected Duke of Sleswick and Count of Holstein. The election
-was accompanied by a declaration that the two principalities, though
-the one was held of the Empire and the other of the Danish crown,
-should never be separated. ♦Duchy of Holstein. 1474.♦ In the same
-reign an Imperial grant raised the counties of Holstein and Stormarn
-with the land of Ditmarsh to the rank of a duchy. But the dominions
-of its duke were not a continuous territory stretching from sea to
-sea. ♦Freedom in Ditmarschen. | Bishopric of Lübeck.♦ To the west,
-_Ditmarschen_—notwithstanding a renewed Imperial grant—remained free;
-to the east, some districts of the old Wagria formed the _bishopric of
-Lübeck_. ♦Denmark, Sleswick, and Holstein under Christian.♦ But now for
-the first time the same prince reigned in the threefold character of
-King of Denmark, Duke of the Danish fief of Sleswick, and Duke of the
-Imperial fief of Holstein. Endless shiftings, divisions, and reunions
-of various parts of the two duchies followed. ♦Royal and Ducal lines.
-1580.♦ In the partitions between the _royal_ and _ducal_ lines of the
-house of Oldenburg, the several portions of the Kings of Denmark and
-of the Dukes of Gottorp paid no regard to the boundary of the Eider,
-but each was made up of detached parts of both duchies. ♦Conquest of
-Ditmarschen. 1559.♦ Meanwhile the freedom of Ditmarschen came to an
-end, and the old Frisian land became part of the royal share of the
-duchy of Holstein. ♦Acquisition of Dago and Oesel.♦ And, as we began
-our story of Danish advance with the settlement in Esthland, we have to
-end it for the present with the acquisition of the islands of _Dago_
-and _Oesel_ off the same coasts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Effect of the Danish advance on the Slavonic lands.♦
-
-After the loss of Rügen, Denmark had little to do with the Slavonic
-lands, except so far as the possession of Holstein carried with it
-the possession of the old Slavonic land of Wagria. Still the advance
-of Denmark at the end of the twelfth century had a lasting effect on
-the Slavonic lands by altogether shaking the Polish dominion on the
-Baltic. But it shook it to the advantage, not of Scandinavia, but of
-Germany. Between the twelfth century and the fourteenth Poland lost all
-its western dominions. _Pomore_, _Pommern_, _Pomerania_, the seaboard
-of the Lechish Slaves, is strictly the land between the mouth of the
-Vistula and the mouth of the Oder; but the name had already spread
-further to the West. ♦Pomerania falls away from Poland.♦ After the
-fall of the Danish power on this coast, Pomerania west of the Riddow
-altogether fell away from Poland. ♦Duchy of Slavia.♦ As the duchy of
-_Slavia_, it became, like Mecklenburg, a land of the Empire, though
-ruled by Slavonic princes. ♦1298-1305. Loss of western territory by
-Poland.♦ But the eastern part of Pomerania, _Cassubia_ and the mark
-of _Gdansk_ or _Danzig_, remained under Polish superiority till the
-beginning of the fourteenth century. Then the greater part fell away,
-partly for ever, to the Pomeranian duchy of _Wolgast_, partly, for
-a season only, to the Teutonic Knights. ♦1220-1260.♦ To the south
-_Barnim_ and _Custrin_ passed, after some shiftings, to the mark of
-Brandenburg. ♦Silesia. 1289-1327.♦ Further to the south, Silesia,
-divided among princes of the house of Piast, gradually fell under
-Bohemian supremacy. Thus the whole western part of the Polish kingdom
-passed into the hands of princes of the Empire, and was included within
-the bounds of the German realm.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fate of Silesia brings us again to the history of the inland
-Slavonic land of the Czechs. _Bohemia_ went on, as duchy and
-kingdom,[65] ruled by native princes as vassals of the Empire. Moravia
-was a fief of Bohemia. In the end Bohemia passed to German kings, but
-not till it had become again the centre of a dominion which recalls
-the fleeting powers of Samo and Sviatopluk. ♦Bohemia and Ottocar.
-1269-1278.♦ Ottocar the Second united the long-severed branches of the
-Slavonic race by annexing the German lands which lay between them. ♦His
-German dominion.♦ Lord of Bohemia, Moravia, Austria, Styria, Carinthia,
-and Carniola, the Czech king reigned on the upper Oder and the middle
-Danube as far as the Hadriatic. The same lands were in after times to
-be again united, but from the opposite side.
-
-♦Luxemburg kings of Bohemia. 1308.♦
-
-The successors of Ottocar reigned only over Bohemia and Moravia.
-Early in the next century the Bohemian crown passed to the house of
-Luxemburg. Under them Bohemia became a powerful state, but a state
-becoming more and more German, less and less Slavonic. ♦Silesia, 1355.♦
-The gradual extension of Bohemian superiority over Silesia led to
-its formal incorporation. ♦Lusatia. 1320-1370.♦ In the same century
-_Lusatia_, High and Low, was won from Brandenburg. ♦Brandenburg.
-1373-1417.♦ The mark of Brandenburg itself became for a while a
-Bohemian possession, before it passed to the burgraves of Nürnberg.
-♦1353.♦ The Bohemian possession of the Upper Palatinate lies out of our
-Slavonic range. Among the revolutions of the fifteenth century, we find
-the Bohemian crown at one time held conjointly with that of Hungary,
-at another time held by a Polish prince. ♦Conquests of Matthias
-Corvinus, 1478-1490.♦ Later in the century the victories of Matthias
-Corvinus took away Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia, from the Bohemian
-crown. ♦Bohemia and Austria. | Its losses. 1635. | 1740.♦ But it was
-the fourfold dominion of Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia, which
-finally passed to the House of Austria, to be shorn of its northern and
-eastern lands to the profit, first of Saxony, and then of Brandenburg
-or Prussia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus far the Teutonic advance, both on the actual Baltic coast and
-on the inland Slavonic region, had been made to the profit, partly
-of the Scandinavian kingdoms, partly of the princes of the Empire.
-♦German corporations.♦ But there were two other forms of Teutonic
-influence and dominion, which fell to the share, not of princes, but
-of corporate bodies, mercantile and military or religious. ♦The
-Hansa.♦ The Hanseatic League was indeed a power in these regions,
-but it hardly has a place on the map. ♦Second foundation of Lübeck.
-1158.♦ Even before the second foundation of Lübeck by Henry the Lion,
-German mercantile settlements had begun at Novgorod, in Gotland, and
-in London. ♦Extent of the League.♦ Gradually, in the course of the
-thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the League into which the union
-of the merchant towns of Germany grew spread itself over the Baltic,
-the Westfalian, and the Netherlandish lands. A specially close tie
-bound together the five _Wendish_ towns, _Lübeck_, _Rostock_, _Wismar_,
-_Stralsund_, and _Greifswald_. ♦Nature of the union.♦ But the union
-of a town with the Hansa did not necessarily affect its political
-position. It might, at least in the later stages of the League, be
-a free city of the Empire, a town subject to some prince of the
-Empire, or a town subject to a prince beyond its bounds. Not only the
-Pomeranian and Prussian cities under the rule of the Knights, but Revel
-in Esthland under Danish rule formed part of the League. ♦The Hansa
-not a territorial power.♦ The League waged wars, made peace, overthrew
-and set up kings, as suited its interests; but territorial dominion,
-strictly so called, was not its object. Still in some cases privileges
-grew into something like dominion; in others military occupation might
-pass for temporary dominion. ♦The Hansa in Gotland and Scania. | 1361.
-| 1368-1385.♦ Thus in the isle of _Gotland_ the Hansa had an ascendency
-which was overthrown by the conquest of the island by the Danish king
-Waldemar, a conquest avenged by a temporary Hanseatic occupation of
-Scania. In fact the nature of the League, the relations of the cities
-to one another, geographical as well as political, hindered the Hansa
-from ever becoming a territorial power like Switzerland and the United
-Provinces. In the history of the Baltic lands it takes for some ages a
-position at least equal to that of any kingdom. But it is only casually
-and occasionally that its triumphs can be marked on the map.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The other great German corporation was not commercial, but military and
-religious. ♦The Swordbearers and the Teutonic Order.♦ The conquests of
-the Order of Christ and of the Order of Saint Mary—better known as the
-_Sword-brothers_ and the _Teutonic Order_—were essentially territorial.
-These orders became masters of a great part of the Baltic coast, and
-wherever they spread their dominion, Christianity and German national
-life were, by whatever means, established. ♦Their connexion with the
-Empire.♦ As both the chiefs of the Order and the Livonian prelates
-ranked as princes of the Empire, the conquests of the Knights were in
-some sort an extension of the bounds of the Empire. Yet we can hardly
-look on Livonia and Prussia as coming geographically within the Empire
-in the same sense as Pomerania and Silesia. ♦Effects of their rule.♦
-But whether strictly an extension of the Western Empire or not, the
-conquests of the Knights were an extension of the Western Church, the
-Western world, and the German nation, as against both heathendom and
-Eastern Christianity, as against all the other Baltic nationalities,
-non-Aryan and Aryan.
-
-♦The Swordbearers in Livland. 1201.♦
-
-The first settlement began in _Livland_. In the beginning of the
-thirteenth century, the Knights of the Order of Christ were called in
-as temporal helpers by Bishop Albert of Riga, and they gradually won
-the dominion of the lands on the gulf called from his city. ♦The Danes
-in Esthland.♦ For a while they had a partner in the Danish crown, which
-held part of _Esthland_. ♦Extent of their dominion. | Dago and Oesel.♦
-But the rest of Esthland, Livland in the narrower sense, Curland,
-Semigola, the special Lettish land, and the Russian territory on the
-Duna, made up this Livonian dominion, which was afterwards enlarged
-by the isles of Dago and Oesel and by the Danish portion of Esthland.
-♦Esthland. 1346.♦ _Riga_ and _Revel_ became great commercial cities,
-and Riga became an ecclesiastical metropolis under a prince-archbishop.
-The natives were reduced to bondage, and the Russian powers of Novgorod
-and Polotsk were effectually kept away from the gulf.
-
-♦The Teutonic Order in Prussia. 1226.♦
-
-The dominion of the Knights of Saint Mary, the Teutonic Order, in
-Prussia and in a small part of Lithuania, began a little later
-than that of the Sword-brothers in Livland. Invited by a Polish
-prince, Conrad of Mazovia, they received from him their first Polish
-possession, the palatinate of _Culm_. ♦Union of the Orders. 1237.♦
-Eleven years later the Prussian and Livonian orders were united. Their
-dominion grew. ♦Purchase of Pomerelia. 1311.♦ The acquisition of
-_Pomerelia_, the eastern part of the old _Pomore_, immediately west of
-the lower Vistula, cut off Poland from the sea. ♦Conquest of Samogitia.
-1384.♦ Later in the century, Lithuania was equally cut off by the
-cession of _Samogitia_. ♦Occupation of Gotland. 1398-1408. | The New
-Mark pledged to the Order. 1402.♦ The isle of _Gotland_ was held for
-a while; the _New Mark_ of Brandenburg was pledged by King Sigismund.
-♦Their coast line.♦ The whole coast from Narva on the Finnish gulf
-to the point where the Pomeranian coast trends south-west formed the
-unbroken sea-board of the Order.
-
-♦Losses of the Prussian Knights.♦
-
-Of the two seats of the Order the northern one proved the stronger and
-more lasting. Livland remained untouched long after Poland had won
-back her lost ground from the Prussian Knights. ♦Samogitia restored
-to Lithuania. 1410.♦ The battle of Tannenberg won back Samogitia for
-Lithuania, and again parted the Livonian and Prussian lands of the
-Order. ♦Peace of Thorn. 1646.♦ By the peace of Thorn its Prussian
-dominion was altogether cut short. ♦Cessions of the Order to Poland.♦
-_Culm_ and _Pomerelia_, with the cities of _Danzig_ and _Thorn_, went
-back to Poland. And a large part of Prussia itself, the bishopric of
-_Ermeland_, a district running deep into the land still left to the
-knights, was added to Poland. ♦Vassalage of the Order.♦ The rest of
-Prussia was left to the Order as a Polish fief.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The thirteenth century was the special time when Teutonic dominion
-spread itself over the Baltic lands. ♦Advance of Christianity.♦ It was
-also the time when heathendom gave way to Christianity at nearly every
-point of those lands where it still held out. But, while the old creeds
-and the old races were giving way, a single one among them stood forth
-for a while as an independent and conquering state, the last heathen
-power in Europe. ♦Lithuania the last heathen power.♦ While all their
-kinsfolk and neighbours were passing under the yoke, the _Lithuanians_,
-strictly so called, showed themselves the mightiest of conquerors in
-all lands from the Baltic to the Euxine. ♦Advance of Lithuania. c.
-1220.♦ From their own land on the Niemen they began, under their prince
-Mendog, to advance at the expense of the Russian lands to the south.
-♦Mendog king. 1252.♦ Mendog embraced Christianity, and was crowned
-King of Lithuania, a realm which now stretched from the Duna to beyond
-the Priepetz. But heathendom again won the upper hand, and the next
-century saw the great advance of the Lithuanian power, the momentary
-rule of old Aryan heathendom alike over Christendom and over Islam.
-♦Conquests from Russia. 1315-1340. 1345-1377.♦ Under two conquering
-princes, Gedymin and Olgierd, further conquests were made from the
-surrounding Russian lands. ♦1315-1360.♦ The Lithuanian dominion was
-extended at the expense of Novgorod and Smolensk; the Lithuanian
-frontier stretched far beyond both the Duna and the Dnieper; Kief was
-a Lithuanian possession. ♦Volhynia and Podolia.♦ The kingdom of Galicia
-lost _Volhynia_ and _Podolia_, which became a land disputed between
-Lithuania and Poland. These last conquests carried the Lithuanian
-frontier to the Dniester, and opened a wholly new set of relations
-among the powers on the Euxine. ♦Perekop. 1363.♦ By the conquest of
-the Tartar dominion of _Perekop_, Lithuania, cut off from the Baltic,
-reached to the Euxine.
-
-♦Consolidation of Poland. 1295-1320.♦
-
-Meanwhile Poland, from a collection of duchies under a nominal head,
-had again grown into a consolidated and powerful kingdom. The western
-frontier had been cut short by various German powers, and the Teutonic
-Order shut off the kingdom from the sea. Mazovia and Cujavia remained
-separate duchies; but Great and Little Poland remained firmly united,
-and were ready to enlarge their borders to the eastward. ♦Conquests of
-Casimir the Great. 1333-1370. | Red Russia. 1340.♦ Casimir the Great
-added _Podlachia_, the land of the _Jatvingi_, and in the break-up of
-the Galician kingdom, he incorporated _Red Russia_ as being a former
-possession of Poland. ♦Annexed to Hungary. 1377.♦ But, as it had also
-been a former possession of Hungary,[66] Lewis the Great, the common
-sovereign of Hungary and Poland, annexed it to his southern kingdom.
-
-♦Union of Poland and Lithuania.♦
-
-The two powers which had thus grown up were now to be gradually fused
-into one. ♦1386.♦ The heathen Lithuanian prince Jagiello became, by
-marriage and conversion, a Christian King of Poland. ♦Volhynia and
-Podolia added to Poland.♦ He enlarged the kingdom at the expense of
-the duchy, by incorporating _Podolia_ and _Volhynia_ with Poland,
-making Poland as well as Lithuania the possessor of a large extent
-of Russian soil. ♦Recovery of Red Russia. 1392. | Moldavia. | Pledge
-of Zips. 1412.♦ The older Russian territory of Poland, Red Russia,
-was won back from Hungary; _Moldavia_ began to transfer its fleeting
-allegiance from Hungary to Poland; within Hungary itself part of the
-county of _Zips_ was pledged to the Polish crown. ♦Recovery of the
-Polish duchies. 1401.♦ The Polish duchies now began to fall back to the
-kingdom. ♦1463-1476.♦ _Cujavia_ came in early in the fifteenth century,
-and parts of _Mazovia_ in its course. Of the relation of the kingdom
-to the Teutonic order we have already spoken. Lithuania meanwhile,
-as part of Western Christendom, remained, under its separate grand
-dukes of the now royal house, the rival both of Islam and of Eastern
-Christendom. ♦Conquests of Witold. 1392-1430.♦ Under Witold the advance
-on Russian ground was greater than ever. _Smolensk_ and all _Severia_
-became Lithuanian; Kief was in the heart of the grand duchy; Moscow
-did not seem far from its borders. ♦Loss of Perekop, 1474.♦ Lithuania
-was presently cut short further to the south by the loss of its
-Euxine dominion. ♦Closer union of Poland and Lithuania. 1501.♦ At the
-beginning of the sixteenth century Poland and Lithuania were united as
-distinct states under a common sovereign. But by that time a new state
-of things had begun in the lands on the Duna and the Dnieper.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Revival of Russia.♦
-
-While the military orders had thus established themselves on the Baltic
-coast, and had already largely given way to the combined Polish and
-Lithuanian power behind them, a new _Russia_ was growing up behind
-them all. ♦Power of Moscow.♦ Cut off from all dealings with Western
-Europe, save with its immediate western neighbours, cut off from its
-own ecclesiastical centre by the advance of Mussulman dominion, the
-new power of _Moscow_ was schooling itself to take in course of time a
-greater place than had ever been held by the elder power of Kief. The
-Mongol conquest had placed the Russian principalities in much the same
-position as that through which most of the south-eastern lands passed
-before they were finally swallowed up by the Ottoman. ♦The Russian
-princes dependent on the Golden Horde.♦ The princes of Russia were
-dependent on the Tartar dominion of _Kiptchak_, which stretched from
-the Dniester north-eastwards over boundless barbarian lands as far as
-the lower course of the Jenisei. Its capital, the centre of the _Golden
-Horde_, was at _Sarai_ on the lower course of the Volga. ♦Homage of
-Novgorod. 1252-1263.♦ Even Novgorod, under its great prince Alexander
-Nevsky, did homage to the Khan. But this dependent relation did not,
-like the Lithuanian conquests to the west, affect the geographical
-frontiers of Russia. The Russian centre at the time of the Mongol
-conquest was the northern Vladimir. ♦Moscow the new centre, c. 1328.♦
-Towards the end of the thirteenth century, _Moskva_, on the river of
-that name, grew into importance, and early in the next century it
-became the centre of Russian life. ♦Name of _Muscovy_.♦ From _Moskva_
-or _Moscow_ comes the old name of _Muscovy_, a name which historically
-describes the growth of the second Russian power. Muscovy was to Russia
-what France in the older sense was to the whole land which came to bear
-that name. Moscow was to Russia all, and more than all, that Paris was
-to France. It was to Moscow as the centre that the separate Russian
-principalities fell in; it was from Moscow as the centre that the lost
-Russian lands were won back. ♦Other Russian states.♦ Besides Novgorod,
-there still were the separate states of _Viatka_, _Pskof_, _Tver_, and
-_Riazan_. Disunion and dependence lasted till late in the fifteenth
-century. ♦Decline of the Mongol power.♦ But the Tartar power had
-already begun to grow weaker before the end of the fourteenth, and the
-invasion of Timour, while making Russia for a moment more completely
-subject, led to the dissolution of the dominion of the older Khans.
-
-♦Break-up of the Mongol power.♦
-
-In the course of the fifteenth century the great power of the Golden
-Horde broke up into a number of smaller khanats. ♦Khanat of Crim;♦
-The khanat of _Crim_—the old Tauric Chersonêsos—stretched from its
-peninsula inwards along the greater part of the course of the Don.
-♦of Kazan, 1438;♦ The khanat of _Kazan_ on the Volga supplanted the
-old kingdom of White Bulgaria. ♦of Siberia;♦ Far to the east, on the
-lower course of the Obi, was the khanat of _Siberia_. ♦of Astrakhan.♦
-The Golden Horde itself was represented by the khanat of _Astrakhan_
-on the lower Volga, with its capital at the mouth of that river. Of
-these Crim and Kasan were immediate neighbours of the Muscovite state.
-♦Deliverance of Russia. 1480.♦ The yoke was at last broken by Ivan the
-Great. ♦1487.♦ Seven years later he placed a tributary prince on the
-throne of Kazan, and himself took the title of _Prince of Bulgaria_.
-♦Crim dependent on the Ottoman.♦ By this time the khans of Crim had
-become dependents of the Ottoman Sultans, the beginning of the long
-strife between Russia and the Turk in Europe.
-
-♦Advance of Moscow in Russia.♦
-
-But before Muscovy thus became an independent power, it had taken the
-greatest of steps towards growing into Russia. ♦Annexation of Novgorod.
-1470;♦ Novgorod the Great, the only Russian rival of Moscow, first lost
-its northern territory, and then itself became part of the Muscovite
-dominion. ♦of Viatka, 1478; | of Tver, 1493.♦ The commonwealth of
-_Viatka_, the principality of _Tver_, and some small appanages of the
-house of Moscow followed. ♦Reign of Basil Ivanovitch, 1505-1533.
-| Annexation of Pskof and Riazan.♦ The annexation of what remained,
-as _Pskof_ and _Riazan_, was only a question of time, and it came in
-the next reign. Of the three works which were needful for the full
-growth of the new Russia, two were accomplished. ♦Russia united and
-independent.♦ The Russian state was one, and it was independent. And
-the third work, that of winning back the lost Russian lands, had
-already begun.
-
-♦Survey at the end of the fifteenth century.♦
-
-Thus, at the end of the fifteenth century, five powers held the Baltic
-coast. Sweden held the west coast from the Danish frontier northward,
-with both sides of the gulf of Bothnia and both sides of the gulf
-of Finland. Denmark held the extreme western coast and the isle of
-Gotland. Poland and Lithuania had a small seaboard indeed compared to
-their inland extent. Poland had only the Pomeranian and Prussian coast
-which she had just won from the Knights. Lithuania barely touched
-the sea between Prussia and Curland. To the west of the Polish coast
-lay the now Germanized lands of Pomerania and Mecklenburg. To the
-north-west lay the coast of the German military Order, under Polish
-vassalage in Prussia, independent in its northern possessions. Thus
-almost the whole Baltic coast was held by Teutonic powers; the Slavonic
-powers still lie mainly inland. The Polish frontier towards the Empire
-has been cut down to the limit which it kept till the end. Pomerania,
-Silesia, a great part of the mark of Brandenburg, have fallen away from
-the Polish realm. On the other hand, that realm and its confederate
-Lithuania have grown wonderfully to the east at the cost of divided and
-dependent Russia, and have begun to fall back again before Russia one
-and independent. Bohemia, enlarged by Silesia and Lusatia, has entered
-so thoroughly into the German world as almost to pass out of our sight.
-
-
-§ 4. _The Growth of Russia and Sweden._
-
-♦Changes of the last four centuries.♦
-
-The work of the last four centuries on the Baltic coast has been to
-drive back the Scandinavian power, after a vast momentary advance,
-wholly to the west of the Baltic—to give nearly the whole eastern
-coast to Russia—to make the whole southern coast German. These changes
-involve the wiping out, first of the German military Order, and then of
-Poland and Lithuania. ♦Growth of Russia and creation of Prussia.♦ This
-last change involves the growth of Russia, and the creation of Prussia
-in the modern sense, a sense so strangely different from its earlier
-meaning. These two have been the powers by which Sweden and Denmark
-have been cut short, by which Poland and Lithuania have been swallowed
-up. In this last work they indeed had a third confederate. Still the
-share of Austria in the overthrow of Poland was in a manner incidental.
-But the existence of such a Polish and Lithuanian state as stood at
-the end of the fifteenth, or even of the seventeenth, century was
-inconsistent with the existence of either Russia or Prussia as great
-European powers.
-
-The period with which we have now to deal takes in only the former
-stage of this process. Russia advances; Prussia in the modern sense
-comes into being. ♦Greatness of Sweden.♦ But Sweden is still the most
-advancing power of all; and, if Denmark falls back, it is before the
-power of Sweden. The Hansa too and the Knights pass away; Sweden is the
-ruling power of the Baltic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The sixteenth century saw the fall of both branches of the Teutonic
-Order. Out of the fall of one of them came the beginnings of modern
-_Prussia_. ♦Separation of the Prussian and Livonian knights. 1515.♦
-The two branches of the Order were separated; the Livonian lands had
-an independent Master. ♦Beginning of the Duchy of Prussia. 1525.♦
-Before long the Prussian Grand Master, Albert of Brandenburg, changed
-from the head of a Catholic religious order into a Lutheran temporal
-prince, holding the hereditary _duchy of Prussia_ as a Polish fief.
-♦Geographical position of Prussia.♦ That duchy had so strange a
-frontier towards the kingdom that it could not fail sooner or later
-either to be swallowed up by the kingdom which hemmed it in, or else
-to make its way out of its geographical bonds. ♦Union of Prussia and
-Brandenburg. 1611.♦ When the Prussian duchy and the mark of Brandenburg
-came into the hands of one prince, when the dominions of that prince
-were enlarged by the union of Brandenburg and Pomerania, the second of
-these solutions became only a question of time. ♦Prussia independent of
-Poland. 1647.♦ The first formal step towards it was the release of the
-duchy from all dependence on Poland. Prussia became a distinct state,
-one now essentially German, but lying beyond the bounds of the Empire.
-
-As the rights of the Empire had been formally cut short when Prussia
-passed under Polish vassalage, they were also formally cut short by
-the dissolution of the northern branch of the Teutonic order. ♦Fall
-of the Livonian Order. 1558-1561.♦ The rule of the Livonian Knights
-survived the secularization of the Prussian duchy by forty years; their
-dominion then fell asunder. ♦Duchy of Curland.♦ As in the case of
-Prussia, part of their territory, _Curland_ and _Semigallia_, was kept
-by the Livonian Master Godhard Kettler, as an hereditary duchy under
-Polish vassalage. The rest of the lands of the order were parted out
-among the chief powers of the Baltic. ♦Momentary kingdom of Livonia.♦ A
-Livonian kingdom under the Danish prince Magnus was but for a moment.
-♦Denmark takes Dago and Oesel.♦ Denmark in the end received the islands
-of _Dago_ and _Oesel_, her last conquests east of the Baltic. ♦Sweden
-takes Esthland.♦ Sweden advanced south of the Finnish gulf, taking
-the greater part of Esthland. ♦Livland goes to Poland and Russia.♦
-Northern Livland fell to Russia, the southern part to Poland. ♦All
-Livland Polish. 1582.♦ Twenty years later all Livland became a Polish
-possession.
-
-♦Greatest Baltic extent of Poland and Lithuania.♦
-
-This acquisition of Livland and of the superiority over Prussia and
-Curland raised the united power of Poland and Lithuania to its greatest
-extent on the Baltic coast. ♦Union of Lublin, 1569.♦ Meanwhile the
-union of _Lublin_ joined the kingdom and the grand duchy yet more
-closely together. But, long before this time, the eastern frontier
-of Lithuania had begun to fall back. ♦Russian advance.♦ The central
-advance of Russia to the west had begun. ♦Its causes.♦ A revived
-state, such as Russia was at the end of the fifteenth century, must
-advance, unless it be artificially hindered; and the new Russian state
-was driven to advance if it was to exist at all. It had no sea-board,
-except on the White Sea; it did not hold the mouth of any one of its
-great rivers, except the Northern Dvina, a stream thoroughly cut off
-from European life. The dominions of Sweden, Lithuania, and the Knights
-cut Russia off from the Baltic and from central Europe. To the south
-and east she was cut off from the Euxine and the Caspian, from the
-mouths of the Don and the Volga, by the powers which represented her
-old barbarian masters. Russia was thus not only driven to advance,
-but driven to advance in various directions. She had to win back her
-lost lands; she had, if she was really to become an European power,
-to win her way to the Baltic and to the Euxine. ♦Advance to the
-north-east.♦ Her position made it almost equally needful to win her
-way to the Caspian, and made it unavoidable that she should spread her
-power over the barbarian lands to the north-east. Of these several
-fields of advance the path to the Euxine was the longest barred.
-♦Order of Russian advances.♦ First, at the end of the fifteenth
-century, began the recovery of the lost lands, a work spread over
-the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. Then, in the
-sixteenth, came the eastern extension at the cost of the now weakened
-Mongol enemy. Strictly Baltic extension was in the sixteenth century
-merely momentary; it did not become lasting till the beginning of the
-eighteenth. ♦The Euxine reached last.♦ But Russia had been established
-on the Caspian for more than two centuries, she had become a Baltic
-power for more than two generations, before she made her way to the
-oldest scene of her seafaring enterprise.
-
-♦Recovery of the lands conquered by Lithuania.♦
-
-The recovery of the lands which had been lost to Lithuania began before
-the end of the fifteenth century. Ivan the Great won back _Severia_,
-with _Tchernigof_ and the Severian _Novgorod_ and part of the territory
-of _Smolensk_. ♦1514. | 1563.♦ Under Basil Smolensk itself followed;
-under Ivan the Terrible Polotsk again became Russian. Then the tide
-turned for a season. Russia first lost her newly-won territory in
-Livland. ♦Recovery of Smolensk by Poland. 1582. | Polish conquest of
-Russia, 1606.♦ The recovery of Smolensk by Poland was followed by the
-momentary Polish conquest of independent Russia, and the occupation of
-the throne of Moscow by a Polish prince. ♦Second revival of Russia, and
-second advance.♦ The Muscovite state came again to life; but it was
-shorn of a large part of the national territory, which had to be won
-again by a second advance. ♦Cessions to Poland.♦ Smolensk, Tchernigof,
-and the greater part of the Lithuanian conquests beyond the Dnieper,
-were again surrendered to the united Polish and Lithuanian state. In
-the middle of the century came the renewed Russian advance. ♦Lands
-recovered by the Peace of Andraszovo, 1667.♦ The Treaty of Andraszovo
-gave back to Russia most of the lands which had been surrendered fifty
-years before. ♦Recovery of Kief. 1686.♦ By the last advance in the
-seventeenth century Russia won back a small territory west of the
-Dnieper, including her ancient capital of Kief. ♦Superiority over the
-Ukraine Cossacks.♦ At the same time Poland finally gave up to Russia
-the superiority over the Cossacks of Ukraine, between the Bug and the
-Lower Dnieper. ♦Russian lands still kept by Poland.♦ But, with this
-exception, Poland and Lithuania still kept all the Russian lands south
-of Duna and west of Dnieper, with some districts beyond those rivers.
-Nor was Russia the only power to which Poland had to give way on her
-south-eastern frontier. ♦Podolia lost to the Turk.♦ In this quarter the
-Ottoman for the last time won a new province from a Christian state by
-the acquisition of _Kamienetz_ and all _Podolia_.[67]
-
- * * * * *
-
-But Poland had during this period to give way at other points also.
-This was the time of the great growth of the Swedish power. ♦Growth of
-Sweden and Russia compared.♦ The contrast between the growth of Sweden
-and the contemporary growth of Russia is instructive. The revived power
-of Moscow was partly winning back its own lost lands, partly advancing
-in directions which were needful for national growth, almost for
-national being. The growth of Sweden in so many directions was almost
-wholly a growth beyond her own borders. ♦Russian advance lasting.
-| Swedish advance temporary.♦ Hence doubtless it came that the advance
-of Russia has been lasting, while the advance of Sweden was only for a
-season. Sweden has lost by far the greater part of her conquests; she
-has kept only those parts of them which went to complete her position
-in her own peninsula.
-
-On the Swedish conquest of Esthland followed a series of shiftings
-of the frontiers of Sweden and Russia which lasted into the present
-century. ♦Advance under and after Gustavus Adolphus. 1611-1660.♦ During
-the reign of Gustavus Adolphus, and the period which we might almost
-call the continuation of his reign after his death, Sweden advanced
-both in her own peninsula and east of the Baltic, while she also
-gained a wholly new footing on German ground, both on the Baltic and
-on the Ocean. ♦Wars between Sweden and Russia. 1576-1617. | Peace of
-Stalbova.♦ A long period of alternate war and peace, a time in which
-Novgorod the Great passed for a moment into Swedish hands, was ended,
-as far as Sweden and Russia were concerned, by the peace of Stalbova.
-♦Sweden gains Ingermanland.♦ The Swedish frontier thus fixed took in
-all _Carelia_ and _Ingermanland_, and wholly cut off Russia from the
-Baltic and its gulfs. Such an advance could not fail to lead to further
-advance, though at the expense of another enemy. ♦Wars between Sweden
-and Poland. 1619-1660. | Swedish conquest of Livland, 1621-1625;♦ The
-long war between Sweden and Poland gave to Sweden Riga and the greater
-part of Livland. ♦of Dago and Oesel, 1645.♦ Her conquests in this
-region were completed by winning the islands of Dago and Oesel from
-Denmark.
-
-♦Advance of Sweden against Denmark and Norway.♦
-
-This last acquisition, geographically connected with the Swedish
-conquests from Russia and Poland, was politically part of an equally
-great advance which Sweden was making at the cost of the rival
-Scandinavian power, the united realms of Denmark and Norway. ♦Conquest
-of Gotland and Bornholm. 1645. | Of Jämteland.♦ Along with the two
-eastern islands, Denmark lost the isle of _Gotland_ for ever and that
-of _Bornholm_ for a moment,[68] and the Norwegian provinces east of the
-mountains, _Jämteland_ and _Hertjedalen_. The treaty of Roskild yet
-further enlarged Sweden at the expense of Norway. ♦Of Trondhjemlän.
-1658.♦ By the cession of _Trondhjemlän_ the Norwegian kingdom was
-split asunder; the ancient metropolis was lost, and Sweden reached to
-the Ocean. ♦Of Bohuslän, and Scania, &c.♦ With Trondhjem Sweden also
-received _Bohuslän_, the southern province of Norway, and, more than
-all, the ancient possessions of Denmark in the northern peninsula,
-with her old metropolis of _Lund_. Here comes in the application of
-the rule. ♦Trondhjem restored to Norway. 1660.♦ In annexing Trondhjem
-Sweden had overshot her mark; it was restored within two years. It was
-otherwise with Bohuslän, Scania, and her other conquests within what
-might seem to be her natural borders; they have remained Swedish to
-this day.
-
-♦Lands held by Sweden in Germany, Pomerania and Rügen, Bremen and
-Verden. 1648.♦
-
-The Swedish acquisition of the eastern lands of Denmark was made more
-necessary by the position which Sweden had now taken on the central
-mainland. The peace of Westfalia had confirmed her in the possession of
-_Rügen_ and _Western Pomerania_ on the Baltic, and of the bishoprics
-of _Bremen_ and _Verden_ which made her a power on the Ocean. These
-lands were not strictly an addition to the Swedish realm; they were
-fiefs of the Empire held by the Swedish king. Here again comes in the
-geographical law. The Swedish possession of the German lands on the
-Ocean was short; part of the German lands on the Baltic was kept into
-the present century.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The peace of Roskild, which cut short the kingdoms of Denmark
-and Norway in the northern peninsula, also marks an epoch in the
-controverted history of the duchies of Sleswick and Holstein. ♦Denmark
-gives up the sovereignty of the Gottorp lands. 1658.♦ The Danish king
-gave up the _sovereignty_ of the Gottorp districts of the duchies. Even
-if that cession implied the surrender of his own feudal superiority
-over the Gottorp districts of Sleswick, he could not alienate any part
-of the Imperial rights over Holstein. ♦Fluctuations in the duchies.
-1675-1700.♦ This sovereignty, in whatever it consisted, was lost
-and won several times between king and Duke before the end of the
-century. ♦Danish possession of Oldenburg. 1678.♦ Meanwhile the Danish
-crown became possessed of the outlying duchies of _Oldenburg_ and
-_Delmenhorst_, which in some sort balanced the Swedish possession of
-Bremen and Verden.
-
-♦Sweden after the peace of Oliva.♦
-
-The wars and treaties which were ended by the peace of Oliva fixed the
-boundaries of the Baltic lands for a season. They fixed the home extent
-of Sweden down to the present century. They cut off Denmark, save its
-one outpost of _Bornholm_, from the Baltic itself, as distinguished
-from the narrow seas which lead to it. They fixed the extent of Poland
-down to the partitions. What they failed to do for any length of time
-was to cut off Russia from the Baltic, and to establish Sweden on
-the Ocean. But for the present we leave Sweden ruling over the whole
-western and the greater part of the eastern coast of the Northern
-Mediterranean, and holding smaller possessions both on its southern
-coast and on the Ocean. The rest of the eastern and southern coast of
-the Baltic is divided between the Polish fief of Curland, the dominions
-of the common ruler of Pomerania and Prussia,—now an independent prince
-in his eastern duchy,—and the small piece of Polish coast placed
-invitingly between the two parts of his dominions. In her own peninsula
-Sweden has reached her natural frontier, and has given back what she
-won for a moment beyond it. While Sweden has this vast extent of coast
-with comparatively little extent inland, the vast inland region of
-Poland and Lithuania has hardly any seaboard, and the still vaster
-inland region of Russia has none at all in Europe, except on the White
-Sea. Thus the most striking feature of this period is the advance of
-Sweden; but we have seen that it was also a time of great advance on
-the part of Russia. It was a time of yet greater advance on that side
-of her dominion where Russia had no European rivals.
-
-♦Eastern advance of Russia.♦
-
-In the case of Russia, the only European power which could conquer
-and colonize by land in barbarian regions,[69] her earlier barbarian
-conquests were absolutely necessary to her existence. No hard line can
-be drawn between her earliest and her latest conquests, between the
-first advance of Novgorod and the last conquests in Turkestan. But the
-advance which immediately followed the deliverance from the Tartar yoke
-marks a great epoch. The smaller khanats into which the dominion of
-the Golden Horde had been broken up still kept Russia from the Euxine
-and the Caspian. ♦Conquest of Kazan and Astrakhan. 1552-1554.♦ The two
-khanats on the Volga, _Kazan_ and _Astrakhan_, were subdued by Ivan
-the Terrible. The coast of the Caspian was now reached. But the khans
-of _Crim_ remained, unsubdued and dangerous enemies, still cutting off
-Russia from the Euxine. ♦Superiority over the Don Cossacks. 1577.♦ Yet,
-even in this direction an advance was made when the Russian supremacy
-was acknowledged by the Cossacks of the Don. ♦Beginning of Siberian
-conquest. 1581. | 1592-1706.♦ The conquest of the Siberian khanat, with
-its capital _Tobolsk_, next followed, and thence, in the course of the
-next century, the boundless extent of northern Asia was added to the
-Russian dominion.
-
-
-§ 5. _The Decline of Sweden and Poland._
-
-In the last section we traced out the greatest advance of Sweden and
-a large advance of Russia, both made at the cost of Poland, that of
-Sweden also at the cost of Denmark. We saw also the beginnings of
-a power which we still called _Brandenburg_ rather than _Prussia_.
-♦Growth of Prussia.♦ In the present section, describing the work of the
-eighteenth century, we have to trace the growth of this last power,
-which now definitely takes the Prussian name, and which we have to
-look at in its Prussian character. ♦Decline of Sweden. | Extinction of
-Poland.♦ The period is marked by the decline of Sweden and the utter
-wiping out of Poland and Lithuania, Russia and Prussia in different
-degrees being chief actors in both cases. ♦Kingdom of Prussia. 1701.♦
-At the beginning of the period Prussia becomes a kingdom—a sign of
-advance, though not accompanied by any immediate increase of territory.
-♦Empire of Russia. 1721.♦ A little later the ruler of Russia, already
-Imperial in his own tongue,[70] more definitely takes the Imperial
-style as _Emperor of all the Russias_. This might pass as a challenge
-of the Russian lands, Black, White, and Red, which were still held by
-Poland.
-
-♦Russia on the Baltic.♦
-
-But more pressing than the recovery of these lands was the breaking
-down of the barrier by which Sweden kept Russia away from the Baltic.
-To a very slight extent this was a recovery of old Russian territory;
-but the position now won by Russia was wholly new. ♦Wars of Charles and
-Peter. 1700-1721. | Foundation of Saint Petersburg. 1703.♦ The war with
-Charles the Twelfth made Russia a great Baltic power, and Peter the
-Great, early in the struggle, set up the great trophy of his victory
-in the foundation of his new capital of Saint Petersburg on ground
-won from Sweden. ♦Cession of Livland, &c., by Sweden.♦ The peace of
-Nystad confirmed Russia in the possession of Swedish Livland, Esthland,
-Ingermanland, part of Carelia, and a small part of Finland itself.
-♦Further advance of Russia. 1741-1743.♦ Another war, ended by the Peace
-of Åbo, gave Russia another small extension in Finland.
-
-At the same time Sweden was cut short in her other outlying
-possessions. ♦Sweden loses Bremen, Verden, and part of Pomerania.♦
-Of her German fiefs, the duchies of Bremen and Verden passed, first
-to Denmark, then to Hannover. But her Baltic possessions were only
-partly lost, to the profit of Brandenburg. The frontier of Swedish
-Pomerania fell back to the north-west, losing Stettin, but keeping
-Stralsund, Wolgast, and Rügen. Denmark meanwhile advanced in the
-debateable land on her southern frontier. ♦Danish conquest of the
-Gottorp lands. 1713-1715.♦ The Danish occupation of Bremen and Verden
-was only momentary; but the Gottorp share of Sleswick and Holstein was
-conquered, and the possession of all Sleswick was guaranteed to Denmark
-by England and France. ♦The Gottorp lands in Holstein restored.♦ But
-the Gottorp share of Holstein, as an Imperial fief, was given back to
-its Duke. ♦They pass to Denmark in exchange for Oldenburg. 1767-1773.♦
-Lastly, when the house of Gottorp had mounted the throne of Russia,
-the Gottorp portion of Holstein was ceded to Denmark in exchange for
-Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, which were at once given to another branch
-of the family.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦First partition of Poland. 1772.♦
-
-In the latter part of the eighteenth century the three partitions
-of Poland brought about the all but complete recovery of the lands
-which the Lithuanian dukes had won from Russia. ♦Russian share.♦ The
-first partition gave Russia Polish Livland, and all the lands which
-Poland still kept beyond Duna and Dnieper. The greater part of _White
-Russia_ was thus won back. ♦Prussian share. | Brandenburg and Prussia
-geographically united.♦ At the same time the house of Hohenzollern
-gained its great territorial need, the geographical union of the
-kingdom of Prussia with the lands of Brandenburg and Pomerania, now
-increased by nearly all Silesia. This union was made by Poland giving
-up _West Prussia_—Danzig remaining an outlying city of Poland—and part
-of _Great Poland_ and _Cujavia_, known as the _Netz District_.[71]
-♦Austrian share. | Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria.♦ The Austrian
-share, the new kingdom of _Galicia and Lodomeria_, was a kind of
-commemoration of the conquests of Lewis the Great:[72] but, while it
-did not take in all _Red Russia_, it took in part of _Podolia_ and of
-_Little Poland_ south of the Vistula, making Cracow a frontier city.
-♦Russian territory held by Austria.♦ Austria thus became possessed of
-a part of the old Russian territory, most of which she has kept ever
-since.
-
-♦Second partition. 1793.♦
-
-The Polish state was thus maimed on all sides; but it still kept a
-considerable territorial extent. The second partition, the work of
-Russia and Prussia only, could only be a preparation for the final
-death-blow. ♦Russian share.♦ It gave to Russia the rest of _Podolia_
-and _Ukraine_, and part of _Volhynia_ and _Podlasia_. _Little Russia_
-and _White Russia_ were thus wholly won back, and the Russian frontier
-was advanced within the old Lithuanian duchy. ♦Prussian share.♦ Prussia
-took nearly all that was left of the oldest Polish state, the rest of
-_Great Poland_ and _Cujavia_, and part of _Mazovia_, forming the _South
-Prussia_ of the new nomenclature. Gnesen, the oldest Polish capital,
-the metropolis of the Polish Church, now passed away from Poland.
-
-The remnant that was left to Poland took in the greater part of _Little
-Poland_, part of _Mazovia_, the greater part of the old _Lithuania_
-with the fragment still left of its Russian territory, _Samogitia_ and
-the fief of _Curland_. ♦Third partition. 1795.♦ The final division
-was delayed only two years. This time all three partners joined.
-♦Russian share.♦ Russia took all _Lithuania_ east of the Niemen, with
-its capital _Vilna_, also _Curland_ and _Samogitia_ to the north, and
-the old Russian remnant to the south. ♦Austrian share.♦ Austria took
-_Cracow_, with nearly all the rest of _Little Poland_, as also part
-of _Mazovia_, by the name of _New Galicia_. ♦Prussian share.♦ Prussia
-took _Danzig_ and _Thorn_, as also a small piece of _Little Poland_ to
-improve the frontiers of South Prussia and Silesia, perhaps without
-thinking that this last process was an advance of the Roman Terminus.
-The capital _Warsaw_, with the remnant of _Mazovia_ and the strip of
-_Lithuania_ west of the Niemen, also fell to Prussia. The names of
-Poland and Lithuania now passed away from the map.
-
-♦No original Polish territory gained by Russia in the partitions.♦
-
-It is important to remember that the three partitions gave no part
-of the original Polish realm to Russia. Russia took back the Russian
-territory which had been long before won by Lithuania, and added the
-greater part of Lithuania itself, with the lands immediately to the
-north. ♦The old Poland divided between Prussia and Austria.♦ The
-ancient kingdom of Poland was divided between Prussia and Austria, and
-the oldest Poland of all fell to the lot of Prussia. ♦Poland passes to
-Prussia,♦ Great Poland, Silesia, Pomerania, the Polish lands which had
-passed to the mark of Brandenburg, once united under Polish rule, were
-again united under the power to which they had gradually fallen away.
-♦Chrobatia to Austria.♦ Austria or Hungary meanwhile took the rest of
-the northern Chrobatia, seven hundred years after the acquisition of
-the former part, and also the Russian land which had been twice before
-added to the Magyar kingdom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Advance to the Euxine.♦
-
-Meanwhile Russia made advances in other quarters of nearly equal
-extent. As the remnant of the Saracen at Granada cut off the Castilian
-from his southern coast or the Mediterranean, for more than two hundred
-years, so did the remnant of the Tartar in _Crim_ cut off the Russian
-for as long a time from his southern coast on the Euxine. ♦Occupation
-of Azof. 1696-1711.♦ Peter the Great first made his way, if not to
-the Euxine, at least to its inland gulf, by the taking of _Azof_.
-But the new conquest was only temporary. After seventy years more
-the work was done. ♦Independence of Crim 1774. | Annexation of Crim.
-1783.♦ First came the nominal independence of the Crimean khanat,
-then its incorporation with Russia. The work at which Megarian and
-Genoese colonists had laboured was now done; the northern coast of the
-Euxine was won for Europe.[73] The road through which so many Turanian
-invaders had pressed into the Aryan continent was blocked for ever.
-♦Conquest of Jedisan. 1791.♦ The next advance, the limit of Russian
-advance made strictly at the expense of the barbarian as distinguished
-from his Christian vassals, carried the Russian frontier from the Bug
-to the Dniester.
-
-♦Russian conquests from Persia. 1727-1734.♦
-
-The chief Asiatic acquisition of Russia in the eighteenth century took
-a strange form. It was conquest beyond the sea, though only beyond the
-inland Caspian. Turk and Russian joined to dismember Persia, and for
-some years Russia held the south coast of that great lake, the lands
-of _Daghestan_, _Ghilan_, and _Mazanderan_. ♦Superiority over Georgia.
-1783.♦ Later in the century the ancient Christian kingdom of _Georgia_
-passed under Russian superiority, the earnest of much Russian conquest
-on both sides of Caucasus. ♦Superiority over the Kirghis. 1773.♦ And
-nearly at the same time as the first steps towards the acquisition of
-Crim, the Russian dominion was spread over the _Kirghis_ hordes west
-of the river Ural, winning a coast on the eastern Caspian, the sea of
-Aral, and the Baltash lake.
-
-♦Survey at the end of the eighteenth century.♦
-
-Thus, by the end of the eighteenth century, the Swedish power has
-fallen back. Its territory east of the Baltic is less than it was at
-the beginning of the sixteenth century. Denmark, on the other hand, has
-grown by an advance in the debateable southern duchies. All Sleswick
-is added to the Danish crown; all Holstein is held by the Danish king.
-Poland has vanished. The anomalous power on the middle Danube, whose
-princes, it must be remembered, still wore the crown of the Empire, has
-thrust itself into the very heart of the old Polish land. But the power
-which has gained most by the extinction of Poland has been the new
-kingdom of Prussia. If part of her annexations lasted only a few years,
-she made her Baltic coast continuous for ever. But Prussia and Austria
-alike, by joining to wipe out the central state of the whole region,
-have given themselves a mighty neighbour. Russia has wholly cast aside
-her character as a mere inland power, intermediate between Europe and
-Asia. She has won her way, after so many ages, to her old position and
-much more. She has a Baltic and an Euxine seaboard. Her recovery of her
-old lands on the Duna and the Dnieper, her conquest of new lands on the
-Niemen, have brought her into the heart of Europe. And she has opened
-the path which was also to lead her into the heart of Asia, and to
-establish her in the intermediate mountain land between the Euxine and
-the Caspian.
-
-
-§ 6. _The Modern Geography of the Baltic Lands._
-
-♦The French revolutionary wars.♦
-
-The territorial arrangements of Northern and Eastern Europe were not
-affected by the French revolutionary wars till after the fall of the
-Western Empire. At that moment the frontier of Germany and Denmark
-was still what it had been under Charles the Great; “Eidora Romani
-terminus Imperii.” Only now the Danish king ruled to the south of the
-boundary stream in the character of a prince of the Empire. ♦Holstein
-incorporated with Denmark, and Swedish Pomerania with Sweden. 1806.♦
-The fall of the Empire put an end to this relation, and the duchy of
-Holstein was incorporated with the Danish realm. In the like sort,
-the Swedish kingdom was extended to the central mainland of Europe,
-by the incorporation of the Pomeranian dominions of the Swedish king.
-♦Russian conquest of Finland, 1809.♦ Before long, the last war between
-Sweden and Russia was ended by the peace of Friderikshamn, when Sweden
-gave up all her territory east of the gulf as far as the river Tornea,
-together with the isles of _Aland_. ♦Grand Duchy of Finland.♦ These
-lands passed to the Russian Emperor as a separate and privileged
-dominion, the _Grand Duchy of Finland_. Thus Sweden withdrew to her own
-side of the Baltic, while Russia at last became mistress of the whole
-eastern coast from the Prussian border northward. ♦Union of Sweden and
-Norway. 1814-1815.♦ The general peace left this arrangement untouched,
-but decreed the separation of Norway from Denmark and its union with
-Sweden. This was carried out so far as to effect the union of Sweden
-and Norway as independent kingdoms under a single king. ♦Swedish
-Pomerania passes to Denmark.♦ Denmark got in compensation, as diplomacy
-calls it, a scrap of its old Slavonic realm, Rügen and Swedish
-Pomerania. ♦Exchanged with Prussia for Lauenburg.♦ These detached lands
-were presently exchanged with Prussia for a land adjoining Holstein,
-the duchy of _Lauenburg_, the representative of ancient Saxony.[74]
-♦Heligoland passes to England.♦ Denmark kept Iceland, but the Frisian
-island of _Heligoland_ off the coast of Sleswick passed to England.
-Thus the common king of Sweden and Norway reigns over the whole of the
-northern peninsula and over nothing out of it. No such great change had
-affected the Scandinavian kingdoms since the union of Calmar.
-
-♦Holstein and Lauenburg join the German Confederation.♦
-
-Meanwhile the king of Denmark, remaining the independent sovereign
-of Denmark, Iceland, and Sleswick, entered the German Confederation
-for his duchies of Holstein and Lauenburg. ♦Disputes and wars in the
-Duchies.♦ Disputes and wars made no geographical change till the war
-which followed the accession of the present king. The changes which
-then followed have been told elsewhere.[75] ♦Transfer of Sleswick
-and Holstein, with Lauenburg to Prussia. 1864-1866.♦ They amount to
-the transfer to Prussia of Lauenburg, Holstein, and Sleswick, with a
-slight change of frontier and a redistribution of the smaller islands.
-A conditional engagement for the restoration of northern Sleswick to
-Denmark was not fulfilled, and has been formally annulled.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Losses of Prussia. 1806.♦
-
-In the lands which had been Poland and Lithuania, the immediate result
-of the French wars was the creation of a new Polish state; their
-final result was a great extension of the dominion of Russia. Prussia
-had to surrender its whole Polish territory, save West Prussia.[76]
-♦Bialystok added to Russia. | Danzig a commonwealth.♦ A small
-Lithuanian territory, the district of _Bialystok_, was given to Russia;
-_Danzig_ became a separate commonwealth. ♦Duchy of Warsaw♦ The rest of
-the Prussian share of Poland formed the new _Duchy of Warsaw_. This
-state was really no bad representative of the oldest Poland of all.
-Silesia was gone; but the new duchy took in Great Poland and Cujavia,
-with parts of Little Poland, Mazovia, and Lithuania. It took in the
-oldest capital at Gnesen and the newest at Warsaw. ♦Enlarged by part
-of Austrian Poland. 1810.♦ The new state was presently enlarged by
-the addition of the territory added to Austria by the last partition.
-Cracow, with the greater part of Little Poland, was again joined to
-Great Poland. ♦Extent of the Duchy.♦ Speaking roughly, the duchy took
-in nearly the whole of the old Polish kingdom, without Silesia, but
-with some small Lithuanian and Russian territory added.
-
-♦Arrangements of 1815.♦
-
-It was the Poland thus formed, a state which answered much more
-nearly to the Poland of the fourteenth than to the Poland of the
-eighteenth century, which, by the arrangements of the Vienna Congress,
-first received a Russian sovereign. ♦Danzig and Posen restored to
-Prussia.♦ Prussia now again rounded off her _West-Prussian_ province
-by the recovery of Danzig and Thorn, and she rounded off her southern
-frontier by the recovery of Posen and Gnesen, which had been part
-of her _South-Prussian_ province. The _Grand Duchy of Posen_ became
-again part of the Prussian state. ♦Cracow a commonwealth. | Annexed by
-Austria. 1846.♦ _Cracow_ became a republic, to be annexed by Austria
-thirty years later. ♦Kingdom of Poland united to Russia. 1831-1863.♦
-The remainder of the Duchy of Warsaw, under the style of the _Kingdom
-of Poland_, became a separate kingdom, but with the Russian Emperor
-as its king. ♦Russia takes old Polish territory for the first time.♦
-Later events have destroyed, first its constitution, then its separate
-being; and now all ancient Poland, except the part of Great Poland kept
-by Prussia and the part of Little Poland kept by Austria, is merged in
-the Russian Empire. Thus the Russian acquisition of strictly Polish,
-as distinguished from old-Russian and Lithuanian territory, dates, not
-from the partitions, but from the Congress of Vienna. It was to the
-behoof of Prussia and Austria, not of Russia, that the old kingdom of
-the Piasts was broken in pieces.
-
-The changes of the nineteenth century with regard to the lands on
-the European coasts of the Euxine have been told elsewhere.[77]
-♦Fluctuation of the Russian frontier towards Moldavia. | 1812-1878.♦
-They amount, as far as the geographical boundaries of Russia are
-concerned, to her advance to the Pruth and the Danube, her partial
-withdrawal, her second partial advance. ♦Advance in the Caucasus.♦
-Meanwhile the Russian advance in the nineteenth century on the Asiatic
-shores of the Euxine and in the lands on and beyond the Caspian has
-been far greater than her advance during the eighteenth. It is in our
-own century that Russia has taken up her commanding position between
-the Euxine and the Caspian seas, one which in some sort amounts to an
-enlargement of Europe at the expense of Asia. The old frontier on the
-Caspian, which had hardly changed since the conquest of Astrakhan,
-reached to the _Terek_. The annexation of Crim made the _Kuban_ the
-boundary on the side of the Euxine. ♦Incorporation of Georgia. 1800.♦
-The incorporation of the _Georgian_ kingdom gave Russia an outlying
-territory south of the Caucasus on the upper course of the _Kur_.
-♦Advance on the Caspian. 1802.♦ Next came the acquisition of the
-Caspian coast from the mouth of the Terek to the mouth of the Kur, the
-land of _Daghestan_ and _Shirwan_, including part of the territory
-which had been held for a few years in the eighteenth century.
-♦Advance in Armenia and Circassia. 1829.♦ The Persian and Turkish wars
-gave Russia the Armenian land of _Erivan_ as far as the _Araxes_,
-_Mingrelia_ and _Immeretia_, and the nominal cession of the Euxine
-coast between them and the older frontier. ♦1859.♦ But it was thirty
-years before the mountain region of _Circassia_ was fully subdued.
-♦1878.♦ The last changes have extended the Trans-Caucasian frontier of
-Russia to the south by the addition of _Batoum_ and _Kars_.
-
-♦Advance in Turkestan. 1853-1868.♦
-
-In the lands east of the Caspian the new province of Turkestan
-gradually grew up in the lands on the Jaxartes, reaching southward
-to Samarkand. ♦1875.♦ _Khokand_ to the south-east followed, while
-_Khiva_ and _Bokhara_, the lands on the Oxus, have passed under Russian
-influence. The Turcoman tribes immediately east of the Caspian have
-also been annexed. The Caspian has thus nearly become a Russian lake.
-Hardly anything remains to Persia except the extreme southern coast
-which was once for a moment Russian.
-
-♦Advance in Eastern Asia. 1858.♦
-
-Far again to the east, Russia has added a large territory on the
-Chinese border on the river Amoor. ♦Extent and character of the Russian
-dominion.♦ All these conquests form the greatest continuous extent of
-territory by land which the world has ever seen, unless during the
-transient dominion of the old Mongols. No other European power in any
-age has, or could have had, such a continuous dominion, because no
-other European power has ever had the unknown barbarian world lying
-in the same way at its side. Nowhere again has any European power
-held a dominion so physically unbroken as that which stretches from
-the gulf of Riga to the gulf of Okhotsk. The greater part of the
-Asiatic dominion of Russia belongs to that part of Asia which has
-least likeness to Europe. It is only on the Frozen Ocean that we find
-a kind of mockery of inland seas, islands, and peninsulas. Massive
-unbroken extent by land is its leading character. And as this character
-extends to a large part of European Russia also, Russia is the only
-European land where there can be any doubt where Europe ends. The
-barbarian dominion of other European states, a dominion beyond the
-sea, has been a dominion of choice. The barbarian dominion of Russia in
-lands adjoining her European territory is a dominion forced on her by
-geographical necessity. The annexation of Kamtschatka became a question
-of time when the first successors of Ruric made their earliest advance
-towards the Finnish north.
-
-♦Russian America.♦
-
-Alongside of this continuous dominion in Europe and Asia, the Russian
-occupation of territory in a third continent, an occupation made by sea
-after the manner of other European powers, has not been lasting. The
-Russian territory in the north-west corner of America, the only part
-of the world where Russia and England marched on one another, has been
-sold to the United States.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Final Survey.♦
-
-To return to Europe, the events of the nineteenth century have,
-in the lands with which we are dealing, carried on the work of the
-eighteenth by the further aggrandizement of Russia and Prussia. The
-Scandinavian powers have withdrawn into the two Scandinavian peninsulas
-and the adjoining islands, and in the southern peninsula the power
-of Denmark has been cut short to the gain of Prussia. The Prussian
-power meanwhile, formed in the eighteenth century by the union of
-the detached lands of Prussia and Brandenburg, has in the nineteenth
-grown into the imperial power of Germany, and has, even as a local
-kingdom, become, by the acquisition of Swedish Pomerania, Holstein, and
-Sleswick, the dominant power on the southern Baltic. The acquisition of
-the duchies too, not only of Sleswick and Holstein, but of Bremen and
-Verden also, as parts of the annexed kingdom of Hannover, have given
-her a part of the former oceanic position both of Denmark and Sweden.
-Russia has acquired the same position on the gulfs of the Baltic which
-Prussia has on the south coast of the Baltic itself. The acquisition
-of the new Poland has brought her frontier into the very midst of
-Europe; it has made her a neighbour, not merely of Prussia as such, but
-of Germany. The third sharer in the partition has drawn back from her
-northern advance, but she has increased her scrap of Russia, her scrap
-of Little Poland, her scrap of Moldavia,[78] by the suppression of a
-free city. The southern advance of Russia on European ground has been
-during this century an advance less of territory than of influence. The
-frontier of 1878 is the restored frontier of 1812. It is in the lands
-out of Europe that Russia has in the meanwhile advanced by strides
-which look startling on the map, but which in truth spring naturally
-from the geographical position of the one modern European power which
-cannot help being Asiatic as well.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[51] See above, pp. 160-162.
-
-[52] See above, p. 163.
-
-[53] A common name for these closely allied nations is sometimes
-needed. _Lettic_ is the most convenient; _Lett_, with the adjective
-_Lettish_, is the special name of one of the obscurer members of the
-family.
-
-[54] See above, p. 130.
-
-[55] See Einhard, Annals A. 815, where we read, ‘trans Ægidoram
-fluvium in terram Nordmannorum ... perveniunt.’ So Vita Karoli 12:
-‘Dani ac Sueones quos Nortmannos vocamus,’ and 14, ‘Nortmanni qui Dani
-vocantur.’ But Adam of Bremen (ii. 3) speaks of ‘mare novissimum, quod
-Nortmannos a Danis dirimit.’ But the name includes the Swedes: as in i.
-63 he says, ‘Sueones et Gothi, vel, si ita melius dicuntur, Nortmanni,’
-and i. 16, ‘Dani et ceteri qui trans Daniam sunt populi _ab historicis
-Francorum_ omnes Nordmanni vocantur.’
-
-[56] See above, p. 131, 159.
-
-[57] See Adam of Bremen, iv. 16.
-
-[58] The origin of Samo and the chief seat of his dominion, whether
-Bohemia or Carinthia, is discussed by Professor Fasching of Marburg
-(Austria) in the _Zweiter Jahresbericht der kk. Staats-Oberrealschule
-in Marburg_, 1872.
-
-[59] See Schafarik, _Slawische Alterthümer_, ii. 503.
-
-[60] See above, p. 198.
-
-[61] The Poles claim Boleslaf the First as the first king. But Lambert
-(1067), who strongly insists on the tributary condition of Poland,
-makes Boleslaf the Second the first king. The royal dignity was
-certainly forfeited after his death.
-
-[62] There can be no doubt that the Russian name strictly belongs to
-the Scandinavian rulers, and not to the Slavonic people. See Schafarik,
-i. 65; Historical Essays, iii. 386. The case is parallel to that of the
-Bulgarians and the Franks, save that the name _Rus_ is said to be, not
-a Scandinavian name, but a name applied to the Swedes by the Fins.
-
-[63] See above pp. 365, 436.
-
-[64] This document, granted at Metz in 1214, will be found in
-Bréholles’ _Historia Diplomatica Friderici Secundi_, i. 347. It reads
-like a complete surrender of all Imperial rights in both the German
-and the Slavonic conquests of Waldemar. It may be that it seems to
-have that meaning only because the retreating of Terminus was deemed
-inconceivable.
-
-[65] Vratislaf, who reigned from 1061 to 1092, is called the first king
-of Bohemia, but his royal dignity was only personal. The succession of
-kings begins only with Ottocar the First, who reigned from 1197 to 1230.
-
-[66] See above, p. 437.
-
-[67] See above, p. 448.
-
-[68] Conquered by Sweden 1643, restored to Denmark 1645. Ceded to
-Sweden 1658, but recovered the same year.
-
-[69] See above, p. 467.
-
-[70] There is no doubt that the title of _Czar_, or rather _Tzar_,
-borne by the Russian princes, as by those of Servia and Bulgaria in
-earlier times, is simply a contraction of _Cæsar_. In the Treaty of
-Carlowitz Peter the Great appears as Tzar of endless countries, but he
-is not called _Imperator_, though the Sultan is.
-
-[71] See above, p. 212.
-
-[72] See above, pp. 319, 437.
-
-[73] It is however to be regretted that, in bringing back the old names
-into these regions, they have been so often applied to wrong places.
-Thus the new _Sebastopol_ answers to the old _Cherson_, while the new
-_Cherson_ is elsewhere. The new _Odessa_ has nothing to do with the old
-_Odêssos_, and so in other cases.
-
-[74] See above, p. 208.
-
-[75] See above, p. 228.
-
-[76] See also p. 222.
-
-[77] See above, p. 449.
-
-[78] See above, p. 441.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE SPANISH PENINSULA AND ITS COLONIES.
-
-
-♦Analogy between Spain and Scandinavia.♦
-
-The great peninsula of the West has much in common with the great
-peninsula of the North. ♦Slight relations with the Empire.♦ Save Sweden
-and Norway, no part of Western Europe has had so little to do with the
-later Empire as Spain. ♦Break between earlier and later history.♦ And
-in no land that formed part of the earlier Empire, save our own island,
-is the later history so completely cut off from the earlier history.
-The modern kingdoms of Spain have still less claim to represent the
-West-Gothic kingdom than the modern kingdom of France had to represent
-the Frankish kingdom. ♦Modern Spanish history begins with the Saracen
-conquest.♦ The history of Spain, as an element in the European system,
-begins with the Saracen invasion. For a hundred years before that time
-all trace of dependence on the elder Empire had passed away. With the
-later Western Empire Spain had nothing to do after the days of Charles
-the Great and his immediate successors. Their claims over a small part
-of the country passed away from the Empire to the kings of Karolingia.
-
-♦Analogy between Spain and South-eastern Europe.♦
-
-With the Eastern Empire and the states which grew out of it Spain
-has the closest connexion in the way of analogy. ♦Comparison of the
-effects of conquest and deliverance in each.♦ Each was a Christian land
-conquered from the Mussulman. Each has been wholly or partially won
-back from him. But the deliverance of south-western Europe was mainly
-the work of its own people, and its deliverance was nearly ended when
-the bondage of south-eastern Europe was only beginning. Again, in
-south-eastern Europe the nations were fully formed before the Mussulman
-conquest, and they have lived through it. ♦The Spanish nation formed
-by the war with the Mussulmans.♦ In Spain the Mussulman conquest cut
-short the West-Gothic power just as it was growing into a new Romance
-nation; the actual Romance nation of Spain was formed by the work of
-withstanding the invaders. ♦Analogy between Spain and Russia.♦ The
-closest analogy of all is between Spain and Russia. Each was delivered
-by its own people. In each case, long after the main deliverance had
-been wrought, long after the liberated nation had begun again to take
-its place in Europe, the ransomed land was still cut off, by a fragment
-of its old enemies, from the coasts of its own southern sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Extent of the West-Gothic and the Saracen dominions.♦
-
-The Saracen dominion in the West, as established by the first
-conquerors, answered very nearly to the West-Gothic kingdom, as it
-then stood: but it did not exactly answer to _Spain_, either in the
-geographical or in the later Roman sense.[79] When the Saracen came,
-the Empire, not the Goth, still held the Balearic Isles, and the
-fortresses of _Tangier_ and _Ceuta_ on the Mauretanian side of the
-strait. On the other hand, the Goth did not hold quite the whole
-of the peninsula, while his dominion took in the Gaulish land of
-_Septimania_. Strictly speaking, the conquest was one, not of Spain
-geographically, but of the West-Gothic dominions in and out of Spain,
-and of the outlying Imperial possessions in their neighbourhood. ♦Two
-centres of deliverance.♦ It was from the lands which hindered both
-the West-Gothic and the Saracen dominion from exactly answering to
-geographical Spain that deliverance came, and it came in two forms.
-♦The independent lands.♦ From the land to the north-west, which held
-out against both Goth and Saracen, came that form of deliverance which
-was strictly native. ♦The Frankish dominion. 752-759.♦ At the other
-end, the Frank first won back for Christendom the Saracen province
-in Gaul, and then carried his arms into the neighbouring corner of
-Spain. ♦778.♦ Thus we get two centres of deliverance, two groups of
-states which did the work. There are the north-western lands, whose
-history is purely Spanish, which simply withstood the Saracen, and
-the north-eastern lands, which were first won from the Saracen by the
-Frank, and which gradually freed themselves from their deliverer.
-♦Represented severally by Castile and Portugal, and by Aragon.♦ The
-former class are represented in later Spanish history by the kingdoms
-of Castile and Portugal, the latter by the kingdom of Aragon. Navarre
-lies between the two, and shares in the history of both. The former
-start geographically from the mountain region washed by the Ocean.
-The latter start geographically from the mountains which divide
-Gaul and Spain, and which stretch westward to the Mediterranean.
-The geographical position of the regions foreshadows their later
-history.[80] ♦Later history of Aragon.♦ It was Aragon, looking to the
-East, which first played a great part in European affairs, and which
-carried Spanish influence and dominion into Gaul, Sicily, Italy, and
-Greece. ♦Of Castile and Portugal.♦ It was Portugal and Castile, looking
-to the West, which established an Iberian dominion beyond the bounds
-of Europe. The fact that a Queen of Castile in the fifteenth century
-married a King of Aragon and not a King of Portugal has led us to
-speak of the peninsular kingdoms as ‘_Spain_ and _Portugal_.’[81] For
-some ages ‘Spain and Aragon’ would have been a more natural division.
-But the very difference in the fields of action of Castile and Aragon
-hindered any such strong opposition. Between Castile and Portugal, on
-the other hand, a marked rivalry arose in the field which was common to
-both.
-
-♦The more strictly native centre foremost in the work of deliverance.♦
-
-Of these two centres, one purely Spanish, the other brought for a
-long time under a greater or less degree of foreign influence, the
-more strictly native region was foremost in the work of national
-deliverance. How far western Spain stood in advance of eastern Spain is
-shown by the speaking fact that Toledo, so much further to the south,
-was won by Castile a generation before Zaragoza was won by Aragon.
-♦Relations of Castile and Aragon towards Navarre.♦ But both Castile and
-Aragon, as powers, grew out of the break-up of a momentary dominion in
-the land which lay between them, and whose later history is much less
-illustrious than theirs. In the second quarter of the eleventh century
-the kingdom of _Pampeluna_ or _Navarre_ had, by the energy of a single
-man, the Sviatopluk or Stephen Dushan of his little realm, risen to the
-first place among the Christian powers of Spain. Castile and Aragon do
-not appear with kingly rank till both had passed under the momentary
-rule of a neighbour which in after times seemed so small beside either
-of them. And the name of _Castile_, whether as county, kingdom, or
-empire, marks a comparatively late stage of Christian advance. We must
-here go back for a moment to those early days of the long crusade of
-eight hundred years at which we have already slightly glanced.[82]
-
-
-§ 1. _The Foundation of the Spanish Kingdoms._
-
-♦Founding of the kingdom of Leon. 753. | 916.♦
-
-We have seen how the union of the small independent lands of the north,
-_Asturia_ and _Cantabria_, grew into the kingdom, first of _Oviedo_
-and then of _Leon_. _Gallicia_, on the one side, representing in some
-sort the old Suevian kingdom, _Bardulia_ or the oldest _Castile_, the
-land of Burgos, on the other side, were lands which were early inclined
-to fall away. ♦Christian advance.♦ The growth of the Christian powers
-on this side was favoured by internal events among the Mussulmans, by
-famines and revolts which left a desert border between the hostile
-powers. ♦The Ommiad emirate. 755.♦ The Ommiad emirate, afterwards
-caliphate, was established almost at the moment of the Saracen loss
-of Septimania. ♦The Spanish March. 778-801.♦ Then came the _Spanish
-March_ of Charles the Great, which brought part of northern Spain once
-more within the bounds of the new Western Empire, as the conquests of
-Justinian had brought back part of southern Spain within the bounds of
-the undivided Empire. ♦Its extent.♦ This march, at its greatest extent,
-took in Pampeluna at one end and Barcelona at the other, with the
-intermediate lands of _Aragon_, _Ripacurcia_, and _Sobrarbe_. But the
-Frankish dominion soon passed away from Aragon, and still sooner from
-Pampeluna. ♦Its division.♦ The western part of the march, which still
-acknowledged the superiority of the Kings of Karolingia, split up into
-a number of practically independent counties, which made hardly any
-advance against the common enemy.
-
-Meanwhile the land of Pampeluna became, at the beginning of the
-eleventh century, an independent and powerful kingdom. ♦Navarre under
-Sancho the Great. 1000-1035.♦ The Navarre of Sancho the Great stretched
-some way beyond the Ebro; to the west it took in the ocean lands of
-_Biscay_ and _Guipuzcoa_, with the original Castile; to the east it
-took in _Aragon_, _Ripacurcia_, and _Sobrarbe_. The two Christian
-kingdoms of Navarre and Leon took in all north-eastern Spain. The
-Douro was reached and crossed; the Tagus itself was not far from the
-Christian boundary; but the states which owned the superiority of the
-power which we may now call _France_ were still far from the lower Ebro.
-
-♦Break-up of the kingdom of Navarre (1035), and of the Ommiad caliphate
-(1028).♦
-
-At the death of Sancho the Great his momentary dominion broke up.
-Seven years earlier the dominion of the Ommiad caliphs had broken up
-also. These two events, so near together, form the turning-point in
-the history of the peninsula. Instead of the one Ommiad caliphate,
-there arose a crowd of separate Mussulman kingdoms, which had to call
-for help to their Mussulman brethren in Africa. ♦Invasion of the
-Almoravides. 1086-1110.♦ This led to what was really a new African
-conquest of Mussulman Spain. The new deliverers or conquerors spread
-their dominion over all the Mussulman powers, save only Zaragoza.
-♦Use of the name _Moors_.♦ This settlement, with other later ones of
-the same kind, gives a specially African look to the later history
-of Mahometan Spain, and has doubtless helped to give the Spanish
-Mussulmans the common name of _Moors_. But their language and culture
-remained Arabic, and the revolution caused by the African settlers
-among the ruins of the Western caliphate was far from being so great as
-the revolution caused by the Turkish settlers among the ruins of the
-Eastern caliphate.
-
-♦New kingdoms, Castile, Aragon, and Sobrarbe 1035.♦
-
-Out of the break-up of the dominion of Sancho came out the separate
-kingdom of Navarre, and the new kingdoms of _Castile_, _Aragon_, and
-_Sobrarbe_. ♦Union of Aragon and Sobrarbe. 1040.♦ Of these the two last
-were presently united, thus beginning the advance of Aragon. Thus we
-come to four of the five historic kingdoms of Spain—Navarre, Castile,
-Aragon, and Leon, whose unions and divisions are endless. ♦Shiftings
-of Castile and Leon. 1037. | 1065-1073.♦ The first king Ferdinand of
-Castile united Castile and Leon; Castile, Leon, and Gallicia were
-again for a moment separated under his son. ♦1076-1134.♦ Aragon and
-Navarre were united for nearly sixty years. ♦The Emperor Alfonso
-1135.♦ Presently Spain has an Emperor in Alfonso of Castile, Leon, and
-Gallicia. ♦1157.♦ But Empire and kingdom were split asunder. Leon and
-Castile became separate kingdoms under the sons of Alfonso, and they
-remained separate for more than sixty years. ♦Final union of Castile
-and Leon. 1230.♦ Their final union created the great Christian power of
-Spain.
-
-♦Decline of Navarre.♦
-
-Navarre meanwhile, cut short by the advance of Castile, shorn of its
-lands on the Ocean and beyond the Ebro, lost all hope of any commanding
-position in the peninsula. ♦1234.♦ It passed to a succession of French
-kings, and for a long time it had no share in the geographical history
-of Spain. ♦Growth of Aragon.♦ But the power of Aragon grew, partly by
-conquests from the Mussulmans, partly by union with the French fiefs
-to the east. ♦Union with Barcelona. 1131.♦ The first union between
-the crown of Aragon and the county of _Barcelona_ led to the great
-growth of the power of Aragon on both sides of the Pyrenees and even
-beyond the Rhone.[83] ♦1213.♦ This power was broken by the overthrow of
-King Pedro at Muret. ♦Settlement with France. 1258.♦ But by the final
-arrangement which freed _Barcelona_, _Roussillon_, and _Cerdagne_, from
-all homage to France, all trace of foreign superiority passed away from
-Christian Spain. The independent kingdom of Aragon stretched on both
-sides of the Pyrenees, a faint reminder of the days of the West-Gothic
-kings.
-
-On the other side of the peninsula the lands between Douro and Minho
-began to form a separate state. ♦County of Portugal. 1094.♦ The county
-of _Portugal_ was held by princes of the royal house of France, as a
-fief of the crown of Castile and Leon. ♦Kingdom, 1139.♦ The county
-became a kingdom, and its growth cut off Leon, as distinguished from
-Castile, from any advance against the Mussulmans. Navarre was cut off
-already. But the three kingdoms of Castile, Aragon, and Portugal were
-all ready for the work. A restored Western Christendom was growing
-up to balance the falling away in the East. ♦Beginning of the great
-Christian advance.♦ The first great advance of the Christians in Spain
-began about the time of the Seljuk conquests from the Eastern Empire.
-The work of deliverance was not ended till the Ottoman had been for
-forty years established in the New Rome.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Christian powers however were disunited, while the Mussulmans
-had again gained, though at a heavy price, the advantage of union.
-♦Conquest of Toledo. 1085.♦ Alfonso the Sixth, commanding the powers
-of Castile and Leon, pressed far to the south, and won the old Gothic
-capital of _Toledo_. ♦Battle of Zalacca. 1086.♦ But his further
-advance was checked by the African invaders at the battle of Zalacca.
-♦Advance of the Almoravides. | Advance of Aragon.♦ The Almoravide
-power was too strong for any present hope of conquests on the part
-of Castile; but the one independent Mussulman state at _Zaragoza_
-lay open to the Christians of the north-east. ♦Conquest of Zaragoza.
-1118. | Of Tarragona.♦ Zaragoza itself was taken by the king of Aragon,
-and _Tarragona_ by the Count of Barcelona. ♦Of Tortosa. 1148.♦ Both
-these powers advanced, and the conquest of _Tortosa_ made the Ebro
-the Christian boundary. ♦Advance of Portugal.♦ As the power of the
-Almoravides weakened, Castile and Portugal again advanced on their
-side. ♦Conquest of Lisbon. 1147. | Of Silvas. 1191.♦ The latter kingdom
-made the great acquisition of its future capital _Lisbon_, and a
-generation later, it reached the southern coast by the conquest of
-_Silvas_ in Algarve. ♦Advance of Castile. 1147-1166.♦ Castile meanwhile
-pressed to the Guadiana and beyond, counting _Calatrava_ and _Badajoz_
-among its cities. The line of struggle had advanced in about a century
-from the land between Douro and Tagus to the land between Guadiana and
-Guadalquivir.
-
-This second great Christian advance in the twelfth, century was again
-checked in the same way in which the advance in the eleventh century
-had been. ♦Invasion of the Almohades. 1146.♦ A new settlement of
-African conquerors, the _Almohades_, won back a large territory from
-both Castile and Portugal. ♦Battle of Alarcos. | 1196.♦ The battle
-of Alarcos broke for a while the power of Castile, and the Almohade
-dominion stretched beyond the lower Tagus. To the east, the lands
-south of Ebro remained an independent Mussulman state. ♦Decline of
-the Almohades.♦ But, as the Almohades were of doubtful Mahometan
-orthodoxy, their hold on Spain was weaker than that of any other
-Mahometan conquerors. ♦Battle of Navas de Tolosa. 1211.♦ Their power
-broke up, and the battle of Navas de Tolosa ruled that Spain should be
-a Christian land. All three kingdoms advanced, and within forty years
-the Mussulman power in the peninsula was cut down to a mere survival.
-♦Conquest of the Balearic Isles. 1228-1236. | Of Valencia. 1237-1305.♦
-Aragon won the _Balearic Isles_ and formed her kingdom of _Valencia_.
-♦Of Murcia. 1243-1253.♦ But as Castile, by the incorporation of
-_Murcia_, reached to the Mediterranean, any further advance in the
-peninsula was forbidden to Aragon. ♦Advance of Portugal. 1217-1256.♦ On
-the eastern side Portugal won back her lost lands, reached her southern
-coast, kept all the land west of the lower Guadiana and some points to
-the east of it. ♦Kingdom of Algarve.♦ To the kingdom of Portugal was
-added the kingdom of _Algarve_.
-
-But the central power of Castile pressed on faster still. ♦Conquest
-of Castile under Saint Ferdinand.♦ Under Saint Ferdinand began the
-recovery of the great cities along the Guadalquivir. ♦Conquest of
-Cordova. 1236. | Of Jaen. 1246. | Of Seville. 1248.♦ _Cordova_, the
-city of the caliphs, was won; _Jaen_ followed; then more famous
-_Seville_; and _Cadiz_, eldest of Western cities, passed again, as when
-she first entered the Roman world, from Semitic into Aryan hands. ♦Of
-Nibla. 1257. | Of Tarifa. 1285.♦ The conquest of _Nibla_ and _Tarifa_
-at last made the completion of the work only a question of time.
-
-No one in the middle of the twelfth century could have dreamed that
-a Mussulman power would live on in Spain till the last years of
-the fifteenth. ♦Kingdom of Granada. 1238.♦ This was the kingdom of
-_Granada_, which began, amid the conquests of Saint Ferdinand, as a
-vassal state of Castile. ♦Reconquered from Castile. 1298.♦ Yet, sixty
-years later, it was able to win back a considerable territory from its
-overlord. ♦Recovery by Castile. 1316. | 1430.♦ Part of the land now
-gained was soon lost again; but part, with the city of _Huascar_, was
-kept by the Mussulmans far into the fifteenth century. ♦Gibraltar lost
-and won. 1309. 1333. 1344.♦ Meanwhile, on the strait between the ocean
-and the Mediterranean, _Gibraltar_ was won by Castile, lost, and won
-again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Geographical position of the four kingdoms.♦
-
-Thus, in the latter part of the thirteenth century, the peninsula
-of Spain was very unequally divided between one Mussulman and four
-Christian states. Aragon on the one side, Portugal on the other, were
-kingdoms with a coast line out of all proportion to their extent
-inwards. Aragon had become a triangle, Portugal a long parallelogram,
-cut off on each side from the great trapezium formed by the whole
-peninsula. Between these two lay the central power of Castile, with
-Christian Navarre still separate at one corner and Mussulman Granada
-still separate at another. Of these five kingdoms, Navarre and Aragon
-alone marched to any considerable extent on any state beyond the
-peninsula. Castile barely touched the Aquitanian dominions of England,
-while Navarre and Aragon, both stretching north of the Pyrenees, had
-together a considerable frontier towards Aquitaine and France. Navarre
-and Aragon again marched on one another, while Portugal and Granada
-marched only on Castile, the common neighbour of all. The destiny of
-all was written on the map. Navarre at one end, Granada at the other,
-were to be swallowed up by the great central power. Aragon, after
-gaining a high European position, was to be united with Castile under
-a single sovereign. Portugal alone was to become distinctly a rival of
-Castile, but wholly in lands beyond the bounds of Europe.
-
-♦Title of ‘King of Spain.’♦
-
-Of the five Spanish powers Castile so far outtopped the rest that
-its sovereign was often spoken of in other lands as _King of Spain_.
-But Spain contained more kingdoms than it contained kings. ♦The
-lesser kingdoms.♦ Castile, Aragon, and Portugal were all formed by
-a succession of unions and conquests, each of which commonly gave
-their kings a new title. The central power was still the power of
-_Castile and Leon_, not of Castile only. _Leon_ was made up of the
-kingdoms of _Leon_ and _Gallicia_. Castile took in Castile proper or
-_Old Castile_, with the principality of the _Asturias_, and the free
-lands of _Biscay_, _Guipuzcoa_, and _Alava_. To the south it took
-in the kingdoms—each marking a stage of advance—of _Toledo_ or _New
-Castile_, of _Cordova_, _Jaen_, _Seville_, and _Murcia_. The sovereign
-of Portugal held his two kingdoms of _Portugal_ and _Algarve_. ♦1262.♦
-The sovereign of Aragon, besides his enlarged kingdom of _Aragon_ and
-his counties of _Catalonia_, _Roussillon_, and _Cerdagne_, held his
-kingdom of _Valencia_ on the mainland, while the Balearic Isles formed
-the kingdom of _Majorca_. ♦1349.♦ This last, first granted as a vassal
-kingdom to a branch of the royal house, was afterwards incorporated
-with the Aragonese state.
-
-
-§ 2. _Growth and Partition of the Great Spanish Monarchy._
-
-♦Little geographical change after the thirteenth century.♦
-
-After the thirteenth century the strictly geographical changes within
-the Spanish peninsula were but few. The boundaries of the kingdoms
-changed but little towards one another, and not much towards France,
-their only neighbour from the fifteenth century onwards. But the five
-kingdoms were gradually grouped under two kings, for a while under one
-only. ♦Territories beyond the peninsula.♦ The external geography, so
-to speak, forms a longer story. We have to trace out the acquisition
-of territory within Europe, first by Aragon and then by Castile, and
-the acquisition of territory out of Europe, first by Portugal and
-then by Castile. ♦The great Spanish Monarchy.♦ The permanent union
-of the dominions of Castile and Aragon, the temporary union of the
-dominions of Castile, Aragon, and Portugal, formed that great _Spanish
-Monarchy_ which in the sixteenth century was the wonder and terror of
-Europe, which lost important possessions in the sixteenth and in the
-seventeenth century, and which was finally partitioned in the beginning
-of the eighteenth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦1410-1430.♦
-
-Within the peninsula we have seen Castile, in the first half of
-the fifteenth century, win back the lands which had been lost to
-Granada at the end of the fourteenth. ♦Conquest of Granada. 1492.♦
-The last decade of the fifteenth saw the ending of the struggle.
-Men fondly deemed that the recovery of Granada balanced the loss of
-Constantinople. ♦End of Mussulman rule in Spain.♦ But the last Moorish
-prince still kept for a moment a small tributary dominion in the
-Alpujarras, and it was the purchase of this last remnant which finally
-put an end to the long rule of the Mussulman in Spain.
-
-The conquest of Granada was the joint work of a queen of Castile and
-a king of Aragon. ♦1469.♦ But the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabel
-did not at once unite their crowns. ♦Union of Castile and Aragon.
-1506.♦ That union may be dated from the beginning of Ferdinand’s
-second reign in Castile. ♦Loss and recovery of Roussillon. 1462-1493.♦
-Meanwhile _Roussillon_ and _Cerdagne_ had been, after thirty years’
-French occupation, won back by Aragon. ♦Conquest of Navarre. 1513.♦
-Then came the conquest of _Navarre_ south of the Pyrenees, which left
-only the small part on the Gaulish side to pass to the French kings
-of the House of Bourbon. Portugal was now the only separate kingdom
-in the peninsula, and the tendency to look on the peninsula as made
-up of _Spain_ and _Portugal_ was of course strengthened. ♦Annexation
-and separation of Portugal. 1581-1640.♦ But later in the century
-Portugal itself was for sixty years united with Castile and Aragon.
-♦Final loss of Roussillon. 1659.♦ Portugal won back its independence;
-and the Spanish dominion was further cut short by the final loss of
-_Roussillon_. The Pyrenees were now the boundary of France and Spain,
-except so far as the line may be held to be broken by the French right
-of patronage over _Andorra_.[84] Since the Peace of the Pyrenees, the
-peninsula itself has seen hardly any strictly geographical change.
-♦Gibraltar lost to England, 1704-1713.♦ _Gibraltar_ has been for nearly
-a hundred and eighty years occupied by England. ♦Oliverca. 1801.♦
-The fortress of _Oliverca_ has been yielded by Portugal to Spain.
-♦Minorca.♦ And during the last century _Minorca_ passed to and fro
-between Spain and England more times than it is easy to remember.[85]
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Advance of Aragon beyond the peninsula.♦
-
-The acquisition of territory beyond the peninsula naturally began
-with Aragon. The acquisition of the Balearic isles may pass as the
-enlargement of a peninsular kingdom; but before that happened,
-Aragon had won and lost what was practically a great dominion north
-of the Pyrenees. But this dominion was continuous with its Spanish
-territory. ♦Union of Aragon and Sicily. 1282-1285.♦ The real beginning
-of Aragonese dominion beyond the sea was when the war of the Vespers
-for a moment united the crowns of Aragon and the insular Sicily.
-♦Second union of Aragon and Sicily. 1409.♦ Then the island crown was
-held by independent Aragonese princes, and lastly was again united
-to the Aragonese crown. ♦Union of Aragon and continental Sicily.
-1442-1458.♦ The continental Sicily had, during the reign of Alfonso the
-Magnanimous, a common king with Aragon and the island. ♦Continental
-Sicily under Aragonese princes. | Final union of Aragon and the
-Sicilies. 1503.♦ Then the continental kingdom was—save during the
-momentary French occupations—held by Aragonese princes till the final
-union of the crowns of Aragon and the Two Sicilies. ♦War of Sardinia.
-1309-1428.♦ Meanwhile a war of more than a hundred years gave to Aragon
-the island of _Sardinia_ as a new kingdom. Thus, at the final union of
-Castile and Aragon, Aragon brought with it the outlying crowns of the
-Two Sicilies and of Sardinia. ♦1530.♦ The insular Sicilian kingdom was
-slightly lessened by the grant of _Malta_ and _Gozo_ to the Knights
-of Saint John. ♦1557.♦ The continental kingdom was increased by the
-addition of a small Tuscan territory.
-
-♦Difference between the outlying possessions of Aragon and those of
-Castile.♦
-
-The outlying possessions of Aragon were thus strictly acquisitions
-made by the Kings of Aragon on behalf of the crown of Aragon. ♦The
-Burgundian inheritance. 1504.♦ But the extension of Castilian dominion
-over distant parts of Europe was due only to the fact that the crown
-of Castile passed to an Austrian prince who had inherited the greater
-part of the dominions of the Dukes of Burgundy. But thereby the
-_Netherlands_ and the counties of _Burgundy_ and _Charolois_ became
-appendages to Castile, and went to swell the great Spanish Monarchy.
-♦Duchy of Milan. 1535. | 1555.♦ The duchy of _Milan_ too, in whatever
-character the Emperor Charles held it, became a Spanish dependency when
-it passed to his son Philip.
-
-♦Extent of the Spanish Monarchy.♦
-
-The European possessions of the Spanish Monarchy thus took in, at the
-time of their greatest extent, the whole peninsula, the Netherlands
-and the other Burgundian lands of the Austrian house, Roussillon,
-the Sicilies, Sardinia, and Milan. ♦Loss of the United Netherlands.
-1578-1609.♦ But this whole dominion was never held at once, unless for
-form’s sake we count the United Netherlands as Spanish territory till
-the Twelve Years’ Truce. Holland and its fellows had become practically
-independent before Portugal was won. ♦Lands lost to France. 1659-1677.♦
-But it was not till after the loss of Portugal that Spain suffered her
-great losses on the side of France, when the conquests of Lewis the
-Fourteenth cost her Roussillon, Cerdagne, Charolois, the County of
-Burgundy, Artois, and other parts of the Netherlands. The remainder of
-the Netherlands, with Milan and the three outlying Aragonese kingdoms,
-were kept till the partitions in the beginning of the eighteenth
-century. ♦Partition of the Spanish Monarchy. 1713.♦ The final results
-of so much fighting and treaty-making was to take away all the outlying
-possessions of both Aragon and Castile, and to confine the Spanish
-kingdom to the peninsula and the Balearic isles, less Portugal and
-Gibraltar for ever, and less Minorca for a season. ♦Recovery of Sicily.
-1718, 1735.♦ Since then Spain has never won back any part of the lost
-possessions of Castile; but she has more than once won back the lost
-possessions of Aragon, insular Sicily twice, continental Sicily once.
-♦Spanish kings of the Two Sicilies. 1735-1860. | Duchy of Parma,
-1731-1860.♦ And if the Sicilies were not kept as part of the Spanish
-dominions, they passed to a branch of the Spanish royal house, as the
-duchies of _Parma_ and _Piacenza_ passed to another.
-
-
-§ 3. _The Colonial Dominion of Spain and Portugal._
-
-The distinction between Spain and Portugal is most strikingly marked in
-the dominion of the two powers beyond the bounds of Europe. ♦Character
-of the Portuguese dominion out of Europe.♦ Portugal led the way among
-European states to conquest and colonization out of Europe. She had a
-geographical and historical call so to do. Her dominion out of Europe
-was not indeed a matter of necessity like that of Russia, but it stood
-on a different ground from that of England, France, or Holland. It
-was not actually continuous with her own European territory, but it
-began near to it, and it was a natural consequence and extension of
-her European advance. The Asiatic and American dominion of Portugal
-grew out of her African dominion, and her African dominion was the
-continuation of her growth in her own peninsula.
-
-When the Moor was driven out of Spain, it was natural to follow him
-across the narrow seas into a land which lay so near to Spain, and
-which in earlier geography had passed as a Spanish land. ♦Portugal
-fully formed in the thirteenth century.♦ But as far as Castile was
-concerned, the Moor was not driven out till late in the fifteenth
-century; as far as Portugal was concerned, he was driven out in the
-thirteenth. Portugal had then reached her full extent in the peninsula,
-and she could no longer advance against the misbelievers by land. One
-is tempted to wonder that her advance beyond sea did not begin sooner.
-♦Her African conquests, 1415-1471.♦ It came in the fifteenth century,
-when fifty years of conquest gave to Portugal her kingdom of _Algarve
-beyond the Sea_, an African dominion older than the Castilian conquest
-of Granada. ♦The Algarves.♦ The king of _Portugal and the Algarves_
-thus held the southern pillar of Hercules, while Castile held the
-northern. ♦Loss of African dominion, 1578.♦ The greater part of this
-African kingdom was lost after the fall of Sebastian. ♦Ceuta Spanish.♦
-_Ceuta_ remained a Spanish possession after the dominion of Portugal,
-so that Spain now holds the southern pillar and England the northern.
-♦Tangier English, 1662-1683.♦ _Tangier_ too once passed from Portugal
-to England as a marriage gift, and was presently forsaken as useless.
-
-♦Advance in Africa and the islands.♦
-
-But before the kingdom of Algarve beyond the sea had passed away,
-its establishment had led to the discovery of the whole coast of the
-African continent, and to the growth of a vast Portuguese dominion in
-various parts of the world. ♦Madeira, 1419. | Azores and Cape Verde
-Islands. 1448-1454.♦ _Madeira_ was the first insular possession,
-followed by the _Azores_ and _Cape Verde Islands_. Gradually, under the
-care of Don Henry, the Portuguese power spread along the north-west
-coast of Africa. ♦Cape of Good Hope, 1497. | Dominion of Arabia and
-India.♦ The work went on: Vasco de Gama made his great discovery of the
-Cape of Good Hope; the road to India was opened; dominion on the coasts
-of Arabia and India, and even in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
-was added to dominion on the coast of Africa. This dominion perished
-through the annexation of Portugal by Spain. Since the restoration
-of Portuguese independence, only fragments of this great African and
-Indian dominion have been kept. ♦Modern extent of Portuguese dominion
-abroad.♦ But Portugal still holds the Atlantic islands, various points
-and coasts in Africa, and a small territory in India and the Eastern
-islands.
-
-But Portuguese enterprise led also to a more lasting work, to the
-creation of a new European nation beyond the Ocean, the single European
-monarchy which has taken root in the New World. ♦Discovery of Brazil,
-1500. | 1531.♦ _Brazil_ was discovered by Portuguese sailors at the end
-of the fifteenth century; it was settled as a Portuguese possession
-early in the sixteenth. ♦1624-1654.♦ During the union of Portugal with
-Spain the Dutch won for a while a large part of the country, but the
-whole was won back by independent Portugal. The peculiar position of
-Portugal, ever threatened by a more powerful neighbour, gave her great
-Transatlantic dominion a special importance. ♦1807.♦ It was looked to
-as possible place for shelter, which it actually became during the
-French invasion of Portugal. ♦Kingdom of Portugal and Brazil, 1813.♦
-The Portuguese dominions took the style of ‘the United Kingdom of
-Portugal, Brazil, and Algarve.’ Nine years later these kingdoms were
-separated, and Brazil became an independent state. ♦Empire of Brazil,
-1822.♦ But it remains a monarchy with the title of Empire, and it is
-still ruled by the direct representative of the Portuguese royal house,
-while Portugal itself has passed away from the native line by the
-accidents of female succession.
-
-In the sixteenth century Brazil held a wholly exceptional position.
-It was the only settlement of Portugal, it was the only considerable
-settlement of any European power, in a region which Spain claimed as
-her exclusive dominion. ♦Division of the Indies between Spain and
-Portugal. 1494.♦ By Papal authority Spain was to have all the newly
-found lands that lay to the west, and Portugal all that lay to the
-east, of a line on the map, drawn at 370 leagues west of the Cape
-Verde Islands. Spain thus held the whole South American continent, with
-the exception of Brazil, together with that part of the North American
-continent which is most closely connected with the southern. While the
-non-European dominion of Portugal was primarily African and Indian, the
-non-European dominion of Spain was primarily American. It did not in
-the same way spring out of the European history of the country; it was
-rather suggested by rivalry of Portugal. ♦Oran, 1516-1708. 1732-1791.♦
-In Africa the Spanish dominion hardly went beyond the possession of
-_Oran_ and the more lasting possession of _Ceuta_. ♦Tunis, 1531.♦
-The conquest of _Tunis_ by Charles the Fifth[86] was made rather in
-his Sicilian than in his Castilian character. Within the range of
-Portuguese dominion the settlements of Spain were exceptional. But
-they took in the _Canaries_ off the Atlantic coast of Africa, and the
-_Philippine Islands_ in the extreme eastern Archipelago. ♦Insular
-possessions of Spain.♦ These insular possessions Spain still keeps.
-
-♦Spanish dominion in America.♦
-
-Meanwhile the great Spanish dominion in the New World, in both Americas
-and in the adjoining islands of the West Indies, has risen and fallen.
-♦Hispaniola, 1492.♦ It began with the first conquest of Columbus,
-_Hispaniola_ or Saint _Domingo_. Thus the dominion of Castile beyond
-the Ocean began at the very moment when she reached the full extent
-of her own Mediterranean coast. ♦1519. | 1532.♦ Then followed the
-great continental dominion in _Mexico_, _Peru_, and the other lands
-on or south of the isthmus which joins the two western continents.
-But into the body of the North American continent, the land which was
-to be disputed between France and England, Spain never spread. _New
-Mexico_, _California_, _Florida_, barely stretched along its western
-and southern coasts. ♦Revolutions of the Spanish colonies.♦ The whole
-of this continental dominion passed away in a series of revolutions
-within our own century. While Portugal and England have really founded
-new European nations beyond the Ocean, the result of Spanish rule in
-America has been to create a number of states of ever shifting extent
-and constitution, keeping the Spanish language, but some of which are
-as much native American as Spanish. ♦Mexico.♦ Of these _Mexico_ is
-the one which has had most to do with the general history of Europe
-and European America. ♦Two Mexican Empires, 1822-1823. | 1866-1867.♦ It
-has twice taken the name of Empire, once under a native, once under a
-foreign, adventurer. And vast provinces, once under its nominal rule,
-have passed to the United States. ♦Cessions to the United States.♦ The
-loss of _Texas_, _New Mexico_, and _Upper California_, has cut down the
-present Mexico nearly to the extent of the first Spanish conquests.
-
-♦Spanish West India islands. | Jamaica, 1655.♦
-
-Of the Spanish West India islands, some, like _Jamaica_ and _Trinidad_,
-have passed to other European powers. ♦Saint Domingo, 1864.♦ The oldest
-possession of all, the Spanish part of Hispaniola, has become a state
-distinct from that of Hayti in the same island. ♦Puerto Rico.♦ _Puerto
-Rico_ remains a real Spanish possession. ♦Cuba.♦ The allegiance of
-_Cuba_ is always doubtful. In short, the dominion of Spain out of
-Europe has followed its European dominion out of Spain. The eighteenth
-century destroyed the one; the nineteenth century has cut down the
-other to mere fragments.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[79] See above, p. 154.
-
-[80] See above, p. 155.
-
-[81] See above, p. 4.
-
-[82] See above, p. 154.
-
-[83] See above, p. 335.
-
-[84] See above, p. 343.
-
-[85] Conquered by England 1708. Ceded 1713. Recovered 1756. Ceded to
-England 1763. Recovered 1782. Conquered by England 1798. Recovered 1802.
-
-[86] See above, p. 447.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE BRITISH ISLANDS AND COLONIES.
-
-
-We have now gone, first through that great mass of European lands
-which formed part either of the Eastern or of the Western Empire, and
-then through those more distant, and mainly peninsular, lands which
-so largely escaped the Imperial dominion. ♦The British islands.♦ We
-end by leaving the mainland of Europe, by leaving the world of either
-Empire, for that great island, or rather group of islands, which for
-ages was looked on as forming a world of its own.[87] ♦Late Roman
-conquest and early loss of Britain.♦ In Western Europe Britain was the
-last land to be won, and the first to be lost, in the days of the elder
-Empire. And, after all, Britain itself was only partly won, while the
-conquest of Ireland was never tried at all. ♦Independence of Britain
-in the later Empire.♦ After the English Conquest, Britain had less
-to do with the revived Western Empire than any Western land except
-Norway. The momentary dealings of Charles the Great with Scotland and
-Northumberland, the doubtful and precarious homage done by Richard the
-First to Henry the Sixth, are the only exceptions, even in form, to its
-complete independence on the continental Empire. ♦Britain another world
-and another Empire.♦ The doctrine was that Britain, the other world,
-formed an Empire of its own. That Empire, being an island, was secured
-against the constant fluctuations of its external boundary to which
-continental states lie open. ♦Changes within Britain.♦ For several
-centuries the boundaries, both of the Celtic and Teutonic occupants and
-of the Teutonic kingdoms among themselves, were always changing. But
-these changes hardly affect European history, which is concerned only
-with the broad general results—with the establishment of the Teutonic
-settlers in the island—with the union of those settlers in one kingdom
-under the West-Saxon house—with the extension of the imperial power of
-the West-Saxon kings over the whole island of Britain. ♦Slight change
-in the internal divisions of England.♦ And, from the eleventh century
-onwards, there has been singularly little change of boundaries within
-the island. The boundaries of England towards Scotland and Wales
-changed much less than might have been looked for during ages of such
-endless warfare. Even the lesser divisions within the English kingdom
-have been singularly lasting. The land, as a whole, has never been
-mapped out afresh since the tenth century. While a map of France or
-Germany in the eleventh century, or even in the eighteenth, is useless
-for immediate practical objects, a map of England in the days of
-Domesday practically differs not at all from a map of England now. The
-only changes of any moment, and they are neither many nor great, are in
-the shires on the Welsh and Scottish borders.
-
-Thus the historical geography of the isle of Britain comes to little
-more than a record of these border changes, down to the incorporation
-of England, Scotland, and Wales into a single kingdom. In the other
-great island of Ireland there is little to do except to trace how the
-boundary of English conquest advanced and fell back, a matter after
-all of no great European concern. The history of the smaller outlying
-islands, from Scandinavian Shetland to the insular Normandy, has
-really more to do with the general history of Europe. The dominion
-of the English kings on the continent is of the highest European
-moment, but, from its geographical side, it is Gaul and not Britain
-which it affects. ♦English settlements beyond sea.♦ The really great
-geographical phænomenon of English history is that which it shares with
-Spain and Portugal, and in which it surpasses both. This is the vast
-extent of outlying English dominion and settlement, partly in Europe,
-but far more largely in the distant lands of Asia, Africa, America, and
-Australia. But it is not merely that England has become a great power
-in all quarters of the world; England has been, like Portugal, but on a
-far greater scale, a planter of nations. ♦English nations.♦ One group
-of her settlements has grown into one of the great powers of the world,
-into a third England beyond the Ocean, as far surpassing our insular
-England in geographical extent as our insular England surpasses the
-first England of all in the marchland of Germany and Denmark. The mere
-barbaric dominion of England concerns our present survey but little;
-but the historical geography of Europe is deeply concerned in the
-extension of England and of Europe in lands beyond the Western and the
-Southern Ocean.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In tracing out the little that we have to say of the geography of
-Britain itself, it will be well to begin with that northern part of the
-island where changes have been both more numerous and more important
-than they have been in England.
-
-
-§ 1. _The Kingdom of Scotland._
-
-♦Historical position of Scotland.♦
-
-In Northern Britain, as in some other parts of Europe, we see a land
-which has taken its name from a people to which it does not owe its
-historic importance. _Scotland_ has won for itself a position in
-Britain and in Europe altogether out of proportion to its size and
-population. But it has not done this by virtue of its strictly Scottish
-element. ♦Greatness of Scotland due to its English element.♦ The Irish
-settlers who first brought the Scottish name into Britain[88] could
-never have made Scotland what it really became. What founded the
-greatness of the Scottish kingdom was the fact that part of England
-gradually took the name of Scotland and its inhabitants took the
-name of Scots. The case is as when the Duke of Savoy and Genoa and
-Prince of Piedmont took his highest title from that Sardinian kingdom
-which was the least valuable part of his dominions. It is as when
-the ruler of a mighty German realm calls himself king of the small
-duchy of Prussia and its extinct people. ♦Two English kingdoms in
-Britain.♦ The truth is that, for more than five hundred years, there
-were two English kingdoms in Britain, each of which had a troublesome
-Celtic background which formed its chief difficulty. One English king
-reigned at Winchester or London, and had his difficulties in Wales and
-afterwards in Ireland. Another English king reigned at Dunfermline or
-Stirling, and had his difficulties in the true Scotland. ♦Extension
-of the Scottish name.♦ But the southern kingdom, ruled by kings of
-native English or of foreign descent, but never by kings of British or
-Irish descent,[89] always kept the English name, while the northern
-kingdom, ruled by kings of Scottish descent, adopted the Scottish name.
-The English subjects of the King of Scots gradually took the Scottish
-name to themselves. ♦Analogy of Switzerland. | Threefold elements in
-the later Scotland.♦ As the present Swiss nation is made up of parts
-of the German, Burgundian, and Italian nations which have detached
-themselves from their several main bodies, so the present Scottish
-nation is made up of parts of the English, Irish, and British nations
-which have detached themselves from their several main bodies. But in
-both cases it is the Teutonic element which forms the life and strength
-of the nation, the kernel to which the other elements have attached
-themselves. ♦True position of the Kings of Scots.♦ We cannot read the
-mediæval history of Britain aright, unless we remember that the King of
-Scots was in truth the English king of Teutonic Lothian and Teutonized
-Fife. ♦Enmity of the true Scots.♦ The people from whom he took his
-title were at most his unwilling subjects; they were often his open
-enemies, the allies of his southern rival.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Lothian, Strathclyde, and Scotland.♦
-
-The modern kingdom of Scotland was made up of English _Lothian_,
-British _Strathclyde_, and Irish _Scotland_. The oldest Scotland is
-Ireland, whence the Scottish name, long since forgotten in Ireland
-itself, came into Britain and there spread itself. These three elements
-stand out plainly. ♦The Picts.♦ But the Scottish or Irish element
-swallowed up another, that of the _Picts_, of whom there can be no
-doubt that they were Celts, like the Scots and Britons, but about whom
-it may be doubted whether their kindred was nearer to the Scots or to
-the Britons. For our purpose the question is of little moment. The
-Picts, as far as geography is concerned, either vanished or became
-Scots.
-
-♦Position of the Picts and Scots in the ninth century.♦
-
-Early in the ninth century the land north of the firths of Clyde and
-Forth was still mainly Pictish. The second Scotland (the first Scotland
-in Britain) had not spread far beyond the original Irish settlement in
-the south-west. ♦Union of Picts and Scots, 843. | The Celtic Scotland.♦
-The union of Picts and Scots under a Scottish dynasty created the
-larger Scotland, the true Celtic Scotland, taking in all the land north
-of the firths, except where Scandinavian settlers occupied the extreme
-north. ♦Bernicia.♦ South of the firths, English _Bernicia_, sometimes a
-separate kingdom, sometimes part of _Northumberland_, stretched to the
-firth of Forth, with _Edinburgh_ as a border fortress. ♦Strathclyde or
-Cumberland.♦ To the west of Bernicia, south and east of the firth of
-Clyde, lay the British kingdom of _Cumberland_ or _Strathclyde_, with
-_Alcluyd_ or _Dumbarton_ as its border fortress. ♦Galloway.♦ To the
-south-west again lay the outlying Pictish land of _Galloway_, which
-long kept up a separate being. Parts of Bernicia, parts of Strathclyde,
-were one day to join with the true Scotland to make up the later
-Scottish kingdom. As yet the true Scotland was a foreign and hostile
-land alike to Bernicia and to Strathclyde.
-
-♦Settlements of the Northmen.♦
-
-In the next century we see the Scottish power cut short to the north
-and west, but advancing towards the south and east. ♦Caithness.♦ The
-Northmen have settled in the northern and western islands, in those
-parts of the mainland to which they gave the names of _Caithness_
-and _Sutherland_, and even in the first Scottish land in the west.
-♦Scotland acknowledges the English supremacy, 924.♦ Scotland itself
-has also admitted the external supremacy of the English overlord.
-♦Taking of Edinburgh, c. 954.♦ On the other hand, the Scots have
-pressed within the English border, and have occupied Edinburgh, the
-border fortress of England. ♦Cession of Lothian, 966 or 1018.♦ Later
-in the same century or early in the next, the Kings of Scots received
-Northern Bernicia, the land of _Lothian_, as an English earldom. On
-the other side, _Strathclyde_ or _Cumberland_—its southern boundary is
-very uncertain—had become in a manner united to England and Scotland at
-once. ♦Grant of Cumberland, 945.♦ An English conquest, it was granted
-in fief to the King of Scots, and was commonly held as an appanage by
-Scottish princes.[90] ♦Different tenures of the dominion of the King of
-Scots.♦ Thus the King of Scots held three dominions on three different
-tenures. Scotland was a kingdom under a merely external English
-supremacy; Cumberland was a territorial fief of England; Lothian was
-an earldom within the English kingdom. ♦The distinctions forgotten in
-later controversies.♦ In after times these distinctions were forgotten,
-and the question now was whether the dominions of the King of Scots,
-as a whole, were or were not a fief of England. When the question took
-this shape, the English king claimed more than his ancient rights over
-Scotland, less than his ancient rights over Lothian.
-
-♦Effects of the grant of Lothian.♦
-
-The acquisition of Lothian made the Scottish kingdom English. Lothian
-remained English; Cumberland and the eastern side of Scotland itself,
-the Lowlands north of the firth of Forth, became practically English
-also. The Scottish kings became English princes, whose strength lay in
-the English part of their dominions. ♦Fate of southern Cumberland.♦
-But late in the eleventh century it would seem that the southern part
-of Cumberland had become a separate principality ruled by a refugee
-Northumbrian prince under Scottish supremacy. ♦Carlisle and its
-district added to England by William Rufus, 1092.♦ This territory,
-the city of _Carlisle_ and its immediate district, the old diocese
-of Carlisle, was added to England by William Rufus. ♦Cumberland and
-Northumberland granted to David, 1136.♦ On the other hand, in the
-troubles of Stephen’s reign, the king of Scots received as English
-earldoms, Cumberland—in a somewhat wider sense—and _Northumberland_
-in the modern sense, the land from the Tweed to the Tyne. Had these
-earldoms been kept by the Scottish kings, they would doubtless have
-become Scottish lands in the same sense in which Lothian did; that
-is, they would have become parts of the northern English kingdom.
-♦Recovered by England, 1157. | The boundary permanent, except as to
-Berwick.♦ But these lands were won back by Henry the Second; and the
-boundary has since remained as it was then fixed, save that the town
-of _Berwick_ fluctuated according to the accidents of war between one
-kingdom and the other.
-
-♦Relations between England and Scotland.♦
-
-But though the boundaries of the kingdoms were fixed, their relations
-were not. ♦1292.♦ Scotland in the modern sense—that is, Scotland in the
-older sense, Lothian, and Strathclyde—was for a moment held strictly as
-a fief of England. ♦1296.♦ It was then for another moment incorporated
-with England. ♦1327.♦ It was then acknowledged as an independent
-kingdom. ♦1333.♦ It again fell under vassalage for a moment, and again
-won its independence. ♦1603.♦ Then, at the beginning of the seventeenth
-century, England and Scotland, as distinct, independent, and equal
-kingdoms, passed under a common king. ♦1649.♦ They were separated
-again for a moment when Scotland acknowledged a king whom England
-rejected. ♦1652.♦ For another moment Scotland was incorporated with an
-English commonwealth. ♦1660. | 1707.♦ Again Scotland and England became
-independent kingdoms under a common king, till the two kingdoms were,
-by common consent, joined in the one kingdom of _Great Britain_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Struggle with the Northerners.♦
-
-Meanwhile the Scottish kings had, like those of England somewhat
-earlier, to struggle against Scandinavian invaders. ♦Scandinavian
-advance, 1014-1064.♦ The settlements of the Northmen advanced, and
-for some years in the eleventh century they took in _Moray_ at one
-end and _Galloway_ at the other. But it was only in the extreme north
-and in the northern islands that the land really became Scandinavian.
-♦The Sudereys, and Man.♦ In the _Sudereys_ or _Hebrides_—the southern
-islands as distinguished from Orkney and Shetland—and in _Man_, the
-Celtic speech has survived. ♦Caithness submits, 1203.♦ _Caithness_
-was brought under Scottish supremacy early in the thirteenth century.
-♦Galloway incorporated, 1235.♦ _Galloway_ was incorporated. ♦Sudereys
-and Man submit, 1263-1266.♦ Later again, after the battle of Largs, the
-Sudereys and Man passed under Scottish supremacy. But the authority of
-the Scottish crown in the islands was for a long time very precarious.
-♦History of Man.♦ Man, the most central of the British isles, lying at
-a nearly equal distance from England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales,
-remained a separate kingdom, sometimes under Scottish, sometimes under
-English, superiority. Granted to English subjects, the kingdom sank
-to a lordship. ♦1764-1826.♦ The lordship was united to the crown of
-Great Britain, and Man, like the Norman islands, remains a distinct
-possession, forming no part of the United Kingdom. ♦Orkney. 1469.♦ The
-earldom of Orkney meanwhile remained a Norwegian dependency till it was
-pledged to the Scottish crown. Since then it has silently become part,
-first of the kingdom of Scotland, and then of the kingdom of Great
-Britain.
-
-
-§ 2. _The Kingdom of England._
-
-♦Harold’s conquests from Wales, 1063.♦
-
-The changes of boundary between England and _Wales_ begin, as far as
-we are concerned with them, with the great Welsh campaign of Harold.
-♦Enlargement of the border shires.♦ All the border shires, Cheshire,
-Shropshire, Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, seem now to have been
-enlarged; the English border stretched to the _Conway_ in the north,
-and to the _Usk_ in the south. ♦The Marches.♦ But part of this
-territory seems to have been recovered by the Welsh princes, while part
-passed into the great _march_ district of England and Wales, ruled by
-the Lords Marchers. ♦Conquest of South Wales, 1070-1121.♦ The gradual
-conquest of South Wales began under the Conqueror and went on under his
-sons; but it was more largely the work of private adventurers than of
-the kings themselves. The lands of _Morganwg_, _Dyfed_, _Ceredigion_,
-and _Breheiniog_, answering nearly to the modern South Wales, were
-gradually subdued. ♦Flemish settlement in Pembrokeshire, 1111.♦
-In some districts, especially in the southern part of the present
-Pembrokeshire, the Britons were actually driven out, and the land was
-settled by Flemish colonists, the latest of the Teutonic settlements in
-Britain. ♦Character of the conquest of South Wales.♦ Elsewhere Norman
-lords, with a Norman, English, and Flemish following, held the towns
-and the more level country, while the Welsh kept on a half independence
-in the mountains. ♦Princes of North Wales.♦ Meanwhile in North Wales
-native princes—_Princes of Aberffraw_ and _Lords of Snowdon_—still
-ruled, as vassals of the English king, till the conquest by Edward
-the First. ♦Cessions to England, 1277.♦ In the first stage the vassal
-prince was compelled again to cede to his overlord the territory
-east of the Conway. ♦Conquest of North Wales, 1282.♦ Six years later
-followed the complete conquest. But complete incorporation with England
-did not at once follow. ♦The Principality of Wales.♦ Wales, North and
-South, remained a separate dominion, giving the princely title to the
-eldest son of the English king.[91] Some shires were formed; some new
-towns were founded; the border districts remained under the anomalous
-jurisdiction of the Marchers. ♦Full incorporation. 1535.♦ The full
-incorporation of the principality and its marches dates from Henry the
-Eighth. Thirteen new counties were formed, and some districts were
-added or restored to the border shires of England. One of the new
-counties, _Monmouthshire_, was, under Charles the Second, added to an
-English circuit, and it has since been reckoned as an English county.
-
-♦The Domesday shires.♦
-
-Setting aside these new creations, all the existing shires of
-England were in being at the time of the Norman Conquest, save those
-of _Lancaster_, _Cumberland_, _Westmoreland_, and _Rutland_. The
-boundaries were not always exactly the same as at present; but the
-differences are commonly slight and of mere local interest. ♦Two
-classes of shires.♦ The shires, as they stood at the Conquest, were
-of two classes. ♦Ancient kingdoms and principalities.♦ Some were old
-kingdoms or principalities, which still kept their names and boundaries
-as shires. Such were the kingdoms of _Kent_, _Sussex_, and _Essex_,
-and the East-Anglian, West-Saxon, and Northumbrian shires. Most of
-these keep old local or tribal names; a few only are called from a
-town. ♦Mercian shires mapped out in the tenth century.♦ In Mercia on
-the other hand, the shires seem to have been mapped out afresh when
-the land was won back from the Danes. They are called after towns, and
-the town which gives the name commonly lies central to the district,
-and remains the chief town of the shire, except when it has been
-outstripped by some other in modern times.[92] Both classes of shires
-survived the Conquest, and both have gone on till now with very slight
-changes.
-
-On the Welsh border, all the shires, for reasons already given,
-stretch further west in Domesday than they do now. ♦Cumberland and
-Westmoreland.♦ On the Scottish border _Cumberland_ and _Westmoreland_
-were made out of the Cumbrian conquest of William Rufus, enlarged by
-districts which in Domesday appear as part of Yorkshire. ♦Lancashire.♦
-_Lancashire_ was made up of lands taken from Yorkshire and Cheshire,
-the Ribble forming the older boundary of those shires. The older
-divisions are marked by the boundaries of the dioceses of _York_,
-_Carlisle_, and _Lichfield_ or _Chester_, as they stood down to the
-changes under Henry the Eighth. ♦Rutland.♦ In central England the
-only change is the formation of the small shire of _Rutland_ out of
-the Domesday district of Rutland (which, oddly enough, appears as an
-appendage to _Nottinghamshire_), enlarged by a small part of what was
-then _Northamptonshire_.
-
-
-§ 3. _Ireland._
-
-♦Ireland the first Scotland.♦
-
-The second great island of the British group, _Ireland_, the original
-_Scotia_, has had less to do with the general history of the world
-than any other part of Western Europe. Its ancient divisions have
-lived on from the earliest times. ♦The five provinces.♦ The names of
-its five great provinces, _Ulster_, _Meath_, _Leinster_, _Munster_,
-and _Connaught_, are all in familiar use, though _Meath_ has sunk from
-its old rank alongside of the other four. The Celtic inhabitants of
-the island remained independent of foreign powers till the days of
-Scandinavian settlement. Just like the English kingdoms in Britain,
-the great divisions of Ireland were sometimes independent, sometimes
-united under the supremacy of a head king. ♦Settlement of the Ostmen.♦
-Gradually the Northmen, called in Ireland _Ostmen_, settled on the
-eastern coast, and held the chief ports, as _Dublin_, _Waterford_,
-_Wexford_, two of which names bear witness to Teutonic occupation.
-♦Irish victory at Clontarf. 1012.♦ The great Irish victory at Clontarf
-weakened, but did not destroy, the Scandinavian power. ♦Increasing
-connexion with England.♦ And, from the latter half of the tenth
-century onward, the eastern coast of Ireland shows a growing connexion
-with England. Any actual English supremacy seems doubtful; but both
-commercial and ecclesiastical ties became closer during the eleventh
-and twelfth centuries. ♦The English conquest, 1169-1652.♦ This led to
-the actual English conquest of Ireland, begun under Henry the Second,
-but really finished only by Cromwell. ♦1171. | Fluctuations of the
-Pale.♦ All Ireland admitted for a moment the supremacy of Henry; but,
-till the sixteenth century, the actual English dominion, called the
-_Pale_, with Dublin for its centre, was always fluctuating, and for a
-while it fell back rather than advanced.
-
-♦Kingdom and Lordship of Ireland.♦
-
-In the early days of the conquest Ireland is spoken of as a kingdom;
-but the title soon went out of use. The original plan seems to have
-been that Ireland, like Wales afterwards, should form an appanage for a
-son of the English King. It became instead, so far as it was an English
-possession at all, a simple dependency of England, from which the King
-took the title of _Lord of Ireland_. ♦1542. | Relations of Ireland to
-England.♦ Henry the Eighth took the title of _King of Ireland_; but the
-kingdom remained a mere dependency, attached to the crown, first of
-England and then of Great Britain. ♦1652. | 1689.♦ This state of things
-was diversified by a short time of complete incorporation under the
-Commonwealth, and a short time of independence under James the Second.
-♦1782-1800.♦ But for the last eighteen years of the last century,
-Ireland was formally acknowledged as an independent kingdom, connected
-with Great Britain only by the tie of a common king. ♦1801.♦ Since that
-time it has formed an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great
-Britain and Ireland.
-
-
-§ 4. _Outlying European Possessions of England._
-
-Ireland, the sister island of Britain, has thus been united with
-Britain into a single kingdom. Man, lying between the two, remains a
-distinct dependency. ♦The Norman Islands. 1205.♦ This last is also
-still the position of that part of the Norman duchy which clave to
-its own dukes, which never became French, but always remained Norman.
-It might be a question what was the exact position of _Guernsey_,
-_Jersey_, _Alderney_, _Sark_, and their smaller neighbours, when the
-English kings took the titles of the French kingdom and actually held
-the Norman duchy. Practically the islands have, during all changes,
-remained attached to the English crown; but they have never been
-incorporated with the kingdom. ♦Other European dependencies, Aquitaine,
-&c.♦ Other more distant European lands have been, some still are, in
-the same position. Such were _Aquitaine_, _Ponthieu_, and _Calais_, as
-fixed by the Peace of Bretigny. Since the loss of Aquitaine, England
-has had no considerable continental dominion in Europe, but she has
-from time to time held several islands and detached points. ♦Outposts
-and islands.♦ Such are _Calais_, _Boulogne_, _Dunkirk_, _Gibraltar_,
-_Minorca_, _Malta_, _Heligoland_, all of which have been spoken of in
-their natural geographical places. To these we may add _Tangier_, which
-has more in common with the possession of Gibraltar and Minorca than
-with the English settlements in the further parts of Africa. Of these
-points, Gibraltar, Heligoland, and Malta, are still held by England.
-♦Greek possessions, Ionian Islands, 1814-1864.♦ The virtual English
-possession of the _Ionian Islands_ made England for a while a sharer in
-the fragments of the Eastern Roman Empire. ♦Cyprus, 1878.♦ And later
-still she has again put on the same character by the occupation, on
-whatever terms, of another Greek and Imperial land, the island of
-_Cyprus_.
-
-
-§ 5. _The American Colonies of England._
-
-♦Colonies of England.♦
-
-England, like France and Holland, became a colonizing power by choice.
-Extension over barbarian lands was not a necessity, as in the case
-of Russia, nor did it spring naturally out of earlier circumstances,
-as in the case of Portugal. But the colonizing enterprise of England
-has done a greater work than the colonizing enterprise of any other
-European power. The greatest colony of England—for in a worthier
-use of language the word _colony_ would imply independence rather
-than dependence[93]—is that great Confederation which is to us what
-Syracuse was to Corinth, what Milêtos was to Athens, what Gades and
-Carthage were to the cities of the older Canaan. ♦The United States.♦
-The _United States of America_, a vaster England beyond the Ocean, an
-European power, on a level with the greatest European powers, planted
-beyond the bounds of Europe, form the great work of English and
-European enterprise in non-European lands.
-
-♦First English settlements in North America, 1497.♦
-
-The settlements which grew into the United States were not the first
-English possessions in North America, but they were the first which
-really deserved to be called colonies. The first discoveries of all led
-only to the establishment of the _Newfoundland_ fisheries. ♦Attempts
-of Raleigh, 1585-1587.♦ Raleigh’s attempts at real colonization ninety
-years later only pointed the way to something more lasting. ♦The
-Thirteen Colonies.♦ In the seventeenth century began the planting of
-the thirteen settlements which won their independence. Of these the
-earliest and the latest, the most southern and the most northern,
-began through English colonization in the strictest sense. ♦Virginia,
-1607.♦ First came _Virginia_. ♦The New England States, 1620-1638.♦
-Then followed the Puritan colonization much further to the north
-which founded the _New England_ states. The shiftings among these
-settlements, from _Plymouth_ to _Maine_, the unions, the divisions, the
-colonies of colonies—the Epidamnos and the Sinôpê of the New World—the
-various and varying relations between the different settlements, read
-like a piece of old Greek or of Swiss history.[94] ♦1629-1692.♦ By the
-end of the seventeenth century they had arranged themselves into four
-separate colonies. ♦1820.♦ These were _Massachusetts_, formed by the
-union of _Massachusetts_ and _Plymouth_, with its northern dependency
-of _Maine_, which became a separate State long after the Revolution;
-_New Hampshire_, annexed by Massachusetts and after a while separated
-from it; _Connecticut_, formed by the union of _Connecticut_ and
-_Newhaven_; _Rhode Island_, formed by the union of _Rhode Island_ and
-_Providence_. These New England States form a distinct geographical
-group, with a marked political and religious character of their own.
-♦The Southern Colonies.♦ Meanwhile, at some distance to the south,
-around Virginia as their centre, grew up another group of colonies,
-with a history and character in many ways unlike those of New England.
-♦Maryland. 1646. | Carolina. 1650-1663. | Divided, 1720.♦ To the north
-of Virginia arose the proprietary colony of _Maryland_; to the south
-arose _Carolina_, afterwards divided into _North and South_. South
-Carolina for a long while marked the end of English settlement to the
-south, as Maine did to the north.
-
-♦Intermediate space occupied by the United Provinces and Sweden. |
-English Conquest of New Netherlands, 1664.♦
-
-But between these two groups of English colonies in the strictest
-sense lay a region in which English settlement had to take the form
-of conquest from another European power. Earlier than any English
-settlement except Virginia, the great colony of the United Provinces
-had arisen on Long Island and the neighbouring mainland. ♦New
-Netherlands, 1614.♦ It bore the name of _New Netherlands_, with its
-capital of _New Amsterdam_. ♦New Sweden, 1658.♦ To the south, on the
-shores of Delaware Bay, the other great power of the seventeenth
-century founded the colony of _New Sweden_. Three European nations,
-closely allied in race, speech, and creed, were thus for a while
-established side by side on the eastern coasts of America. ♦Union of
-New Sweden with New Netherlands, 1655.♦ But the three settlements were
-fated to merge together, and that by force of arms. A local war added
-New Sweden to New Netherlands; a war between England and the United
-Provinces gave New Netherlands to England. ♦New York.♦ New Amsterdam
-became _New York_, and gave its name to the colony which was to become
-the greatest State of the Union. ♦1674.♦ Ten years later, in the next
-war between the two colonizing powers, the new English possession was
-lost and won again.
-
-Meanwhile the gap which was still left began to be filled up by other
-English settlements. ♦The Jerseys. 1665. | 1702.♦ _East_ and _West
-Jersey_ began as two distinct colonies, which were afterwards united
-into one. ♦Pennsylvania, 1682. | Delaware, 1703.♦ The great colony of
-_Pennsylvania_ next arose, from which the small one of _Delaware_ was
-parted off twenty years later. Pennsylvania was thus the last of the
-original settlements of the seventeenth century, which in the space of
-nearly eighty years had been formed fast after one another. ♦Georgia,
-1733.♦ Fifty years after the work of the benevolent Penn came the work
-of the no less benevolent Oglethorpe; _Georgia_, to the south of all,
-now filled up the tale of the famous Thirteen, the fitting number, it
-would seem, for a Federal power, whether in the Old World or in the New.
-
-♦Independence of the United States, 1783.♦
-
-By the Peace of Paris the Thirteen Colonies were acknowledged as
-independent States. The great work of English settlement on foreign
-soil was brought to perfection. The new and free English land beyond
-the Ocean took in the whole temperate region of the North American
-coast, all between the peninsula of _Acadia_ to the north and the other
-peninsula of _Florida_ to the south. Both of these last lands were
-English possessions at the time of the War of Independence, but neither
-of them had any share in the work. ♦Nova Scotia, 1713.♦ Acadia, under
-the name of _Nova Scotia_, had been ceded by France in the interval
-between the settlement of Pennsylvania and the settlement of Georgia.
-♦Conquest of Canada, 1759-1763.♦ Next came the conquest of _Canada_, in
-which the men of the colonies played their part. ♦The French barrier at
-Alleghany.♦ Hitherto the English colonies had been shut in to the West
-by the French claim to the line of the Alleghany mountains. The Treaty
-of Paris took away this bugbear, and left the whole land as far as the
-Mississippi open to the enterprise of the English colonists. Thus, when
-the Thirteen States started on their independent career, the whole land
-between the great lakes, the Ocean, and the Mississippi, was open to
-them. ♦Florida again Spanish, 1781-1821.♦ Florida indeed, first as an
-English, then again as a Spanish possession, cut them off from the Gulf
-of Mexico. The city of _New Orleans_ remained, first a Spanish, then a
-French, outpost east of the Mississippi, and the possessions still held
-by England kept them from the mouth of the Saint Lawrence. ♦Extension
-to the West.♦ But within these limits, such of the old States as were
-allowed by their geographical position might extend themselves to the
-west, and new States might be formed. Both processes went on, and two
-of the barriers formed by European powers were removed. ♦Louisiana,
-1803. | Florida, 1821.♦ The purchase of _Louisiana_ from France, the
-acquisition of _Florida_ from Spain, gave the States the sea-board of
-the Gulf of Mexico, and allowed their extension to the Pacific. The
-details of that extension, partly by natural growth, partly at the
-expense of the Spanish element in North America, it is hardly needful
-to go through here. ♦A new English nation.♦ But, out of the English
-settlements on the North-American coast, a new English nation has
-arisen, none the less English, in a true view of history, because it
-no longer owes allegiance to the crown of Great Britain. But the power
-thus formed, exactly like earlier confederations in Europe, lacks
-a name. ♦Lack of a name.♦ The _United States of America_ is hardly
-a geographical or a national name, any more than the names of the
-_Confederates_ and the _United Provinces_. In the two European cases
-common usage gave the name of a single member of the Union to the
-whole, and in the case of Switzerland the popular name at last became
-the formal name. In the American case, on the other hand, popular usage
-speaks of the Confederation by the name of the whole continent of which
-its territory forms part. ♦Use of the word _America_.♦ For several
-purposes, the words _America_ and _American_ are always understood
-as shutting out Canada and Mexico, to say nothing of the southern
-American continent. For some other purposes, those names still take
-in the whole American continent, north and south. But it is easier
-to see the awkwardness of the usual nomenclature than to suggest any
-improvement on it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Second English nation in North America.♦
-
-While one set of events in the eighteenth century created an
-independent English nation on North American soil, another set of
-events in the same century, earlier in date but later in their results,
-has led to the formation in its immediate neighbourhood of another
-English nation which still keeps its allegiance to the English crown.
-♦Dependent confederacy.♦ A confederation of states, practically
-independent in their internal affairs, but remaining subjects of a
-distant sovereign, is a novelty in political science. ♦British North
-America.♦ Such is the _Confederation of British North America_. But
-this dependent Confederation did not arise out of colonization in the
-same sense as the independent Confederation to the south of it. The
-central land which gives it its character is the conquered land of
-_Canada_. ♦New Brunswick, &c.♦ Along with Canada came the possession
-of the smaller districts which received the names of _New Brunswick_
-and _Prince Edward’s Island_, districts which were at first joined
-to Nova Scotia, but which afterwards became distinct colonies. ♦The
-Dominion, 1867.♦ Now they are joined with the _Dominion of Canada_,
-which, like the United States, grows by the incorporation of new states
-and territories. ♦British Columbia, 1871. | Rupertsland.♦ The addition
-of _British Columbia_ has carried the Confederation to the Pacific;
-that of _Rupertsland_ carries it indefinitely northward towards the
-pole. This second English-speaking power in North America, stretches,
-like the elder one, from Ocean to Ocean. ♦Newfoundland, 1713.♦
-_Newfoundland_ alone, a possession secured to England after many
-debates at the same time as Nova Scotia, remains distinct.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦The West Indies. Barbadoes, 1605.♦
-
-Of the British possessions in the _West Indies_ a few only, among them
-_Barbadoes_, the earliest of all, were colonies in the same sense
-as Virginia and Massachusetts. ♦Jamaica, 1655.♦ The greater number,
-_Jamaica_ at their head, were won by conquest from other European
-powers. No new English nation, like the American and the Canadian,
-has grown up in them. ♦Smaller settlements.♦ Still less is there
-any need to dwell on the _Bahamas_, the _Falkland Islands_, or the
-South-American possession of _British Guiana_.
-
-
-§ 6. _Other Colonies and Possessions of England._
-
-♦Colonies in the southern hemisphere.♦
-
-The story of the North-American colonies may be both compared and
-contrasted with the story of two great groups of colonies in the
-southern hemisphere. ♦Australia.♦ In Australia and the other great
-southern islands, a body of English colonies have arisen, the germs at
-least of yet another English nation, but which have not as yet reached
-either independence or confederation. ♦South Africa.♦ In South Africa,
-another group of possessions and colonies, beginning, like Canada,
-in conquest from another European power, seems to be feeling its way
-towards confederation, while one part has in a manner stumbled into
-independence.
-
-The beginning of English settlement in the greatest of islands began
-in the years which immediately followed the establishment of American
-independence. ♦New South Wales, 1787.♦ First came _New South Wales_, on
-the eastern coast, designed originally as a penal settlement. ♦Western
-Australia, 1829.♦ It outgrew this stage, and another penal settlement
-was founded in _Western Australia_. ♦South Australia, 1836. |
-Victoria, 1837. | Queensland, 1859.♦ Then colonization spread into the
-intermediate region of _Southern Australia_ (which however stretches
-right through the island to its northern coast) into the district
-called _Victoria_, south-west of the original settlement, and lastly,
-into _Queensland_ to the north-east. ♦Colonies Act, 1850.♦ Since
-the middle of the present century all these colonies have gradually
-established constitutions which give them full internal independence.
-♦Tasmania, 1804. | 1839.♦ South of the great island lies one smaller,
-but still vast, that of _Van Diemen’s_ Land, now _Tasmania_, which was
-settled earlier than any Australian settlement except New South Wales.
-♦Six colonies, 1852. | United, 1875.♦ And to the east lie the two
-great islands of _New Zealand_, where six English colonies founded at
-different times have been united into one.
-
-♦South Africa.♦
-
-While the Australian settlements were colonies in the strictest sense,
-the English possessions in South Africa began, like New York, in a
-settlement first planted by the United Provinces. ♦Conquest of the
-Cape, 1806. | 1815.♦ The _Cape Colony_, after some shiftings during
-the French revolutionary wars, was conquered by England, and its
-possession by England was confirmed at the general peace. ♦Eastern
-Colony and Natal, 1820-1836.♦ Migration northward, both of the English
-and Dutch inhabitants, has produced new settlements, as the _Eastern
-Colony_ and _Natal_. ♦Orange River State, 1847-1856. | Transvaal,
-1861-1877.♦ Meanwhile independent Dutch states have arisen, as the
-_Orange River Republic_, annexed by England, then set free, and lastly
-dismembered, and the _Transvaal_, more lately annexed after sixteen
-years of independence. Lastly a scheme of confederation for all these
-settlements awaits some more peaceful time to be carried into effect.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Europe extended by colonization.♦
-
-In all these cases of real colonization, of real extension of the
-English or any other European nation, it is hardly a figure to say
-that the bounds of Europe have been enlarged. All that makes Europe
-Europe, all that parts off Europe from Africa and Asia, has been
-carried into America and Australia and Africa itself. The growth of
-this new Europe, no less than the changes of the old, is an essential
-part of European geography. ♦Barbarian dominion.♦ It is otherwise
-with territories, great or small, which have been occupied by England
-and other European powers merely for military or commercial purposes.
-Forts, factories, or empires, on barbarian soil, where no new European
-nation is likely ever to grow up, are not cases of true colonization;
-they are no extension of the bounds of Europe. ♦English dominion in
-India.♦ The climax of this kind of barbarian dominion is found in those
-vast Indian possessions in which England has supplanted Portugal,
-France, and the heirs of Timour. ♦Empire of India. 1876.♦ Of that
-dominion the scientific frontier has yet to be traced; yet it has
-come to give an Imperial title to the sovereign of Great Britain and
-Ireland, while those two European islands, as perhaps befits their
-inferiority in physical size, remain content with the lowlier style of
-the United Kingdom. Whether the loftier pretensions of Asia do, or do
-not, imply any vassalage on the part of Europe, it is certain that the
-Asiatic Empire of the sovereign of the British kingdom is no extension
-of England, no extension of Europe, no creation of a new English or
-European nation. The Empire of India stands outside the European world,
-outside the political system which has gathered round the Old and the
-New Rome. But a place amongst the foremost members of that system
-belongs to the great European nation on American soil, where the tongue
-of England is kept, and the constitution of old Achaia is born again,
-in a confederation stretching from the Western to the Eastern Ocean.
-
- * * * * *
-
-♦Summary.♦
-
-We have thus traced the geography, and in tracing the geography we have
-in a slighter way traced the history, of the various states and powers
-of Europe, and of the lands beyond the Ocean which have been planted
-from Europe. We have throughout kept steadily before our eyes the
-centre, afterwards the two centres, of European life. We have seen how
-the older states of Europe gradually lose themselves in the dominion
-of Rome, how the younger states gradually spring out of the dominion
-of Rome. We have followed, as our central subjects, the fates of those
-powers in the East and West which continued the Roman name and Roman
-traditions. We have traced out the states which were directly formed
-by splitting off from those powers, and the states which arose beyond
-the range of Roman power, but not beyond the range of Roman influence.
-We have seen the Western Empire first pass to a German prince, then
-gradually shrink into a German kingdom, to be finally dissolved into
-a German confederation. We have watched the states which split off at
-various dates from its body, the power of France on one side, the power
-of Austria on another, the powers of Italy on a third, the free states
-of Switzerland at one end, the free states of the Netherlands at the
-other. We have beheld the long tragedy of the Eastern Rome; we have
-told the tale of the states which split off from it and arose around
-it. We have seen its territorial position pass to a barbarian invader,
-and something like its position in men’s minds pass to the mightiest of
-its spiritual disciples. And we have seen, painted on the map of our
-own century, the beginning of the great work which is giving back the
-lands of the Eastern Rome to their own people. We have then traced the
-shiftings of the powers which lay wholly or partly beyond the bounds
-of either Empire, the great Slavonic mainland, the Scandinavian and
-the Iberian peninsulas, ending with that which is geographically the
-most isolated land of all, the other world of Britain. We have seen too
-how Europe may be said to have spread herself beyond her geographical
-limits in the foundation of new European states beyond the Ocean. We
-have contrasted the different positions and destinies of the colonizing
-European powers—where, as in the days of Old Rome, a continuous
-territory has been extended over neighbouring barbarian lands—where
-growth beyond the sea was the natural outcome of growth at home—where
-European powers have colonized and conquered simply of their own free
-will. In thus tracing the historical geography of Europe, we have made
-the round of the world. But we have never lost sight of Europe; we
-have never lost sight of Rome. Wherever we have gone, we have carried
-Europe with us; wherever we have gone, we have never got beyond the
-power of the two influences which, mingling into one, have made Europe
-all that it has been. The whole of European history is embodied in the
-formula which couples together the ‘rule of Christ and Cæsar;’ and that
-joint rule still goes on, in the shape of moral influence, wherever the
-tongues and the culture of Europe win new realms for themselves in the
-continents of the western or in the islands of the southern Ocean.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[87] See Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 564.
-
-[88] See above, p. 98.
-
-[89] The Tudor kings were doubtless of British descent; but they did
-not reign by virtue of that descent, and they did not come in till ages
-after the English kingdom was completely formed.
-
-[90] See Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 580.
-
-[91] It should be remembered that the principality became the appanage
-of the eldest son only by accident. The first English prince,
-afterwards Edward the Second, was not his father’s eldest son at the
-time of his creation. The title moreover is newly created each time.
-
-[92] See Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 48; and Macmillan’s Magazine,
-April, 1880.
-
-[93] The Latin _colonia_ certainly does not imply independence; but,
-the word _colony_, in our use of it, rather answers to the Greek
-ἀποικία which does.
-
-[94] It may be well to give the dates in order:—
-
- Plymouth 1620
- Massachusetts 1628
- New Hampshire 1629
- Connecticut 1635
- Newhaven 1638
- Providence 1644
- Rhode Island 1634
- Maine 1638
- New Hampshire annexed by Massachusetts 1641
- Rhode Island and Providence united 1644
- Connecticut and Newhaven united 1664
- New Hampshire separated from Massachusetts 1671
- Maine purchased by Massachusetts 1677
- Plymouth and Massachusetts united 1691
-
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
-Aachen, crowning-place of the German kings, 189.
- annexed to France, 220.
-
-Aargau, 271.
-
-Åbo, bishopric of, 184.
- peace of, 512.
-
-Abruzzi, the, annexed to Sicily, 396.
-
-Abyssinian Church, 169.
-
-Acadia; _see_ NOVA SCOTIA.
-
-Acciauoli, Dukes of Athens, 417.
-
-Achaia, League of, 40.
- dependent on Rome, 41.
- province of, 78.
- principality of, 416, 417.
- Angevin overlordship of, 418.
- its dismemberment, _ib._
- Savoyard counts of, 283, 418.
-
-Achaians, use of the name in the Homeric catalogue, 26.
-
-Acre, lost and won in the Crusades, 398, 400.
- fall of, 400.
-
-Ægæan Sea, Greek colonies on its coasts, 21, 22, 32.
- theme of, 150.
-
-Ælfred, his treaty with Guthrum, 161.
-
-Æmilia, province of, 79.
-
-Æquians, 46.
- their wars with Rome, 50.
-
-Africa, Greek colonies in, 35.
- Roman province of, 59.
- New, province of, _ib._
- diocese of, 78, 79.
- Vandal kingdom, 90.
- recovered to the Empire, 104.
- Saracen conquest of, 111.
- Norman conquests in, 396.
- Portuguese conquests in, 541.
- French conquests in, 360.
- South, English possessions in, 565, 566.
-
-Agram (Zagrab), 439.
-
-Agri Decumates, 84.
-
-Agricola, his conquest of Britain, 69.
-
-Agrigentum (Akragas), 48.
- conquered by the Saracens, 370.
-
-Aigina, held by Venice, 410.
-
-Aiolian colonies in Asia, 32.
-
-Aire, 349.
-
-Aitolia, geographical position of, 21.
- League of, 40.
- its alliance with and dependence on Rome, 40, 41.
-
-Aitolians, their place in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
-
-Aix (Aquæ Sextiæ), Roman colony, 57.
- ecclesiastical province of, 173.
-
-Aix-la-Chapelle, Peace of, 249, 349.
-
-Ajaccio, birthplace of Buonaparte, 352.
-
-Akarnania, 21, 30.
- league of, 40.
-
-Akarnanians, not in the Homeric catalogue, 26 (_note_).
-
-Akerman, Peace of, 453.
-
-Akragas; _see_ AGRIGENTUM.
-
-Aktê, Argolic, 29.
-
-Alans, origin of, 89.
- their settlements in Spain, 90.
-
-Alarcos, battle of, 533.
-
-Alaric, king of the West-Goths, 89.
-
-Alava, 535.
-
-Albania, Asiatic, 99.
-
-Albania, kings of, 420.
- Turkish conquest of, 421.
- revolt of, under Scanderbeg, _ib._
-
-Albanians, their origin, 24.
- their settlements in Greece, 115, 364, 366.
-
-Albanon (Elbassan), 430.
-
-Albigensian War, 335.
-
-Albi, ecclesiastical province of, 174.
- under Aragon, 335.
- annexed to France, _ib._
-
-Alemanni, 85, 91.
- conquered by the Franks, 117.
-
-Alemannia, Duchy of, 140.
-
-Alessandria, 237.
- ceded to Savoy, 249.
-
-Alessio, taken by Venice, 410.
-
-Alexander the Great, his conquests, 37.
-
-Alexandria, greatness of, 38, 61, 77.
- Patriarchate of, 168, 169.
-
-Alexios Komnênos, his conquests in Asia Minor, 381.
-
-Alexios Komnênos, founds the Empire of Trebizond, 386.
-
-Alfonso VI. of Castile, Emperor, 531.
- his conquests, 532.
-
-Algarve, 533, 535.
-
-Algarve-beyond-the-Sea, kingdom of, 541.
-
-Algeria, character of the French conquest of, 360.
-
-Algiers, 447.
-
-Almohades, invade Spain, 533.
- decline of, _ib._
-
-Almoravides, invade Spain, 530.
-
-Alps, the, 43.
-
-Alsace; _see_ ELSASS.
-
-Amadeus VI., Count of Savoy, his Eastern expedition, 390.
-
-Amadeus VIII., first Duke of Savoy, 281.
- his title of Prince of Piedmont, 284.
-
-Amalfi, 369.
-
-Amastris, held by Genoa, 414.
-
-Ambrakia, Corinthian colony, 31.
- capital of Pyrrhos, 37; _see_ ARTA.
-
-America, Spanish dominion in, 543.
- use of the word, 563.
-
-America, North, French settlements in, 352.
- English and French rivalry in, 353.
- Russian settlements in, 523.
- first English settlements in, 559.
- formation of the thirteen colonies in, 560-562.
- colonies of the United Provinces and Sweden in, 561.
- confederation of British North America, 564; _see also_ UNITED STATES.
-
-Amiens, county of, added to France, 331.
- to Burgundy, 340.
-
-Amisos, held by Genoa, 414.
-
-Amurath I., Sultan, takes Hadrianople, 445.
-
-Anatolikon, theme of, 151.
-
-Anchialos, 376.
-
-Ancona (Ankôn), 47.
- march of, 238.
- occupied by Manuel Komnênos, 381.
-
-Andalusia, origin of the name, 90.
-
-Andorra, French protectorate of, 343, 537.
-
-Andraszovo, Peace of, 506.
-
-Angles, their settlements in Britain, 97.
-
-Angora, battle of, 445.
-
-Anhalt, principality of, 226.
-
-Ani, annexed to the Eastern Empire, 379.
- taken by the Turks, _ib._
-
-Anjou, county of, 142.
- united to Touraine, 330.
- to Maine and England, 332.
- annexed by Philip Augustus, 333.
-
-Anjou, House of, its growth, 332, 333.
- its overlordship in Peloponnêsos, 418.
-
-Ankôn; _see_ ANCONA.
-
-Anne of Britanny, effects of her marriages, 341.
-
-Antilles, French colonies in, 353.
-
-Antioch, greatness of, 61, 77.
- taken by Chosroes, 109.
- patriarchate of, 168, 169.
- restored to the Eastern Empire, 379.
- taken by the Turks, 380.
- recovered by the Empire, 381.
- its later captures, 399.
-
-Antiochos the Great, his war with Rome, 38, 41, 64.
-
-Antivari, Servian, 406.
- part of Montenegro, 428.
- recovered by Montenegro, 429.
-
-Aosta, bishopric of, 173.
- part of the kingdom of Burgundy, 278.
- its relations to Savoy, 288.
-
-Apennines, the, 44.
-
-Apollônia, its alliance with Rome, 40.
-
-Appenzell, joins the Confederates, 272.
-
-Apulia, Norman conquest of, 394.
-
-Aquæ Sextiæ; _see_ AIX.
-
-Aquileia, foundation of, 55.
- destroyed by Attila, 94.
- Patriarchate of, 170, 171, 237, 308.
- fluctuates between Germany and Italy, 195.
- under Austria, 255, 318.
-
-Aquitaine, south-western division of Transalpine Gaul, 58.
- its inhabitants, _ib._
- Frankish conquest of, 118, 120.
- kingdom of, 128.
- united with Neustria, 135, 339.
- duchy of, 142.
- extent of, 332.
- united with Gascony, _ib._
- its union with and separation from France, _ib._
- united with England and Normandy, 333.
- kept by England, 334.
- French designs on, 337.
- released from homage, 338.
- its final union with France, 338, 558.
-
-Arabia, attempted Roman conquest of, 68.
- Portuguese conquests in, 541.
-
-Arabia Petræa, Roman conquest of, 70.
-
-Aragon, county of, 154, 155.
- its position in the Mediterranean, 463.
- its later history, 527.
- its relations towards Navarre, 528.
- formation of the kingdom, 530.
- Sobrarbe joined to, 531.
- united with Barcelona, _ib._
- advances beyond the Pyrenees and Rhone, 334, 531.
- conquers the Balearic isles and Valencia, 533.
- extent of in the thirteenth century, 534, 536.
- united with Castile, 537.
- its second advance beyond the peninsula, 538.
- united with Sicily, _ib._
- its conquests in Sardinia, _ib._
- its outlying possessions compared with those of Castile, 539.
-
-Arcadius, Emperor of the East, 81.
-
-Archipelago, Duchy of, 413.
-
-Argos, its place in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- its early greatness, 29.
- joins the Achaian League, 40.
- won from Epeiros by the Latins, 417.
- held by Venice, 410, 418.
- taken by the Turks, 411.
-
-Ariminum; _see_ RIMINI.
-
-Arkadia, its place in the Homeric catalogue, 30.
-
-Arles, later Roman capital of Gaul, 92.
- Saracen conquest of, 112.
- kingdom of, 145.
- ecclesiastical province of, 173.
- crowning-place of the kings of Burgundy, 189.
- annexed to France, 265.
-
-Armagh, ecclesiastical province of, 183.
-
-Armenia, conquered by Trajan, 99.
- given up by Hadrian, _ib._
- division of, 100.
- conquered by Basil II., 153, 379.
- Russian advance in, 521.
-
-Armenia, Lesser, 379, 399.
- acknowledges the Western Emperor, 401.
- its connexion with Cyprus, _ib._
- end of the kingdom, _ib._
-
-Arminius, his victory over Varus, 67.
-
-Armorica; _see_ BRITANNY.
-
-Arnulf, king of the East Franks and Emperor, 139.
-
-Arras, Treaty of, 297.
- ceded to France, 301.
-
-Arta (Ambrakia), won by the Eastern Empire, 388, 420.
-
-Arthur of Britanny, possible effects of the success of his claims, 333.
-
-Artois, added to France, 331.
- to the Duchy of Burgundy, 339.
- its momentary annexation by Lewis XI., 340.
- relieved from homage, _ib._
- within the Burgundian circle, 218.
- French acquisitions in, 348, 349.
-
-Aryan nations of Europe, order of their settlements, 13-15.
-
-Asia, its geographical character, 6.
- Macedonian kingdoms in, 37, 38.
- Roman province of, 64.
-
-Asia Minor, historically connected with Europe, 6.
- Greek colonies in, 22, 34.
- kingdoms in, 38.
- Roman conquest of, 64.
- Saracen ravages in, 117, 378.
- Turkish conquests of, 380, 389.
-
-Aspledôn, its place in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
-
-Astrakhan, khanat of, 501.
- conquered by Russia, 511.
-
-Asturia, united to Cantabria, 154, 529.
- grows into the kingdom of Leon, _ib._
-
-Asturias, principality of, 534.
-
-Athamania, kingdom of, 37.
-
-Athaulf, king of the West Goths, 89.
-
-Athens, its position in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- nominally independent of Rome, 41.
- lordship and duchy of, 416.
- Ottoman and Venetian conquests of, 417.
-
-Atropatênê, 99.
-
-Attabegs, their wars with the Crusaders, 400.
-
-Attica, 21, 27.
-
-Attila, effects of his inroads, 94.
-
-Auch, ecclesiastical province of, 173.
-
-Augsburg, bishopric of, 216.
- free city, 220.
- annexed by Bavaria, 221.
-
-Aurelian, Emperor, gives up Dacia, 70.
-
-Australia, English settlement in, 565.
-
-Austria, Lombard, 234.
-
-Austria, origin and use of the name, 121, 192, 305, 321.
- beginning of, 140.
- mark of, 196-202, 203, 305, 307.
- its position as a marchland, 267.
- duchy of, 308.
- annexed by Bohemia, 309.
- under the Habsburgs, 310.
- archduchy of, 313.
- its connexion with the Western Empire, 311.
- circle of, 217.
- its acquisitions and divisions, 312, 315.
- its union with Bohemia and Hungary, 314, 317.
- its foreign possessions, 318, 319.
- its rivalry with Prussia, 204.
- Venice surrendered to, 252, 255.
- so-called Empire of, 221, 267, 306.
- changes of, during the revolutionary wars, 221-224.
- its position compared with that of Prussia, 225.
- loses and recovers Hungary, 323.
- modern extent of, 321-324.
- cedes its rights in Sleswick and Holstein, 228.
- Bosnia and Herzegovina administered by, 441.
-
-Austro-Hungary, dual system in, 323.
-
-Autun, 93.
-
-Auvergne, counts of, 332.
-
-Avars, a Turanian people, 17, 365.
- allied with the Lombards against the Gepidæ, 107, 113.
- kingdom of, 113.
- overthrown by Charles the Great, 122, 127.
-
-Aversa, county of, 394.
-
-Avignon, archbishopric of, 174.
- taken by France, 264.
- sold to the Pope, 265.
- annexed to France, 265, 355.
-
-Azof, won and lost by Russia, 449, 516.
-
-Azores, conquered by Portugal, 541.
-
-
-Babylonia, 99.
-
-Badajoz, 533.
-
-Baden, mark, electorate, and duchy of, 216, 220, 226.
-
-Bahamas, the, 565.
-
-Bajazet the Thunderbolt, Sultan, defeated by Timour, 390, 445.
- his conquest of Bulgaria, 431.
- extent of his dominion, 445.
-
-Balearic Isles, conquered by Aragon, 533.
-
-Balsa, house of, its dominion in Albania, 428.
-
-Baltic Sea, Scandinavian and German influence on, compared, 486.
-
-Baltic lands, general view of, 464-468.
-
-Bamberg, bishopric of, 176, 215, 226.
-
-Bangor, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Bar, duchy of, united to Lorraine, 193.
- annexed by France, 348.
- restored to Lorraine, _ib._
-
-Barbadoes, 565.
-
-Barcelona, county of, 320.
- joined to Aragon, 531.
- released from homage to France, 335, 531.
-
-Bardulia, the original Castile, 529.
-
-Bari, archbishopric of, 172.
- won from the Saracens, 370.
-
-Barnim, under Poland, 479.
- passes to Brandenburg, 492.
-
-Barrier Treaty, 349.
-
-Basel, joins the Confederates, 262, 272.
-
-Basel, bishopric of, annexed by France, 355.
- restored by France, 359.
-
-Basil II., Eastern Emperor, his conquests, 153, 379.
- incorporates Serbia, 424.
-
-Basques, remnant of non-Aryan people in Europe, 12, 13.
- their independence, 90.
-
-Batoum, annexed to Russia, 522.
-
-Bavaria, duchy of, 140.
- conquered by the Franks, 117, 118, 120.
- modern use of the name, 191, 192.
- electorate of, 215.
- united with the Palatinate, _ib._
- kingdom of, 220.
- extent of, 226.
-
-Bayonne, diocese of, 179.
-
-Belgium, kingdom of, 303.
-
-Belgrade, taken by the Magyars, 379.
- by the Turk, 438.
- Peace of, 440.
-
-Belisarius, ends the Vandal kingdom in Africa, 105.
-
-Benevento, Lombard duchy of, 108, 147, 254.
- papal possession of, 250.
-
-Berengar, king of Italy, submits to Otto the Great, 147.
-
-Berlin, its position, 230.
-
-Berlin, Treaty of, 429, 450, 452.
-
-Bern, joins the Confederates, 262, 270.
- its Savoyard conquests, 272, 273.
- annexes Lausanne, 273.
- restores lands north of the lake, _ib._
-
-Bernhard, duke of Saxony, 208.
-
-Bernicia, kingdom of, 97, 161, 550.
-
-Berwick, 552.
-
-Besançon, 93.
- ecclesiastical province of, 175.
- an Imperial city, 261.
- united to France, 261, 349.
-
-Bessarabia, annexed by Russia, 449.
-
-Beziers, annexed by France, 335.
-
-Bialystok, 519.
-
-Bienne, 274.
-
-Billungs, their mark, 198, 476.
-
-Biscay, 535.
-
-Bithynia, kingdom of, 38, 61.
- Roman conquest of, 64.
-
-Bleking, 470.
-
-Blois, united to Champagne, 330.
- purchased by Saint Lewis, 336.
-
-Bodonitza, principality of, 417.
-
-Bohemia, whether the seat of Samo’s kingdom, 473 (_note_).
- kingdom of, 159, 199, 217, 477.
- annexes Austria, 309, 315.
- its union with Brandenburg, 209, 493.
- its permanent union with Austria, 317, 323, 493.
- sketch of its history, 477, 492, 493.
-
-Bohuslän, ceded to Sweden, 508.
-
-Boiôtia, 21.
- legendary Thessalian settlement of, 30.
- league of, 40.
- dissolved, 41.
-
-Bokhara, 522.
-
-Boleslaf I., of Poland, his conquests, 479.
- whether the first king, 479 (_note_).
-
-Bologna, archbishopric of, 171.
-
-Bona, 396.
-
-Boniface, king of Thessalonikê, extent of his kingdom, 385, 417.
-
-Bormio, won by Graubünden, 273.
-
-Bornholm, 508.
-
-Bosnia, Hungarian conquest of, 424.
- won back by Stephen Dushan, 425.
- origin of the kingdom, 426.
- its greatest extent, 427.
- Turkish conquest of, _ib._
- administered by Austro-Hungary, 324, 441.
-
-Bosporos, kingdom of, 39, 64.
-
-Boukellariôn, theme of, 151.
-
-Boulogne, lost and won by France, 342, 347, 558.
-
-Bourbon, Isle of, occupied by the French, 354.
- taken by England but restored, 360.
-
-Bourdeaux, ecclesiastical province of, 173.
-
-Bourges, ecclesiastical province of, 173.
- viscounty of, added to France, 331.
-
-Brabant, duchy of, 294.
- united to Burgundy, 297.
-
-Braga, 179.
-
-Brandenburg, mark of, 199, 209, 476.
- grows into modern Prussia, 202, 203, 210.
- New Mark of, pledged to the Teutonic knights, 496.
- its union with Bohemia, 209, 493.
- united to Prussia, 204, 209, 504, 513.
-
-Branibor, takings of, 475.
-
-Brazil, discovery of, 542.
- Empire of, _ib._
-
-Breisach, annexed by France, 347.
- restored, 350.
-
-Bremen, archbishopric of, 176, 214.
- held and lost by Sweden, 509, 513.
- annexed to Hannover, 208.
-
-Bremen, city, one of the Hanse towns, 214, 220.
- its independence of the Bishop, 214.
-
-Brescia, 237.
-
-Breslau, bishopric of, 185.
-
-Bresse, annexed to Savoy, 263.
- ceded to France, 287, 347.
-
-Bretigny, Peace of, 337.
-
-Brindisi, lost by Venice, 248.
-
-Britain, use of the name, 3, 4.
- early position of, 10.
- Celtic settlements in, 14.
- Roman conquest of, 69, 545.
- diocese of, 80.
- Roman troops withdrawn from, 95.
- Teutonic settlements in, 15, 96.
- English kingdoms in, 129.
- Celtic states in, 130.
- Empire of, 462, 545.
- its independence of the Western Empire, 545.
- two English kingdoms in, 548.
-
-Britanny, origin of the name, 93.
- duchy of, 142.
- its relations to Normandy, 328, 333.
- incorporated with France, 341.
-
-Brixen, bishopric of, 217, 308.
- united to Bavaria, 221.
- recovered by Austria, 224.
-
-Brunswick, duchy of, 208, 227.
-
-Brusa, Turkish conquest of, 389, 444.
-
-Bucharest, Treaty of, 450.
-
-Bugey, annexed to Savoy, 263.
- to France, 287, 347.
-
-Bukovina, annexed by Austria, 441.
-
-Bulgaria, White and Black, 374, 481.
- extent of, in the eighth century, 375.
- under Simeon, 376.
- conquered by Sviatoslaf, 377.
- by John Tzimiskês, _ib._
- extent of, under Samuel, _ib._
- recovered by Basil II., 153, 378.
- third kingdom of, 382, 429.
- advance of, under John Asan, 430.
- its decline, _ib._
- Cuman dynasty in, 431.
- break up of, _ib._
- Turkish conquest of, _ib._
- triple partition of, by the Treaty of Berlin, 454.
-
-Bulgarians, a Turanian people, 17, 365.
- their settlements, 116, 156, 365.
- compared with the Magyars and Ottomans, 365.
-
-Buonaparte, Napoleon, his kingdom of Italy, 253, 254.
- his feeling towards Switzerland, 355.
- character of his conquests, 356.
- his treatment of Germany and Italy, 357.
- his scheme for the division of Europe, _ib._
- extent of France under, 358.
-
-Buonaparte, Louis Napoleon, his annexations, 359.
-
-Buondelmonte, house of, in Northern Epeiros, 420.
-
-Burgos, ecclesiastical province of, 179.
-
-Burgundians, 87.
- their settlement in Gaul, 93.
-
-Burgundy, Frankish conquest of, 118.
- use of the name, 93, 192.
-
-Burgundy, Kingdom of, 137, 144.
- Trans- and Cis-jurane, 145.
- chiefly annexed by France, 146, 264.
- represented by Switzerland, 146, 259.
- its language, 259.
- importance of its acquisition by France, 343, 344.
-
-Burgundy, County of, 218.
- revolutions of, 260.
- joined with the duchy, 339.
- momentary annexation of, by Lewis XI., 340.
- an appendage to Castile under Charles V., 539.
- finally annexed by France, 261, 344, 349, 539.
-
-Burgundy, Duchy of, 142, 144.
- escheat of, 339.
- union of Flanders with, 292.
- its growth, 339.
- annexed by Lewis XI., 340.
-
-Burgundy, Lesser, Duchy of, 260, 261.
-
-Burgundy, circle of, 216, 218.
-
-Butrinto, under the Angevins, 397.
- commends itself to Venice, 410.
- ceded to the Turk, 411.
- won back by Venice, 412.
-
-Byzantium, annexed by Vespasian, 41, 63, 68.
- capital of the Eastern Empire, 33, 77.
- _see_ CONSTANTINOPLE.
-
-
-Cæsar, Augustus, his conquests, 56, 66.
- his division of Italy, 74.
-
-Cæsar, Caius Julius, his conquests in Gaul, 57, 58.
- forms the province of New Africa and restores Carthage, 59.
-
-Cadiz, joined to Castile, 534;
- _see_ GADES.
-
-Caithness, 550.
-
-Calabria, change of the name, 369.
-
-Calais, English conquest of, 338, 558.
- won back by France, 342, 347.
-
-Calatrava, 533.
-
-California, Upper, ceded by Spain to the United States, 544.
-
-Caliphate, Eastern, extent of, 112.
- division of, 113, 122, 125.
-
-Caliphate, Western, beginning of, 113, 122, 125.
- broken up, 156.
-
-Calmar, Union of, 487.
-
-Cambray, bishopric of, 175.
- becomes an archbishopric, 177.
- League of, 242.
- annexed to France, 301, 349.
-
-Camerino, march of, 238.
-
-Campo Formio, treaty of, 252.
-
-Canada, colonized by France, 352.
- conquered by England, 353, 562.
- part of the confederation of British North America, 564.
-
-Canali, district of, originally Servian, 405.
-
-Canaries, conquered by Spain, 543.
-
-Candia, war of, 404.
- use of the name, 409 (_note_).
-
-Cantabria, conquered by Augustus, 56.
- united with Asturia, 154, 529.
-
-Canterbury, archbishopric of, 181.
-
-Cape Breton, French settlement at, 352.
-
-Cape Colony, conquered by England, 566.
-
-Cape of Good Hope, discovery of, 541.
-
-Cape Verde Islands, conquered by Portugal, 541.
-
-Capua, Archbishopric of, 172.
- Principality of, 394.
- annexed to Sicily by King Roger, 396.
-
-Carcassonne, 335.
-
-Carelia, conquered by Sweden, 488.
- part of, ceded to Russia, 512.
-
-Carinthia (Kärnthen), mark of, 114, 127, 140, 196.
- Duchy of, 217, 308.
- whether the seat of Samo’s kingdom, 473 (_note_).
-
-Carlisle, bishopric of, 183.
- added to England by William Rufus, 551.
-
-Carlowitz, Peace of, 412, 439, 448.
-
-Carniola, (Krain), Duchy of, 217.
- mark of, 196.
-
-Carolina, 561.
- its division, _ib._
-
-Carthage, Phœnician colony, 35.
- greatness of, 79.
- its possessions in Sicily, 48.
- holds Sardinia and Corsica, 54.
- its power in Spain, 56.
- destroyed, 59.
- restored, _ib._
- capital of the Vandal kingdom, 90.
-
-Carthagena (New Carthage), 56.
-
-Cashel, ecclesiastical province of, 183.
-
-Casimir the Great, king of Poland, his conquests, 498.
-
-Caspian, Russian advance on, 521.
-
-Cassubia, 492.
-
-Castile, county of, 154.
- origin of the name, _ib._
- kingdom of, 155, 530, 535.
- its Emperor, 463.
- later history of, 527.
- its relations towards Navarre, 528.
- shiftings of, 531.
- its final union with Leon, _ib._
- advance of, 533.
- conquests of, under Saint Ferdinand, 534.
- conquers Granada, 534, 537.
- loses and recovers Gibraltar, 534.
- its union with Aragon, 537.
- its outlying possessions compared
- with those of Aragon, 539.
-
-Catalans, conquests of, in Greece, 387, 416.
-
-Catalonia, county of, 536.
-
-Cattaro, won and lost by Montenegro, 322, 428.
-
-Caucasus, Russian advance in, 521.
-
-Cayenne, 353.
-
-Celts, earliest Aryan settlers in western Europe, 13, 14, 56.
- effects of their settlements, 14.
-
-Cerdagne, released from homage to France, 531.
- recovered by Aragon, 537.
- loss of, 539.
-
-Ceuta, under the Empire, 526.
- under Spain, 541, 543.
-
-Ceylon, Dutch colony, 300.
-
-Chablais, 273.
-
-Chaldia, theme of, 150.
-
-Chalkidikê, 20.
- Greek colonies in, 33.
- united to Macedonia, 37.
- kept by the Empire, 390.
-
-Châlons, battle of, 94.
-
-Chambéry, Savoyard capital, 282, 288.
-
-Champagne, county of, 142.
- character of its vassalage, 329.
- joined to France, 336.
-
-Chandernagore, a French settlement, 354.
-
-Channel Islands, kept by the English kings, 334, 558.
-
-Charles the Great, his conquests, 121, 122.
- conquers Lombardy, 123.
- his title of Patrician, _ib._
- conquers Saxony, 126.
- overthrows the Avars, 127.
- crowned Emperor, 124.
- extent of his Empire, 126, 127.
- his divisions of the Empire, 128.
- his death, _ib._
- archbishoprics founded by, 176.
-
-Charles the Fat, Emperor, union of the Frankish kingdoms under, 137.
-
-Charles V., Emperor, dominions of, 249, 298, 539.
- his conquest of Tunis, 447, 543.
- extension of Castilian dominion under, 539.
-
-Charles VI., Emperor, his Pragmatic Sanction, 320.
-
-Charles XII., of Sweden, his wars with Peter the Great, 512.
-
-Charles of Anjou, his kingdom of Sicily, 250.
- his Italian dominion, 283.
- his dominion in Epeiros, 397.
- occupies Acre, 398.
-
-Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, his schemes for a Burgundian kingdom, 290, 304.
- effects of his death, 340.
-
-Charles, Duke of Leukadia, his conquests and title, 421.
-
-Charles the Good, Duke of Savoy, 286.
-
-Charles Emmanuel, Duke of Savoy, 287.
-
-Charolois, under the Dukes of Burgundy, 339.
- an appendage to Castile under Charles V., 539.
- conquered by Lewis XIV., _ib._
-
-Chartres, county of, united to Champagne, 330.
- purchased by Saint Lewis, 336.
-
-Chazars, their settlements, 17, 113, 365.
- Russian advance against, 481.
-
-Chersôn (Chersonêsos), city of, 36.
- theme of, 152.
- annexed to the Eastern Empire, 378.
- taken by Vladimir, 153, 378, 482.
- not the site of modern Cherson, 516 (_note_).
-
-Chiavenna, 195, 273.
-
-Chichester, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Chios, early greatness of, 32.
- under the Zaccaria and the Maona, 414.
- under the Turks, _ib._
-
-Chlodwig, King of the Franks, 92, 117.
-
-Chosroes II., his conquests, 109.
-
-Christian I., King of Denmark, unites Denmark, Sleswick, and Holstein, 490, 491.
-
-Chrobatia, Northern and Southern, 433.
- _See also_ CROATIA.
-
-Chrobatia, Northern, becomes Little Poland, 479.
- passes to Austria, 515.
-
-Chur, bishopric of, 216.
-
-Church, Eastern, its relations to Russia, 468.
-
-Cibin, gives its name to Siebenbürgen, 435 (_note_).
-
-Circassia, Russian advance in, 521.
-
-Cispadane Republic, the, 251.
-
-Clermont, county of, 330.
-
-Cleve, 210.
-
-Clissa, 410.
-
-Clontarf, Irish victory at, 557.
-
-Cnut, his conquest of England, 162.
- his northern Empire, 162, 462.
-
-Colony, meaning and use of the word, 559.
-
-Columbia, British, 564.
-
-Como, 237.
-
-Compostella, ecclesiastical province of, 179.
-
-Confederation of the Rhine, 221, 222, 358.
-
-Connaught, 183, 556.
-
-Connecticut, 560.
-
-Conrad of Mazovia, grants Culm to the Teutonic knights, 496.
-
-Constantine, French conquest of, 360.
-
-Constantine the Great, divisions of the Empire under, 74.
- his new capital, 33, 77.
-
-Constantine Porphyrogennêtos, his description of the themes of the Empire, 149.
-
-Constantine Palaiologos, his conquests in Peloponnêsos, 418.
-
-Constantinople, foundation of, 33, 77.
- its moral influence, 116.
- Patriarchate of, 168.
- early Russian attempts on, 482.
- Latin conquest of, 383.
- won back under Michael Palaiologos, 387.
- taken by the Turks, 391.
-
-Constanz, bishopric of, 216.
- passes to Austria, 274.
-
-Cordova, bishopric, of, 178.
- conquered by Ferdinand, 534, 535.
- Caliphate of; _see_ CALIPHATE, Western.
-
-Corfu, Norman conquests of, 380, 395, 396.
- held by Margarito, 397.
- won from Venice by Epeiros, 385.
- granted to Manfred, _ib._
- under Charles of Anjou, _ib._
- under Venice, _ib._
- summary of its history, 408.
- _see also_ KORKYRA.
-
-Corinth, in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- a Dorian city, 29.
- joins the Achaian League, 40.
- under Macedonia, _ib._
- won from Epeiros by the Latins, 417.
-
-Cornwall, 130.
-
-Coron (Kôrônê), held by Venice, 409.
- lost by her, 411.
-
-Corsica, 44.
- early inhabitants of, 53.
- Roman conquest of, 54.
- province of, 79.
- held by Genoa, 238, 245.
- ceded to France, 249.
- effects of its incorporation with France, 351, 356.
-
-Cosmo de’ Medici, Duke of Florence and Grand Duke of Tuscany, 246.
-
-Cottbus, 211, 224.
-
-Courtray, 349.
-
-Cracow, capital of Poland, 479.
- annexed by Austria, 514.
- joined to the duchy of Warsaw, 82, 520.
- republic of, _ib._
- second Austrian annexation of, 323, 520.
-
-Crema, 237.
-
-Cremona, 237.
-
-Crete, its geographical position, 22.
- in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
- keeps its independence, 37.
- conquered by Rome, 63.
- province of, 78.
- lost and recovered by the Eastern Empire, 152, 153, 371, 372.
- conquered by Venice, 404.
- by the Turks, 404, 448.
- re-enslaved by the Treaty of Berlin, 452.
-
-Crim, khanat of, 501.
- dependent on the Sultans, _ib._
- annexed to Russia, 449, 516.
-
-Croatia, Slavonic settlement in, 114.
- its relations to the Eastern and Western Empires, 378, 406, 407.
- its relations to Hungary, 323, 407, 434.
- part of the Illyrian Provinces, 322.
-
-Croja, won and lost by Venice, 411.
-
-Crotona; _see_ KROTÔN.
-
-Crusade, first, its geographical result, 399.
-
-Crusaders, take Constantinople, 383.
- their conquests compared with those of the Normans in Sicily, 398.
-
-Cuba, 544.
-
-Cujavia, 478, 499.
-
-Culm, granted to the Teutonic knights, 496.
- restored to Poland, 497.
-
-Cumæ, 47, 48.
-
-Cumania, king of, a Hungarian title, 436.
-
-Cumans, settlements of, 365, 436, 483.
- dynasty of in Bulgaria, 431, 436.
- crushed by the Mongols, 436, 483.
-
-Cumberland, (Strathclyde), Scandinavian settlements in, 161.
- grant of, to Scotland, 162, 551.
- southern part united to England, 551, 552.
- formation of the shire, 556.
-
-Curland, Swedish conquest of, 472.
- tribes of, 484.
- dominion of the Sword-brothers in, 496.
- duchy of, 504.
-
-Curzola; _see_ KORKYRA, BLACK.
-
-Custrin, under Poland, 479.
- passes to Brandenburg, 492.
-
-Cyprus, Greek colonies in, 22.
- Phœnician colonies in, 35.
- Roman conquest of, 63.
- theme of, 151.
- lost and won by the Eastern Empire, 372.
- conquered by Richard, _ib._
- kingdom of, 401.
- its connexion with Jerusalem and with Armenia, _ib._
- conquered by Venice, 404.
- by the Turks, 404, 447.
- under English rule, 449, 559.
-
-Czar; _see_ TZAR.
-
-Czechs, 477.
-
-Czepusz; _see_ ZIPS.
-
-
-Dacia, wars of, with Rome, 70.
- made a province by Trajan, _ib._
- given up by Aurelian, _ib._
- its later history, 71.
- diocese of, 78.
-
-Daghestan, 516, 521.
-
-Dago, under the Sword-brothers, 496.
- under Denmark, 491, 504.
- under Sweden, 508.
-
-Dalmatia, Greek colonies in, 34.
- its wars with Rome, 62.
- Roman colonies in, _ib._
- province of, 79.
- Slavonic settlement in, 115.
- kingdom of, 407, 409.
- its relations to the Eastern Empire, 376, 406.
- history of the coast cities, 406.
- Venetian conquest in, 406, 407.
- joined to Croatia, _ib._
- recovered by Manuel, 381, 407.
- fluctuates between Hungary and Venice, 407, 409-412.
- annexed by Lewis the Great, 409, 437.
- taken, lost, and recovered by Austria, 320, 322, 441.
-
-Danaoi, 26.
-
-Danes, the, 127, 130.
- their settlements, 131, 471.
- their invasions of England, 160.
-
-Danish Mark, 196, 469.
-
-Danube, Roman conquests on, 68, 70.
- boundary of the Empire, 71.
- Gothic settlement on, 88.
- crossed by the Goths, 89.
-
-Danzig, mark of, 492.
- lost and recovered by Poland, 492, 497.
- commonwealth of, 223, 519.
- restored to Prussia, 520.
-
-Dardanians, 28.
-
-Dauphiny; _see_ VIENNOIS.
-
-Deira, kingdom of, 97, 161.
-
-Delaware, 562.
-
-Delmenhorst, 509, 513.
-
-Denmark, extent of, 131.
- its relations to the Western Empire, 127, 196, 467.
- formation of the kingdom, 469.
- conquests and colonies of, 471.
- united with England under Cnut, 163.
- bishoprics of, 184.
- conquers Sclavinia, 489.
- advance of, in Germany, _ib._
- titles of its kings, _ib._
- keeps Rügen, 490.
- effect of its advance on the Slavonic lands, 491.
- its settlement in Esthland, 488.
- united with Sweden and Norway, 487.
- with Norway only, 488.
- its wars with Sweden, 508.
- gives up the sovereignty of the Gottorp lands, 509.
- gets Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, _ib._
- recovers the Gottorp lands, 513.
- gives up Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, _ib._
- incorporation of Holstein with, 518.
-
-Desnica, Zupania of, 424.
-
-δεσπότης, a Byzantine title, 384 (_note_).
-
-Dijon, capital of the duchy of Burgundy, 142, 144.
-
-Diocletian, Emperor, division of the Empire under, 75.
- his conquests, 100.
-
-Dioklea, Zupania of, the germ of the Servian kingdom, 424.
-
-Ditmarsh, 489.
- joined to Holstein, 490.
- freedom of, 491.
- Danish conquest of, _ib._
-
-Dobroditius, his dominion, 431.
-
-Dobrutcha, origin of the name, 431.
- joined to Wallachia, 431, 436.
- restored to Roumania, 454.
-
-Dôdekannêsos; _see_ NAXOS.
-
-Dole, capital of Franche Comté, 261.
-
-Domfront, acquired by William of Normandy, 332.
-
-Dorchester, bishoprics of, 182.
-
-Dorian settlement in Peloponnêsos, 29.
- in Asia, 32.
-
-Douay, becomes French, 349.
-
-Dreux, county of, 330.
-
-Drusus, his campaigns in Germany, 67.
-
-Dublin, ecclesiastical province of, 183.
-
-Dulcigno, originally Servian, 406.
- won and lost by Montenegro, 429.
-
-Dunkirk, held by England, 301, 558.
- bought back by France, 301, 342.
-
-Durazzo (Epidamnos), taken by the Normans, 380, 395, 396.
- held by Margarito, 397.
- conquered by Venice, 408.
- won from Venice by Epeiros, 385.
- recovered by the Eastern Empire, 387, 397.
- under Charles of Anjou, 397.
- won by Servia, 425.
- duchy of, 397.
- second Venetian conquest of, 410.
- won by the Albanians, 420.
- by the Turks, 411.
-
-Durham, bishopric of, 183.
-
-Dutch, use of the name, 300.
-
-Dyrrhachion, theme of, 152.
- _see_ DURAZZO.
-
-
-Eadmund, his conquest and grant of Cumberland to Scotland, 162.
-
-Eadward the Elder, extent of England under, 162.
-
-East, the, prefecture of, 75, 77.
- dioceses of, 76.
-
-East Angles, kingdom of, 130.
- diocese of, 182.
-
-East India Company, French, 354.
-
-Eastern Mark; _see_ AUSTRIA.
-
-Ecgberht, king of the West-Saxons, his supremacy, 130, 160.
-
-Edessa, restored to the Eastern Empire, 153, 379.
- taken by the Turks, 400.
-
-Edinburgh, bishopric of, 183.
- taken by the Scots, 550.
-
-Egypt under the Ptolemies, 38, 61.
- Roman conquest of, 66.
- diocese of, 76.
- conquered by Selim I., 447.
-
-Eider, boundary of Charles the Great’s empire, 127, 196, 469.
-
-Eleanor of Aquitaine, effects of her marriages, 332, 337.
-
-Elba, annexed to the kingdom of Naples, 44, 246.
-
-Êlis, district of, 29.
- city of, 30.
- joins the Achaian league, 40.
-
-Elmham, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Elsass, 193.
- annexed by France, 194, 347.
- recovered by Germany, 229, 359.
-
-Ely, bishoprick of, 182.
-
-Embrun, ecclesiastical province of, 173.
-
-Emmanuel Filibert, Duke of Savoy, 286.
-
-Emperors, Eastern, position of, 362.
-
-Emperors, Western, position of, 362.
-
-Empire, Roman, greatest extent of, 9.
- conquests under, 66.
- its river boundaries, 71.
- division of under Diocletian, 75.
- united under Constantine, _ib._
- division of, 75, 81.
- reunited under Zeno, 94, 103.
- continuity of, 95, 103.
- loses its eastern provinces, 111.
- final division of, 124.
- its political tradition unbroken in the East, 363.
-
-Empire, Western, beginning of, 81.
- Teutonic invasions and settlements in, 82, 86, 87.
- united with the Eastern Empire, 94, 103.
- contrasted with the Eastern, 98, 362.
- divisions of, 135, 137, 326.
- its relations to Germany, 124-126, 128, 189, 190.
- restored by Otto the Great, 147.
- position of its Emperors, 362.
- its relations to Scandinavia, 467.
- to the Northern Slaves, 475.
-
-Empire, Eastern, wars of, with Persia, 82.
- contrasted with the Western, 98, 362.
- extent of, in the eighth century, 116.
- its Greek character, 149, 366, 382.
- its themes, 149-152.
- its dominion in Italy, 152, 371, 393.
- position of its Emperors, 362.
- falls mainly through foreign invasion, 363, 367.
- its partial tendencies to separation, 363.
- keeps the political tradition of the Roman Empire, _ib._
- distinction of races in, 364.
- its power of revival, 369, 377.
- its loss and gain in the great islands, 372.
- its relations towards the Slavonic powers, 373, 375.
- Bulgarian settlement in, 374, 376.
- recovers Greece from the Slaves, 375.
- its conquests of Bulgaria, 377-378.
- its relations to Venice, 378.
- its fluctuations in Asia, _ib._
- Turkish invasions in, 379.
- Norman invasions in, 380, 394.
- its geographical aspect in 1085, 380.
- under the Komnênoi, 366, 381, 386.
- act of partition, 383, 402, 403.
- losses and gains, 387-391.
- under the Palaiologoi, 387.
- effect of Timour’s invasion, 391.
- its final fall, _ib._
- states formed out of, 391-393.
- general survey of its history, 455-460.
- compared with the Ottoman dominion, 443.
-
-Empire, Latin, 383.
- its end, 387.
-
-Empire of Nikaia, 387.
-
-Empire of Trebizond, 36, 386, 422.
-
-Empire of Thessalonikê, 385.
-
-Empire, Serbian, 420, 425.
-
-Empire of Britain, 162, 462, 545.
-
-Empire of Spain, 463, 531.
-
-Empire of Russia, 512.
-
-Empire, French, 356.
-
-Empire of Austria, 221, 267, 306.
-
-Empire of Hayti, 359.
-
-Empires of Mexico, 544.
-
-Empire of Brazil, 542.
-
-Empire, German, 229, 230.
-
-Empire of India, 567.
-
-England, use of the name, 2, 3.
- origin of the name, 97.
- formation of the kingdom, 160.
- West-Saxon supremacy in, 160, 161.
- Danish invasions, _ib._
- advance of, 162.
- united with Scandinavia under Cnut, _ib._
- Norman conquest of, 163.
- its ecclesiastical geography, 166.
- its wars with France, 337, 338.
- its rivalry with France in America and India, 353.
- slight change in its internal divisions, 546.
- its relations with Scotland, 552.
- changes of its boundary towards Wales, 553.
- its relations with Ireland, 557.
- its settlements beyond sea, 547.
- its outlying European possessions, 558.
- its American colonies, 559-565.
- West Indian possessions, 565.
- other colonies and possessions of, 565, 566.
- its dominion in India, 567.
-
-English, character of their settlement, 96.
- origin of the name, 97.
-
-Epeiros, its ethnical relations to Greece, 24.
- use of the name, 26.
- kingdom of Pyrrhos, 37.
- league of, 40, 41.
- Roman province of, 78.
- Norman conquests in, 395, 396.
- granted in fief to Margarito, 397.
- despotat of, 384, 385.
- its conquest of and separation from Thessalonikê, 385.
- under Manfred and Charles of Anjou, 397.
- its first dismemberment, 419.
- recovered by the Eastern Empire, 388.
- under Servian, Albanian, and Italian rule, 419, 420.
- Venetian and Turkish occupation of, 421.
-
-Ephesos, its early greatness, 32.
-
-Epidamnos, 34.
- its alliance with Rome, 40.
- _see_ DURAZZO.
-
-Epidauros (Dalmatian), Greek colony, 34.
- destroyed, 115.
-
-Eric, Saint, king of Sweden, his conquests in Finland, 486.
-
-Erivan, 521.
-
-Ermeland, bishopric of, added to Poland, 497.
-
-Essex, kingdom of, 160, 555.
-
-Este, house of, 237, 243, 249.
-
-Esthland (Esthonia), Fins in, 484.
- Danish settlement in, 488.
- dominion of the Swordbearers in, 496.
- under Sweden, 504.
- under Russia, 512.
-
-Etruria, kingdom of, 253.
-
-Etruscans, their doubtful origin and language, 45.
- confederation of their cities, _ib._
-
-Euboia, 22.
- its position in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- under Macedonian influence, 37, 40.
- conquered by Venice, 409.
- by the Turks, _ib._
-
-Euphrates, Asiatic boundary of the Roman Empire, 71, 99.
-
-Europa, Roman province of, 77.
-
-Europe, its geographical character, 5, 6, 8.
- its three great peninsulas, 6.
- its colonizing powers, 10.
- Aryan settlements in, 12-15.
- non-Aryan races in, 12, 13, 16, 17.
- beginning of the modern history of, 85.
- Buonaparte’s scheme for the division of, 357.
- extended by colonization, 566.
-
-Euxine, Greek colonies on, 35.
-
-Evora, 179.
-
-Exeter, diocese of, 182.
-
-Ezerites, 375.
-
-
-Falkland Islands, 565.
-
-Famagosta, under Genoa, 401.
-
-Faroe Islands, 471.
-
-Faucigny, annexed to Savoy, 280.
- held by the Dauphins of Viennois, 281.
-
-Ferdinand, Saint, king of Castile, his conquests, 534.
-
-Fermo, march of, 238.
-
-Ferrara, duchy of, 243, 244, 249.
-
-Finland, Swedish conquests in, 486, 488.
- Russian conquests in, 512, 518.
-
-Fins, remnant of non-Aryan people in Europe, 12, 466.
- in Livland and Esthland, 484.
-
-Flaminia, province of, 79.
-
-Flanders, county of, 141, 142.
- united to Burgundy, 292, 339.
- within the Burgundian circle, 218.
- released from homage to France, 218, 298, 340.
- French acquisitions in, 348.
-
-Flemings, their settlement in Pembrokeshire, 554.
-
-Florence, archbishopric of, 171.
- its greatness, 238.
- Pisa submits to, 245.
- rule of the Medici in, _ib._
-
-Florida, held by England and Spain, 563.
- acquired by the States, _ib._
-
-France, effect of its geographical position, 9.
- origin and use of the name, 4, 5, 91, 121, 325-327.
- beginning of, 135, 136.
- its ecclesiastical divisions, 166.
- its annexations, 222, 252, 264, 265, 341-352.
- compared with Austria, 325.
- a nation in the fullest sense, 327.
- great fiefs of, 328.
- twelve peers of, _ib._
- its incorporation of vassal states, 329-341.
- effects of the wars with England, 337-339.
- beginning of the modern kingdom, 339.
- thorough incorporation of its conquests, 351.
- its colonial dominions, 352-354.
- its rivalry with England in America and India, 353, 354.
- its barrier towns against the Netherlands, 349.
- effects of the Peace of 1763 on, 354.
- its annexations under the Republic and Empire, 355, 356.
- extent of under Buonaparte, 358.
- restorations made by, after his fall, _ib._
- later annexations and losses, 359, 360.
- character of its African conquests, 360.
- its war with Prussia, 229.
-
-France, duchy of, 142.
- united with the kingdom of the West Franks, 143.
-
-Franche Comté; _see_ BURGUNDY, County of.
-
-Francia, meanings of the name, 91, 121, 128.
- extent of, 134.
-
-Francia, Eastern, 92, 121, 205.
-
-Francia, Western, 92.
-
-Francis I., Emperor, exchanges Lorraine for Tuscany, 321.
-
-Francis II., Emperor, his title of ‘Emperor of Austria,’ 221.
-
-Franconia, origin of the name, 91, 121.
- extent of the circle, 214.
- _see_ FRANCIA, Eastern.
-
-Frankfurt, election and coronation of the German kings at, 189.
- a free city, 220, 227.
- Grand Duchy of, 222.
- annexed by Prussia, 228.
-
-Franks, the, 85.
- their settlements, 87, 88.
- extent of their kingdom under Chlodwig, 92.
- their conquest of the Alemanni, 117.
- of Thuringia and Bavaria, _ib._
- of Aquitaine and Burgundy, 118.
- their position, 119.
- their German and Gaulish dependencies, 120.
- division of their kingdom, _ib._
- kingdom of united under the Karlings, 121.
- their relations with the Empire, 123.
- their conquest of Lombardy, _ib._
-
-Franks, East, their kingdom grows into Germany, 138.
-
-Franks, West, kingdom of, its extent, 141.
- its union with the duchy of France, 143.
- grows into modern France, _ib._
-
-Frederick II., Emperor, recovers Jerusalem, 400.
-
-Frederick William I., the Great Elector of Brandenburg, 210.
-
-Frederick I., King of Prussia, 210.
-
-Freiburg, joins the Confederates, 262, 272.
-
-Freiburg-im-Breisgau, conquered by France, 350.
- restored, _ib._
-
-French language, becomes the dominant speech of Gaul, 345.
-
-Friderikshamn, Peace of, 518.
-
-Friesland, East, annexed by Prussia, 212.
- annexed by France, 222.
- part of the kingdom of Hannover, 223.
-
-Friesland, West, county of, 293.
- annexed to Burgundy, 298.
-
-Frisians, 91.
-
-Friuli, duchy of, 235.
-
-Fulda, 214.
-
-Furnes, Barrier Town, 349.
-
-
-Gades, Phœnician colony, 35, 56.
- admitted to the Roman franchise, 56.
- _see_ CADIZ.
-
-Gaeta, 369.
-
-Galata, colony of Genoa, 414.
-
-Galicia (Halicz), kingdom of, 483.
- twice annexed to Hungary, 437, 498.
- recovered by Poland, 498.
- Austrian possession of, 319, 323, 440, 514.
-
-Galicia, New, 515, 520.
-
-Gallicia, 529.
-
-Galloway, incorporated with Scotland, 553.
-
-Gascony, Duchy of, 142.
- its union with Aquitaine, 332.
- ceded by the Peace of Bretigny, 337.
-
-Gatinois, county of, 330, 331.
-
-Gattilusio, family of, receives Lesbos in fief, 414.
-
-Gaul, use of the name, 3, 4.
- its geographical position, 7.
- non-Aryan people in, 13.
- Greek colonies in, 35.
- prefecture of, 75, 79.
- its gradual separation from the Empire, 88.
- Teutonic invasions of, 89.
- West Gothic kingdom in, 90.
- position of the Franks in, 91, 119.
- extent of Frankish kingdom in, 93.
- Burgundian settlement in, _ib._
- Hunnish invasion of, 94.
- ecclesiastical divisions of, 172-174.
-
-Gaul, Cisalpine, 46.
- Roman conquest of, 54.
-
-Gaul, Transalpine, first Roman province in, 57.
- its boundaries, _ib._
- its divisions and inhabitants, 58.
- Romanization of, _ib._
- nomenclature of its northern and southern part, _ib._
-
-Gauls, their settlements, 14, 46, 47.
-
-Gauthiod, 131, 470.
-
-Gauts, Geátas, of Sweden, name confounded with Goths, 470.
-
-Gauverfassung, 202.
-
-Gdansk; _see_ DANZIG.
-
-Gedymin, king of Lithuania, 497.
-
-Geldern, Gelderland, duchy of, 295.
- annexed to Burgundy, 298.
- division of, 299.
- United Province of, 300.
-
-Geneva, annexed by Savoy, 281.
- allied to Bern and Freiburg, 273.
- annexed by France, 276.
- restored by France, 359.
- joins the Swiss Confederation, 276.
-
-Genoa, archbishopric of, 171.
- holds Smyrna, 389.
- holds Corsica, 238, 245.
- cedes Corsica to France, 249.
- annexed to Piedmont, 256.
- compared with Venice, 402.
- her settlements, 413.
-
-George Akropolitês, 430 (_note_).
-
-George Kastriota; _see_ SCANDERBEG.
-
-Georgia, kingdom of, 516, 521.
-
-Georgia, state of, 562.
-
-Gepidæ, their kingdom, 107.
- conquered by the Lombards, _ib._
-
-Germans, early confederacies of, 84.
- serve within the Empire, 86.
-
-Germany, effect of its geographical character, 9.
- Roman campaigns in, 67.
- Frankish dominion in, 119.
- its relations to the Western Empire, 126, 188-190.
- beginning of the kingdom, 136, 138.
- its extent, 139, 192-195.
- ecclesiastical divisions of, 175-177.
- its losses, 190, 203.
- its changes in geography and nomenclature, 191, 201.
- its eastern extension, 200.
- the great duchies, 202.
- circles of, 203, 206.
- later history of, 204.
- late beginnings of French annexation from, 343, 346.
- Buonaparte’s treatment of, 357.
- state of in 1811, 221, 222.
- the Confederation, 218, 223-226.
- last geographical changes in, 229.
- its war with France, _ib._
- Empire of, 219, 229, 230.
- its influence on the Baltic, 486.
-
-Gex, under Savoy, 273, 281.
- annexed by France, 287, 347.
-
-Ghilan, 516.
-
-Gibraltar, lost and won by Castile, 534.
- occupied by England, 537, 558.
-
-Glarus, joins the Swiss Confederation, 270.
-
-Glasgow, ecclesiastical province of, 183.
-
-Gnezna (Gniezno, Gnesen), ecclesiastical province of, 184.
- beginning of the Polish kingdom at, 479.
- passes to Prussia, 514, 520.
-
-Görz (Gorizia), county of, 217, 308.
- annexed by Austria, 318.
-
-Gothia; _see_ PERATEIA or SEPTIMANIA.
-
-Gothland, 470.
-
-Goths, their settlements in the Western Empire, 87, 89.
- defeated by Claudius, 88.
- driven on by the Huns, _ib._
- their conquests in Spain, 90, 108, 526.
- make no lasting settlement in the Eastern Empire, 364.
-
-Goths, East, their dominion in Italy, 95.
-
-Goths, West, extent of their dominions, 526.
-
-Goths, Tetraxite, their settlement, 98.
-
-Gotland, power of the Hansa in, 494.
- held by the military orders, 496.
- conquered by Sweden, 508.
-
-Gottorp lands, sovereignty of, resigned by Denmark, 509.
- annexed to Denmark, 513.
-
-Gozo, granted to the knights of Saint John, 538.
-
-Granada, ecclesiastical province of, 179.
- kingdom of, 534.
- final conquest of, 537.
-
-Graubünden, League of, 272, 273.
- loses its subject districts, 275.
-
-Gravelines, taken by France, 301.
-
-Greece, one of the three great European peninsulas, 6.
- its geographical character, 8, 11, 18.
- its history earlier than that of Rome, 8, 42.
- use of the name, 19.
- its chief divisions, 19-21.
- insular and Asiatic, 19-23.
- its Homeric geography, 25, 26.
- its cities, 27.
- leagues in, 40.
- Roman conquests in, 41.
- Slavonic occupation of, 116, 375, 461.
- recovered by the Eastern Empire, 375.
- war of independence, 452.
- kingdom of formed, _ib._
- Ionian Islands ceded to, _ib._
- promised extension of, _ib._
-
-Greeks, order of their coming into Europe, 13.
- their kindred with Italians and other nations, 23-25.
- their rivalry with the Phœnicians, 28.
- their colonies, 28, 32-35.
- their revival of the name Hellênes, 364.
-
-Greenland, Norwegian and Danish settlements in, 131.
- united to Norway, 488.
-
-Greifswald, 494.
-
-Guiana, British, French, Dutch, 300, 353, 565.
-
-Guinea, Dutch settlements in, 300.
-
-Guines, made over to England, 338.
-
-Guipuzcoa, 535.
-
-Guthrum, his treaty with Ælfred, 161.
-
-
-Habsburg, House of, 270, 309, 310.
- scattered territories of, 310.
- its connexion with the Western Empire, 311, 315.
-
-Hadrian, surrenders Trajan’s conquests, 99.
-
-Hadrianople, taken by the Bulgarians, 377.
- by Michael of Epeiros, 385.
- by the Turks, 390, 445.
- treaty of, 450, 453.
-
-Hadriatic Sea, Greek colonies in, 34.
-
-Hainault (Hennegau), county of, 294.
- united with Holland, _ib._
- French acquisitions in, 348.
-
-Halberstadt, 224.
-
-Halicz; _see_ GALICIA.
-
-Halikarnassos, held by the knights of Saint John, 415.
- Turkish conquest of, 447.
-
-Halland, 469.
-
-Hamburg, archbishopric of, 176.
- one of the Hanse Towns, 214, 220.
-
-Hannover, Electorate, 208.
- its union with Great Britain, 204.
- kingdom of, 223.
- annexed by Prussia, 228.
-
-Hansa, the, 197, 487.
- extent and nature of its power, 494.
-
-Hanse Towns, the, 213, 214, 220.
- surviving ones annexed by France, 222.
- join the German Confederation, 227.
-
-Harold, his Welsh conquests, 553.
-
-Hayti; _see_ SAINT DOMINGO.
-
-Hebrides, Scandinavian settlement in, 553.
- submit to Scotland, _ib._
-
-Heligoland, passes to England, 518, 558.
-
-Helladikoi, use of the name, 376.
-
-Hellas, use of the name, 18.
- ‘continuous,’ 21.
- theme of, 151.
- later use of the name, 151, 461.
-
-Hellênes, use of the name in the Homeric catalogue, 26.
- later history of the name, 375, 376, 461.
- its modern revival, 364.
-
-Helsingland, 470.
-
-Helvetic Republic, 275.
-
-Hennegau; _see_ HAINAULT.
-
-Henry II., of England, his dominions, 332.
-
-Henry V., of England, his conquests, 338.
- crowned in Paris, _ib._
-
-Henry IV., of France, unites France and Navarre, 342.
-
-Heraclius, Emperor, his Persian campaigns, 109.
- Slavonic settlements under, 114.
-
-Hêrakleia, commonwealth of, 37, 39, 64.
-
-Hereford, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Hertjedalen, conquered by Sweden, 508.
-
-Herzegovina, origin of the name, 427.
- Turkish conquest of, _ib._
- administered by Austro-Hungary, 324, 427.
-
-Hessen-Cassel, Electorate of, 220, 226.
- annexed by Prussia, 228.
-
-Hessen-Darmstadt, Grand Duchy of, 226.
-
-Hierôn, king of Syracuse, his alliance with Rome, 52.
-
-Hispaniola; _see_ SAINT DOMINGO.
-
-Hohenzollern, House of, 209.
-
-Holland, county of, 293.
- united to Hainault, 294.
- to Burgundy, 297.
- kingdom of, 302.
- annexed by France, _ib._
- _see_ UNITED PROVINCES.
-
-Holstein, 198, 488.
- first Danish conquest of, 489.
- fluctuations of, 490.
- made a duchy, _ib._
- under Christian I., 491.
- effect of the peace of Roskild on, 509.
- incorporated with Denmark, 518.
- joins the German Confederation, 225, 519.
- final cession of to Prussia, 228, 519.
-
-Homeric Catalogue, the, 26-29.
-
-Honorius, Emperor of the West, 81.
-
-Huascar, 534.
-
-Hugh Capet, Duke of the French, chosen king, 143.
-
-Hundred Years’ Peace between Rome and Persia, 100.
-
-Hundred Years’ War, 337.
-
-Hungarians; _see_ MAGYARS.
-
-Hungary, kingdom of, 157, 367, 432.
- its relations to the Western Emperors, 196.
- extent of the kingdom, 323, 324.
- whether a Bulgarian duchy existed in, 376 (_note_).
- its frontier towards Germany, 433.
- its relations with Croatia, 433, 434.
- acquires Transsilvania, 435.
- conquests of the Komnênoi from, 381.
- its struggles with Venice for Dalmatia, 407.
- Mongol invasion of, 436.
- its wars with Bulgaria, 430.
- its conquest of Bosnia, 424.
- extension of under Lewis the Great, 437.
- Turkish conquests in, 438.
- its kings tributary to the Turk, 439.
- recovered from the Turk, 439, 448.
- acquisitions of by the Peace of Passarowitz, 440.
- later losses and acquisitions of, 440, 441.
- separated from and recovered by Austria, 323.
- its dual relations to Austria, 441.
-
-Huniades, John, his campaign against the Turks, 426, 438.
-
-Huns, a Turanian people, 17.
- their invasions, 88, 94.
-
-
-Iapodes, 62.
-
-Iapygians, 46.
-
-Iberia, Asiatic, 99, 100.
-
-Iberians, a non-Aryan people, 13, 55.
-
-Iceland, Norwegian and Danish settlements in, 131, 471.
- united to Norway, 488.
- kept by Denmark, 518.
-
-Ikonion, Turkish capital, 381.
-
-Illyria, Illyricum, Greek colonies in, 20.
- Roman conquests in, 40, 41, 62.
- use of the name, 62.
- prefecture of, 75, 77, 78.
- western diocese of, 79.
- kingdom of, 322.
-
-Illyrian Provinces, incorporated with France, 222, 322, 358.
- misleading use of the name, 322.
- recovered by Austria, 322.
-
-Illyrians, their kindred with the Greeks, 24.
- displaced by Slavonic invasions, 115.
-
-Immeretia, 521.
-
-India, French settlements in, 353.
- Portuguese settlements in, 541.
- English dominion in, 567.
- Empire of, _ib._
-
-Indies, division of, between Spain and Portugal, 542.
-
-Ingermanland, 508, 512.
-
-Ionian colonies in Asia, 32.
-
-Ionian Islands, 22.
- ceded to France, 358, 451.
- to the Turks, 451.
- under English protection, 451, 558.
- added to Greece, 452.
-
-Ireland, the original Scotia, 549, 556.
- provinces of, 183, 556.
- Scandinavian settlements in, 471, 556.
- its increasing connexion with England, 557.
- English conquest of, _ib._
- kingdom and lordship of, _ib._
- its shifting relations with England, _ib._
- its union with Great Britain, _ib._
-
-Isle of France, 329.
-
-Isle of France; _see_ MAURITIUS.
-
-Istria, Roman conquest of, 55, 62.
- incorporated with Italy, 62.
- Slavonic settlements in, 115.
- March of, 147, 195, 235.
- fluctuates between Germany and Italy, 195.
- possessions of Venice in, 242.
- under Austria, 258, 318.
-
-Italians, their origin, 13.
- their kindred with the Greeks, 24.
- two branches of, 45.
-
-Italy, one of the three great European peninsulas, 6, 7.
- its geographical position, 8, 44.
- use of the name, 43, 246.
- inhabitants of, 45, 46.
- Greek colonies in, 47.
- growth of Roman power in, 50.
- divisions of, under Augustus, 74.
- prefecture of, 75, 78.
- diocese of, 79.
- invaded by the Huns, 94.
- rule of Odoacer in, _ib._
- rule of Theodoric in, 95.
- recovered to the Empire, 105.
- Lombard conquest of, 107.
- Imperial possessions in, 108, 123, 152, 371.
- rule of Charles the Great in, 123.
- Imperial kingdom of, 128, 134, 137, 146, 147, 234.
- its ecclesiastical divisions, 170, 171.
- changes on the Alpine frontier, 232.
- system of commonwealths in, 235, 238.
- four stages in its history, 236.
- growth of tyrannies in, 239.
- a ‘geographical expression,’ 246, 255.
- dominion of Spain and Austria in, 247.
- revolutionary changes in, 252-55.
- French kingdom of, 253-55, 345, 357.
- settlement of in 1814, 255.
- restored kingdom of, 257.
- its extension, 258.
- part not yet recovered, _ib._
-
-Ithakê, in the Homeric Catalogue, 26.
- held in fief by Margarito, 397.
-
-Ivan the Great, of Russia, his conquests, 501, 506.
- styles himself Prince of Bulgaria, 501.
-
-Ivan the Terrible, of Russia, his conquests, 506, 511.
-
-Ivrea, Mark of, 235, 236.
-
-
-Jadera; _see_ ZARA.
-
-Jaen, 534, 535.
-
-Jägerndorf, principality of, 210.
-
-Jagiello, union of Lithuania and Poland under, 498.
-
-Jamaica, 544, 565.
-
-Jämteland, 470.
- conquered by Sweden, 508.
-
-Jatwages, the, 484, 498.
-
-Java, Dutch settlement in, 300.
-
-Jayce, 427.
-
-Jedisan, annexed by Russia, 449, 516.
-
-Jerseys, East and West, 561.
-
-Jerusalem, patriarchate of, 168, 169.
- taken by Chosroes, 109.
- extent of the Latin kingdom, 399.
- taken by Saladin, 400.
- recovered and lost by the Crusaders, _ib._
- crown of, claimed by the kings of Cyprus, 401.
-
-Jezerci; _see_ EZERITES.
-
-Jireček, C. J. on Slavonic settlements, 133 (_note_).
-
-Jôannina, restored to the Empire, 388.
- taken by the Turks, 421.
-
-John Asan, extent of Bulgaria under, 430.
-
-John Komnênos, Emperor, his conquests, 381.
-
-John Komnênos, Emperor of Trebizond, acknowledges the supremacy of
- Constantinople, 422.
-
-John Tzimiskês, Emperor, recovers Bulgaria, 377.
- his Asiatic conquests, 379.
-
-Jomsburg Vikings, settlement of, 471.
-
-Judæa, its relations with Rome, 65.
-
-Jung, on the Roumans, 435 (_note_).
-
-Justinian, extent of the Roman power under, 104, 105, 106.
-
-Jutes, their settlement in Kent, 97.
-
-Jutland, South, duchy of, united with Holstein, 490.
- called Duchy of Sleswick, _ib._
-
-
-Kaffa, colony of Genoa, 414.
-
-Kainardji, Treaty of, 449.
-
-Kalabryta, 418.
-
-Kamienetz, ceded by Poland to the Turk, 448, 507.
-
-Kappadokia, kingdom of, 38.
- annexed by Rome, 67.
- theme of, 151.
-
-Karians, in the Homeric Catalogue, 28.
-
-Karlili, why so called, 421.
-
-Karlings, Frankish dynasty of, 121.
-
-Kärnthen; _see_ CARINTHIA.
-
-Karolingia, kingdom of, 137, 141, 143, 148, 326.
-
-Kars, joined to the Eastern Empire, 379.
- annexed by Russia, 522.
-
-Karystos, 403.
-
-Kazan, Khanat of, 501.
- conquered by Russia, 511.
-
-Kent, settlement of the Jutes in, 97.
- kingdom of, 160, 555.
-
-Kephallênia, in the Homeric Catalogue, 26.
- theme of, 151.
- Norman conquests in, 395, 397.
- held in fief by Margarito, _ib._
- commended to Venice, 410.
- lost and won by Venice, 411.
-
-Khiva, 522.
-
-Kibyrraiotians, theme of, 150.
-
-Kief, Russian centre at, 481.
- supremacy of, 482.
- taken by the Mongols, 483.
- by the Lithuanians, 498.
- recovered by Russia, 506.
-
-Kilikia, 76.
- restored to the Empire, 153, 379.
-
-Kirghis, Russian superiority over, 516.
-
-Klek, Ottoman frontier extends to, 412.
-
-Kleônai, 27.
-
-Köln (Colonia Agrippina), 92.
- ecclesiastical province of, 175.
- its archbishops chancellors of Italy and electors, 175, 176.
- chief of the Hansa, 213.
- annexed to France, 220.
- restored to Germany, 224, 358.
-
-Kolocza, ecclesiastical province of, 186.
-
-Kolôneia, theme of, 150.
-
-Korkyra, 22, 26.
- alliance of with Rome, 40.
- _See also_ CORFU.
-
-Korkyra, Black (Curzola), Greek colony, 34, 406.
-
-Kôrônê; _see_ CORON.
-
-Kôs, Greek colony, 28.
- held by the knights of St. John, 389, 415.
- by the Maona, 414.
-
-Kossovo, battle of, 426.
-
-Krain; _see_ CARNIOLA.
-
-Kresimir, king of Croatia and Dalmatia, 407.
-
-Krotôn, early greatness of, 47.
-
-Ktesiphôn, conquered by Trajan, 99.
-
-Kymê; _see_ CUMÆ.
-
-Kyrênê, Greek colony, 35, 36.
- Roman conquest of, 63.
-
-
-Lakedaimonia, 151.
-
-Lakonikê, 29.
-
-Λαμπαρδοί, use of the form, 369 (_note_).
-
-Lancashire, formation of the shire, 556.
-
-Langue d’oc, extent of, 135.
- effects of French annexations on, 345.
-
-Languedoc, province of, 335.
-
-Laodikeia, 381.
-
-Laon, capital of the Karlings, 143.
-
-Laps, remnant of non-Aryan people in Europe, 12.
-
-Latins, 46.
- their alliance with Rome, 50.
-
-Lauenburg, represents the elder Saxony, 208.
- held by the kings of Denmark, 225, 518.
- joins the German confederation, 225, 519.
- final cession of, to Prussia, 228, 519.
-
-Lausanne, annexed by Bern, 273.
-
-Lausitz; _see_ LUSATIA.
-
-Lazia, allotment of, 404.
-
-Lechs; _see_ POLES.
-
-Leinster, 183, 556.
-
-Lemberg, ecclesiastical province of, 185, 186.
-
-Lêmnos, becomes Greek, 32.
-
-Leo IX. Pope, grants Apulia as a fief to the Normans, 394.
-
-Leon, kingdom of, 154, 529.
- shiftings of, 531.
- its final union with Castile, _ib._
-
-Leopol; _see_ LEMBERG.
-
-Lepanto (Naupaktos) under Anjou, 397.
- ceded to Venice, 410.
- to the Turk, 411.
-
-Lesbos, mention of in the Iliad, 28.
- a fief of the Gattilusi, 414.
-
-Lesina; _see_ PHAROS.
-
-Leukas, Leukadia (Santa Maura), 22, 26.
- date of its foundation, 31.
- commended to Venice, 410.
- lost and won by her, 411, 412.
-
-Leuticii, the, 474, 475.
-
-Letts, 466 (_note_).
- settlements of, 484.
-
-Lewis I. (the Pious), Emperor, 128, 135.
-
-Lewis II. Emperor, 136.
-
-Lewis VII. of France, effects of his marriage and divorce, 332, 337.
-
-Lewis IX. (Saint) of France, growth of France under, 335.
-
-Lewis XII. of France, effects of his marriage, 341.
-
-Lewis XIV. of France, effects of his reign, 350.
- his conquests from Spain, 539.
-
-Lewis XV. of France, effects of his reign, 350.
-
-Lewis the Great, of Hungary, his conquests, 409, 437.
- annexes Red Russia, 498.
-
-Liburnia, 62.
-
-Libya, 76.
-
-Lichfield, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Liechtenstein, principality of, 229.
-
-Liége; _see_ LÜTTICH.
-
-Liguria, Roman conquest of, 55.
- province of, 79.
- part of the kingdom of Italy, 147.
-
-Ligurian Republic, the, 252.
-
-Ligurians, non-Aryan people in Europe, 13, 45.
-
-Lille, annexed by France, 301, 349.
-
-Limburg, passes to the Dukes of Brabant, 295.
- duchy of, within the German confederation, 228.
-
-Limoges, 332.
-
-Lincoln, diocese of, 182.
-
-Lindisfarn, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Lisbon, patriarchate of, 170, 179.
- conquered by Portugal, 533.
-
-Lithuania, bishopric of, 185.
- effect of the German conquest of Livland on, 487.
- its conquests from Russia, 497.
- joined with Poland, 185, 498, 499.
-
-Lithuanians, settlements of, 15, 484.
- long remain heathen, 466, 497.
-
-Livland, Livonia, Finnish population of, 484.
- German conquests in, 486.
- dominion of the Sword-brothers in, 495.
- momentary kingdom of, 504.
- conquered by Poland, _ib._
- by Sweden, 508.
- by Russia, 512.
-
-Livonian Knights; _see_ SWORD-BROTHERS.
-
-Llandaff, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Lodi, 237.
-
-Lodomeria; _see_ VLADIMIR.
-
-Λογγιβαρδία, use of the form, 369 (_note_).
-
-Lokrians, their position in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- settle on the Corinthian Gulf, 30.
-
-Lokris, league of, 40.
-
-Lombards, their settlement in Italy, 106, 107.
- take Ravenna, 108, 123.
- overthrown by Charles the Great, 123.
-
-Lombardy, kingdom of, 107, 234.
- under Charles the Great, 123.
- growth of her cities, 237.
- ceded to Sardinia, 257.
-
-Lombardy, theme of, 152, 369.
-
-Lombardy and Venice, kingdom of, 255, 322.
-
-London, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Lorraine, duchy of, 193.
- seized by Lewis XIV., 194.
- exchanged for Tuscany, 321.
- finally annexed to France, 194, 351.
- recovered by Germany, 359.
-
-Lorraine, House of, Emperors of, 321.
-
-Lothar I., Emperor, 135, 136.
-
-Lotharingia, kingdom of, 137, 140, 193.
-
-Lothian, granted to Scotland, 162, 550.
- effects of the grant, 551.
-
-Lothringen; _see_ LORRAINE.
-
-Louisiana, colonized by France, 352.
- ceded to Spain, 353, 360.
- recovered and sold to the United States, 360, 563.
-
-Louvain (Löwen), 294.
-
-Low Countries; _see_ NETHERLANDS.
-
-Lübeck, founded by Henry the Lion, 198, 494.
- its independence of the bishop, 214.
- one of the Hansa, 214, 220, 494.
- conquered by Denmark, 489.
-
-Lübeck, bishopric of, 491.
-
-Lublin, Union of, 505.
-
-Lucanians, 46.
-
-Lucca, 238.
- under Castruccio, 245.
- remains a commonwealth, 249.
- archbishopric of, 171.
- Grand Duchy of, 253.
- annexed to Tuscany, 256.
-
-Lund, archbishopric of, 184.
- ceded to Sweden, 508.
-
-Lüneburg, duchy of, 208.
-
-Luneville, peace of, 194.
-
-Lusatia (Lausitz), Mark of, 199, 475.
- won by Bohemia, 493.
-
-Lüttich (Liége), bishopric of, 295, 298.
- annexed by France, 302.
- added to Belgium, 227, 302.
- French acquisitions from, 348.
-
-Luxemburg (Lüzelburg), duchy of, 295.
- annexed to Burgundy, 298.
- French acquisitions from, 348.
- within the German confederation, 225.
- division of, 229, 303.
- neutrality of, 229.
-
-Luxemburg, House of, kings of Bohemia, 493.
-
-Luzern, joins the Confederates, 262, 270.
-
-Lydians, 33.
-
-Lykandos, theme of, 150.
-
-Lykia, league of, 39.
- preserves its independence, 64.
- annexed by Rome, 67.
-
-Lykians, in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-Lyons, in the kingdom of Burgundy, 145, 263.
- archbishopric of, 167, 173.
- annexed by Philip the Fair, 264.
-
-
-Macedonia, 20, 21.
- its close connexion with Greece, 24.
- not in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
- growth of the kingdom, 36, 37.
- Roman conquest of, 41.
- diocese of, 78.
- theme of, 151.
- recovered by the Empire, 388.
-
-Macedonian, use of the name, 115.
-
-Macon, annexed by Saint Lewis, 336.
-
-Madeira, colonized by Portugal, 541.
-
-Madras, taken by the French, 354.
-
-Madrid, Treaty of, 298, 340.
-
-Magdeburg, archbishopric of, 176.
- recovered by Prussia, 224.
-
-Magyars, a Turanian people, 17.
- their settlements, 17, 157, 365, 433.
- effects of their invasion on the Slaves, 158, 432.
- called Turks, 379.
- origin of the name, 433 (_note_).
-
-Mahomet, union of Arabia under, 110.
-
-Mahomet I., Sultan, Ottoman power under, 446.
-
-Mahomet the Conqueror, Sultan, his conquests, 411, 446.
- extent of his dominions, 446.
-
-Maina, name of Hellênes confined to, 376.
- recovered by the Empire, 388, 418.
- independence of, 419.
-
-Maine, county of, 330.
- conquered by William of Normandy, 332.
- united with Anjou, _ib._
- annexed to France, 333.
-
-Maine, State of, 560.
-
-Mainz, 92.
- ecclesiastical province of, 175.
- its archbishops chancellors of Germany and electors, 176.
- annexed to France, 220.
- restored to Germany, 358.
-
-Maionians, in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-Majorca, kingdom of, 536.
-
-Malta, taken by the Saracens, 370.
- by the Normans, 395.
- granted to the knights of Saint John, 398, 415, 538.
- revolutions of, 415.
- held by England, 415, 558.
-
-Man, Scandinavian settlement in, 471, 553.
- its later history, 488, 553.
-
-Manfred, King of Sicily, his dominion in Epeiros, 397.
- styled Lord of Romania, _ib._
-
-Mantua, 243, 248, 257.
-
-Manuel Komnênos, his conquests, 381, 424.
-
-Manzikert, battle of, 380.
-
-Maona, the, its dominions, 414.
-
-Marche, county of, 332.
-
-Marcomanni, 85.
-
-Margarito, king of the Epeirots, 397.
-
-Maria Theresa, Empress-Queen, her hereditary dominions, 320.
- effects of her marriage, 321.
-
-Marienburg, 301, 348.
-
-Marseilles, acquired by France, 265.
-
-Mary of Burgundy, effects of her marriage, 340.
-
-Maryland, 561.
-
-Massa, 249.
-
-Massachusetts, 560.
-
-Massalia, Ionian colony, 35, 36, 56.
- _see_ MARSEILLES.
-
-Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary, his conquests, 438, 493.
-
-Maurienne, Counts of, 278.
-
-Mauritania, 67.
-
-Mauritius (Isle of France), a French colony, 354.
- taken and held by England, 360.
-
-Maximilian I., his legislation, 203.
- effects of his marriage, 340.
-
-Mazanderan, 516.
-
-Mazovia, duchy of, 478.
- recovered by Poland, 499.
-
-Meath, 556.
-
-Meaux, settlement of, 335.
-
-Mechlin, archbishopric of, 177.
-
-Mecklenburg, duchy of, 198.
- Slavonic princes continue in, 198, 476.
-
-Mediation, act of, 276.
-
-Medici, the, rule of in Florence, 245, 246.
-
-Mediterranean Sea, centre of the three old continents, 5, 6.
-
-Megalopolis, its foundation, 31.
-
-Megara, 29.
- joins the Achaian League, 40.
-
-Mehadia, 396.
-
-Meissen, Mark of, 199, 475.
-
-Meleda, 406.
-
-Melfi, 394.
-
-Melinci, Melings, 375.
-
-Mendog, king of Lithuania, his conquests, 497.
-
-Mentone, annexed by France, 346, 359.
-
-Mercia, kingdom of, 129, 130, 160, 161.
-
-Mesopotamia, conquest of, under Trajan, 99.
- under Diocletian, 100.
-
-Messana (Messina), receives Roman citizenship, 53.
- recovered and lost by the Eastern Empire, 270.
- taken by the Saracens, 370.
- by the Normans, 395.
- first Norman capital, _ib._
-
-Messênê, Dorian, 29.
- conquered by Sparta, 30.
- foundation of the city, 31.
-
-Metz, annexed by France, 193, 346.
- restored to Germany, 229.
-
-Mexico, Spanish conquest of, 543.
- two Empires of, 544.
-
-Mexico, New, ceded by Spain, 544.
-
-Michael Palaiologos, Eastern Emperor, 422.
-
-Michael, despot of Epeiros, his conquests, 385.
-
-Mieczïslaf, first Christian prince of Poland, 479.
-
-Milan, capital of kingdom of Italy, 147.
- archbishopric of, 171.
-
-Milan, duchy of, 240, 241, 248.
- temporary French possession of, 346.
- a Spanish dependency, 539.
-
-Milêtos, its colonies, 32.
-
-Military Orders, 487, 495-497.
-
-Mingrelia, 521.
-
-Minorca, 538.
-
-Misithra, restored to the Empire, 388, 418.
-
-Mississippi, colonization at the mouth of, 353.
- made the boundary of Louisiana, _ib._
-
-Mithridates, king of Pontos, his wars with Rome, 64.
-
-Modena, duchy of, 243, 244, 249, 256.
- annexed to Piedmont, 257.
-
-Modon, held by Venice, 409.
- lost by her, 411.
-
-Mœsia, Roman conquest of, 68.
-
-Mohacz, battle of, 438.
-
-Moldavia, Rouman settlement, 437.
- tributary to the Turk, 439.
- fluctuations of its homage, 499.
- joined to Wallachia, 453.
- shiftings of the frontier, 450.
-
-Molossis, 37.
-
-Moluccas, Dutch settlements in, 300.
-
-Monaco, principality of, 247, 256.
-
-Montbeliard, county of, 261, 350.
- annexed by France, 355.
-
-Monembasia, restored to the Empire, 388, 418.
- held by Venice, 410.
- lost by her, 411.
-
-Mongols, invade Europe, 436, 483.
- Russia tributary to, 483, 500.
- effects of their invasion on the Ottomans, 443, 444.
- decline and break up of their power, 500, 501.
-
-Monmouthshire, becomes an English county, 555.
-
-Monopoli, lost by Venice, 248.
-
-Montenegro, origin and independence of, 427, 428.
- its Vladikas, 428.
- joins England and Russia against France, _ib._
- its conquest and loss of Cattaro, 322, 428.
- later conquests and diplomatic concessions to, 429.
-
-Montferrat, marquisate and duchy of, 236, 240, 248.
- homage claimed from by Savoy, 284.
- partially annexed by Savoy, 248, 289.
-
-Montfort, Simon of, at Toulouse, 335.
-
-Moors, use of the name, 530.
-
-Môraia, origin and use of the name, 416.
-
-Moravia, 199.
- history of, 477.
-
-Moravia, Great, kingdom of, 157, 432, 473.
- overthrown by the Magyars, 433.
-
-Morosini, Francesco, his conquests, 412.
-
-Moscow, patriarchate of, 170.
- centre of Russian power, 500, 501.
- advance of, 501.
-
-Moudon, granted to Savoy, 280.
-
-Moulins, county of, 330.
-
-Mülhausen, in alliance with the Confederates, 274.
- annexed by France, 355.
-
-Munster, 183, 556.
-
-Münster, 224.
-
-Murcia, conquered by Castile, 533, 535.
-
-Muret, battle of, 531.
-
-Muscovy, origin of the name, 500.
-
-Mykênê, its position in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- destruction of, 31.
-
-Mykonos, held by Venice, 409, 411.
-
-Mysians, in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-
-Namur, Mark of, 294.
- annexed to Burgundy, 296.
-
-Naples, cleaves to the Eastern Empire, 369.
- conquered by King Roger, 396.
- kingdom of, 250, 254.
- temporary French possession of, 346.
- title of king of, 251, 254.
- Parthenopæan republic, 252.
- restored to the Bourbons, 256.
-
-Narbonne, Roman colony, 57.
- Saracen conquest of, 112.
- ecclesiastical province of, 173.
- annexed to France, 335.
-
-Narses, wins back Italy to the Empire, 105.
-
-Nassau, Grand Duchy of, 226.
- annexed by Prussia, 228.
-
-Natal, 566.
-
-Naupaktos; _see_ LEPANTO.
-
-Nauplia, won from Epeiros by the Latins, 417.
- held by Venice, 410.
- lost by her, 411.
-
-Navarre, kingdom of, 154, 528.
- extent of under Sancho the Great, 529.
- break-up of, 530.
- its decline, 531.
- union with, and separation from France, 336, 531.
- conquered by Ferdinand, 537.
- northern part united to France, 342.
-
-Navas de Tolosa, battle of, 533.
-
-Naxos, duchy of, 413.
- annexed by the Turk, 413, 447.
-
-Negroponte, use of the name, 409 (_note_).
-
-Neopatra, Epeirot dynasty of, 419.
- Catalan conquest of, 416.
- taken by the Turks, 417, 420.
-
-Netherlands, their separation from Germany, 203, 291, 299.
- Imperial and French fiefs in, 293.
- an appendage to Castile under Charles V., 539.
- French annexations in, 348.
- barrier towns against France, 349.
- _see_ UNITED PROVINCES.
-
-Netherlands, kingdom of, 302.
- divided, 303.
-
-Netz District, 514.
-
-Neufchâtel, allied with Bern, 274.
- passes to Prussia, 224, 274.
- granted to Berthier, 276.
- joined to the Swiss Confederation, 276, 359.
- separated from Prussia, 276.
-
-Neustria, Lombard, 234.
-
-Neustria, kingdom of, 121, 134.
- united with Aquitaine, 135, 339.
-
-New Amsterdam, 300, 561.
-
-New Brunswick, 564.
-
-New England, settlements of, 560.
- form four colonies, _ib._
-
-New France, settlement of, 352.
-
-New Hampshire, 560.
-
-New Netherlands, colony of, 300, 561.
- united to New Sweden, 561.
- conquered by England, 300, 561.
-
-New Orleans, 353, 563.
-
-New South Wales, 565.
-
-New Sweden, 561.
- united to New Netherlands, _ib._
-
-New York, 300, 561.
-
-New Zealand, 566.
-
-Newfoundland, first settlements in, 559.
- remains distinct from Canada, 565.
-
-Nibla, taken by Castile, 534.
-
-Nidaros; _see_ TRONDHJEM.
-
-Nikaia, Turkish capital of Roum, 380.
- recovered by Alexios Komnênos, 381.
- Empire of, 386.
- its extent and growth, 387.
- taken by the Turks, 389, 445.
-
-Nikêphoros Phôkas, Eastern Emperor, his Asiatic conquests, 379.
-
-Nikomêdeia, taken by the Turks, 389, 445.
-
-Nikopolis, theme of, 152.
- battle of, 438.
-
-Nîmes, Saracen conquest of, 112.
- under Aragon, 335.
- annexed to France, _ib._
-
-Nimwegen, Peace of, 301, 349.
-
-Nish, taken by the Turks, 426.
-
-Nisibis, fortress of, 100.
-
-Nizza, annexed by Savoy, 265, 282.
- taken by Buonaparte, 355.
- restored to Savoy, 359.
- finally annexed by France, 258, 288, 359.
-
-Nogai Khan, overlord of Bulgaria, 431.
-
-Noricum, conquest of, 68.
- in the diocese of Illyricum, 79.
-
-Normandy, duchy of, 142.
- character of its vassalage, 328.
- union of with Aquitaine, Anjou, and Britanny, 333.
- annexed by Philip Augustus, 333.
-
-Normans, their conquests in Italy and Sicily, 370, 393-395.
- in England, 163.
- in Epeiros, 380, 395.
- their conquests in Sicily compared with those of the Crusaders, 398.
-
-Northmen, use of the name, 469.
- their settlements, 471, 550, 552, 556.
-
-Northumberland, kingdom of, 97, 129, 162.
- earldom of granted to David, 551.
- recovered by England, 552.
-
-Norway, its extent and settlements, 131, 159, 471.
- united to England under Cnut, 163.
- its independence of the Empire, 467.
- formation of the kingdom, 469.
- Iceland and Greenland united to, 488.
- united with Sweden and Denmark, 488.
- its wars with Sweden, 508.
- united with Sweden, 464, 518.
-
-Noto, taken by Count Roger, 395.
-
-Nova Scotia, ceded to England, 352, 562.
-
-Novara, 249.
-
-Novempopulana, 173.
-
-Novgorod, beginning of, 481.
- commonwealth at, 483.
- Russia represented by, 484.
- does homage to the Mongols, 500.
- annexed by Muscovy, 501.
-
-Novgorod, Severian, principality of, 483.
-
-Novi-Bazar (Rassa), 424.
-
-Numantia, Roman conquest of, 56.
-
-Numidia, province of, 59.
-
-Nürnberg, 209, 215, 220, 226.
-
-Nystad, Peace of, 512.
-
-
-Obotrites, 474.
-
-Ochrida, taken by the Bulgarians, 377.
- kingdom of, its extent, 377, 378.
-
-Oczakow, annexed by Russia, 449.
-
-Odessa, does not answer to Odêssos, 516 (_note_).
-
-Odo, king of the West Franks, does homage to Arnulf, 139, 326.
-
-Odoacer, his reign in Italy, 94.
- overthrown by Theodoric, 95.
-
-Oesel, won by Denmark, 491, 504.
- under the Sword-brothers, 496.
- under Sweden, 508.
-
-Ogres; _see_ MAGYARS.
-
-Oldenburg, united with Denmark, 509.
- becomes a separate duchy, 513.
- Grand Duchy of, 226.
- annexed by France, 222.
-
-Olgierd, king of Lithuania, 497.
-
-Oliva, Peace of, 510.
-
-Oliverca, ceded to Spain by Portugal, 538.
-
-Olynthos, 33.
-
-Opicans, Oscans, 46.
-
-Opsikion, theme of, 151.
-
-Optimatôn, theme of, 151.
-
-Oran, conquered by Spain, 543.
-
-Orange, 263.
- annexed to France, 265, 350.
-
-Orange River State, 566.
-
-Orchomenos, its position in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- its secondary position in historic times, 30.
- destroyed by the Thebans, 31.
-
-Oreos, 403.
-
-Orkney, Scandinavian colony, 471.
- earldom of, 553.
- pledged to Scotland, 488.
-
-Osrhoênê, 100.
-
-Ostmen, their settlements in Ireland, 159, 556.
-
-Otho de la Roche, founds the lordship of Athens, 416.
-
-Otranto, Turkish conquest of, 446.
-
-Otto the Great, Emperor, subdues Berengar, 147.
- crowned at Rome, 148.
-
-Ottocar II., king of Bohemia, his German dominion, 492.
-
-Ottoman Turks, their position in Europe, 17.
- compared with the Magyars and Bulgarians, 365.
- with the Saracens, 442.
- their special character as Mahometans, _ib._
- their dominion compared with the Eastern Empire, 443.
- their origin, 444.
- effect on, of the Mongol invasion, _ib._
- their first settlements, _ib._
- invade Europe, 445.
- under Bajazet, 445.
- their conquests of Servia, 426.
- of Thessaly and Albania, 420, 421.
- of Bulgaria, 431.
- invade Hungary, 438.
- overthrown by Timour, 390, 445.
- reunited under Mahomet I., 446.
- under Mahomet the Conqueror, _ib._
- take Constantinople, 391, 446.
- their conquests in Peloponnêsos, 419.
- of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 427.
- under Selim and Suleiman, 447.
- their conquest of Hungary, _ib._
- greatest extent of their dominion, 448.
- decline of their power, 448-450.
- their wars with Russia, 449.
-
-Oudenarde, becomes French, 349.
- restored, _ib._
-
-Oviedo, 529.
-
-
-Paderborn, 224.
-
-Padua, 237.
-
-Pagania, originally Servian, 405.
- its extent, 406.
-
-Paionia, 20.
-
-Paionians, in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-Palaiologos, House of, 366.
- branch of at Montferrat, 240.
-
-Palatinate of the Rhine, 215.
- united with Bavaria, _ib._
-
-Pale, fluctuations of the, 557.
-
-Palermo (Panormos), a Phœnician colony, 48.
- taken by the Saracens, 370.
- taken by the Normans, 395.
- becomes the capital of Sicily, 395.
-
-Palestine, its relations to Rome, 65.
-
-Pampeluna, diocese of, 179.
- kingdom of; _see_ NAVARRE.
-
-Pannonia, Roman conquest of, 68.
- in the diocese of Illyricum, 79.
- Lombard kingdom in, 106.
- Bulgarian attempt on, 376.
-
-Panormos; _see_ PALERMO.
-
-Papal Dominions, beginning and growth of, 239, 242, 244, 249.
- its overthrow and restoration, 252, 253, 359.
- annexed by France, 253, 256.
- annexed to the kingdom of Italy, 258.
-
-Paphlagonia, kingdom of, 38.
- theme of, 150.
-
-Paphlagonians, 28.
-
-Parga, commends itself to Venice, 410.
- surrendered to the Turks, 451.
-
-Paris (Lutetia Parisiorum), 58.
- capital of the duchy of France, 142.
- capital and centre of the kingdom of France, 144, 167.
- becomes an archbishopric, 174.
-
-Paris, treaty of, 353, 354, 360, 450.
-
-Parma, 237, 241.
- given to the Spanish Bourbons, 249.
- the duchy restored, 256.
- annexed to Piedmont, 257.
-
-Parthenopæan Republic, the, 252.
-
-Parthia, its rivalry with Rome, 65, 81.
-
-Partition, crusading act of, 383.
-
-Passarowitz, Peace of, 440.
-
-Patras, under the Pope, 418.
- held by Venice, 410, 418.
-
-Patriarchates, the, 168, 169.
-
-‘Patrician,’ title of, 123.
-
-Patzinaks, 17, 113, 156, 158, 365.
-
-Pavia, old Lombard capital, 147, 237.
- county of, 241.
-
-‘Pax Romana,’ 66.
-
-Pelasgians, use of the name, 24.
- in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-Peloponnêsos, its geographical position, 21.
- Homeric divisions of, 27.
- changes in, 29.
- united under the Achaian League, 40.
- Slavonic settlements in, 116, 375, 461.
- theme of, 151.
- won back to the Eastern Empire, 153.
- Latin conquests in, 417.
- Venetian settlements in, 409, 410.
- recovered by the Eastern Empire, 418.
- becomes an Imperial dependency, 388.
- conquered by the Turks, 391, 419.
- Venetian losses in, 411.
- conquered by Venice, 412.
- recovered by the Turks, 412.
-
-Pembrokeshire, Flemish settlement in, 554.
-
-Pennsylvania, 561.
-
-Pentedaktylos; _see_ TAŸGETOS.
-
-Perateia, meaning of the name, 422.
- Turkish conquest of, 423.
-
-Perche, united to France, 336.
-
-Perekop, conquered by Lithuania, 498.
- added to Poland, _ib._
- lost by Poland, 499.
-
-Pergamos, kingdom of, 38, 61.
-
-Persia, wars of with Greece, 33.
- with Rome, 81, 99, 109.
- Saracen conquest of, 82, 111.
- revival of, 98, 100.
- Russian conquests in, 516.
-
-Peru, Spanish conquest of, 543.
-
-Perugia, 239.
-
-Peter the Great of Russia, his wars with Charles XII., 512.
-
-Peter, count of Savoy, 278.
-
-Pharos (Lesina), 34, 406.
-
-Philadelphia, taken by the Turks, 390.
-
-Philip, rise of Macedonia under, 37.
-
-Philip Augustus, King of France, his annexations, 333.
-
-Philip the Fair, King of France, effects of his marriage, 336.
- his momentary occupation of Aquitaine, 337.
-
-Philip of Valois, King of France, his attempt on Aquitaine, 337.
-
-Philip the Hardy, Duke of Burgundy, duchy of Burgundy granted to, 339.
-
-Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, his acquisitions, 296-298.
-
-Philippeville, held by France, 301, 348.
-
-Philippine Islands, conquered by Spain, 543.
-
-Philippopolis, first Bulgarian occupation of, 377.
- first Russian occupation of, _ib._
- finally becomes Bulgarian, 389, 430.
- taken by the Turks, 431.
-
-Phœnicians, their colonies, 28, 35, 48.
-
-Phôkaia, held by the Maona, 414.
-
-Phôkis, 21.
- league of, 40.
-
-Phrygians, in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-Piacenza, 237, 241.
- given to the Spanish Bourbons, 249.
-
-Picts, 98, 549.
- united with the Scots, 550.
-
-Piedmont, joined to France, 252, 356.
- reunited with Sardinia, 256.
- union of Italy comes from, _ib._
-
-Pietas Julia; _see_ POLA.
-
-Pinerolo, occupied by France, 347.
-
-Pippin, king of the Franks, conquers Septimania, 121.
-
-Pisa, archbishopric of, 171.
- position of, 238.
- conquers Sardinia, _ib._
- subject to Florence, 245.
-
-Plataia, destroyed by Thebes, 31.
-
-Podlachia, conquered by Poland, 498.
-
-Podolia, lost by Galicia, 498.
- added to Poland, _ib._
- ceded to the Turks, 448, 507.
- recovered by Poland, _ib._
-
-Poitou, annexed by Philip Augustus, 334.
-
-Pola (Pietas Julia), Roman colony, 63.
-
-Polabic branch of the Slaves, 474.
-
-Poland, kingdom of, 159, 200, 479.
- its ecclesiastical relations, 465.
- its relations to the Empire, 467, 478.
- wars of, with Russia, 478, 506.
- various tribes in, 478.
- its conversion, 479.
- its extent under Boleslaf, 478.
- internal divisions of, _ib._
- consolidation of, 498.
- Pomerania falls away from, 492.
- conquests of, 498, 499.
- joined with Lithuania, 498, 499.
- Red Russia restored to, 437.
- Zips pledged to, _ib._
- its acquisitions from the Teutonic knights, 497.
- acquires Livland, 504.
- its relations with Wallachia and Moldavia, 439.
- its wars with Sweden, 508.
- cedes Podolia to the Turk, 448.
- partitions of, 212, 440, 513, 515.
- formation of the new kingdom, 520.
- united to Russia, 520.
-
-Poland, Little, 479.
-
-Poles (Lechs), their settlements, 478.
-
-Polizza, independence of, 407.
-
-Polotsk, principality of, 483.
-
-Pomerania, Pomore, Pommern, its extent, 199, 200.
- its early relations to Poland, 478, 479.
- Danish conquests in, 489.
- falls away from Poland, 491, 492.
- its divisions, 200, 492.
- divided between Brandenburg and Sweden, 210, 213, 504.
- its western part incorporated with Sweden, 518.
- ceded to Denmark and then to Prussia, 225, 518.
-
-Pomerelia, purchased by the Teutonic knights, 496.
- restored to Poland, 497.
-
-Pondicherry, a French settlement, 354.
- conquests and restorations of, 360.
-
-Ponthieu, county of, 330.
- acquired by William of Normandy, 332.
- made over to England in 1360, 338, 558.
-
-Pontos, kingdom of, 38.
- Roman conquest of, 64.
- diocese of the Eastern Prefecture, 76.
-
-Portugal, 155, 527.
- formation of the kingdom, 532.
- its growth, 533.
- kingdom of Algarve added to, 534.
- extent of, in the thirteenth century, 534, 535, 540.
- its African conquests, 541.
- its colonies, 541, 542.
- divides the Indies with Spain, _ib._
- annexed to and separated from Spain, 537.
-
-Posen, Grand Duchy of, 224, 231, 520.
-
-Potidaia, 33.
-
-Prag, ecclesiastical province of, 176.
-
-Prefectures, of the Roman Empire, 75-79.
-
-Pressburg, Peace of, 220.
-
-Prevesa, held by Venice, 412.
- ceded to the Turk, 451.
-
-Primorie; _see_ HERZEGOVINA.
-
-Provençal language, its fall, 345.
-
-Provence, origin of the name, 57.
- part of Theodoric’s kingdom, 93, 95.
- ceded to the Franks, 105, 118.
- part of the kingdom of Burgundy, 145.
- Angevin counts of, 263.
- annexed to France, 264, 344.
-
-Provinces, Roman, nature of, 51.
- Eastern and Western, 52.
-
-Prussia, use of the name, 192, 211, 230.
- long remains heathen, 466.
- dominion of the Teutonic Knights in, 496.
- beginning of the duchy, 503.
- its geographical position, 504.
- united with Brandenburg, 204, 209, 504, 513.
- independent of Poland, 504.
- growth of, 202, 511.
- kingdom of, 512.
- its acquisition of Silesia, 211.
- of East Friesland, _ib._
- its share in the partition of Poland, 212, 513-515.
- losses of, 222, 223, 519.
- recovery and increase of its territory, 224.
- head of North German confederation, 228.
- annexes Sleswick, Holstein, and Lauenburg, 519.
- war with France, 229.
-
-Prussia Western, 212, 513.
-
-Prussia South, 212, 514.
-
-Prussia New East, 212.
-
-Przemyslaf, king of the Wends, founds the house of Mecklenburg, 476.
-
-Pskof, commonwealth of, 483.
- annexed by Muscovy, 501.
-
-Puerto Rico, 544.
-
-Punic Wars, the, 52, 56.
-
-Pyrenees, Peace of, 301, 348.
-
-Pyrrhos, 37.
-
-
-Quadi, 85.
-
-Quebec, 352.
-
-Queensland, 566.
-
-
-Rætia, conquest of, 68.
-
-Ragusa, origin of, 115.
- ecclesiastical province of, 186.
- keeps her independence, 407, 412.
- prefers the Turk to Venice, 412.
- annexed to Austria, 320, 322.
-
-Raleigh, Sir Walter, 559.
-
-Rama, Hungarian kingdom of, 424, 441.
-
-Rametta, taken by the Saracens, 370.
-
-Ramsbury, see of, 182.
-
-Rascia; _see_ DIOKLEA.
-
-Rassa (Novi Bazar), capital of Dioklea, 424.
-
-Rastadt, Peace of, 350.
-
-Ravenna, residence of the Western Emperors, 81.
- of the Gothic kings, 95.
- of the exarchs, 105.
- taken by the Lombards, 108, 123.
- its ecclesiastical position, 171.
- under Venice, 242.
- lost by Venice, 248.
-
-Red Russia; _see_ GALICIA.
-
-Regensburg, 220.
-
-Revel, bishopric of, 184.
-
-_Rex Francorum_, title of, 144.
-
-Rheims, position of the archbishop, 167.
- ecclesiastical province of, 175.
-
-Rhine, the boundary of the Roman Empire, 71.
- frontier of, 348, 350, 355.
-
-Rhodes, in the Homeric Catalogue, 28.
- keeps its independence, 37, 41.
- annexed by Vespasian, 41, 63.
- held by the knights of Saint John, 389, 415.
- revolutions of, 414.
- knights driven out from, 447.
-
-Rhode Island, 560.
-
-Riazan, annexed by Muscovy, 501.
-
-Richard I., of England, takes Cyprus, 372.
- grants it to Guy of Lusignan, 318.
-
-Riga, ecclesiastical province of, 185.
- under the Sword-brothers, 496.
- under Sweden, 508.
-
-Rimini (Ariminum), 54, 244.
-
-Riparanensia, 154, 529.
-
-Robert Wiscard, duke of Apulia, 394.
- his conquests in Epeiros, 395.
-
-Rochester, bishopric of, 181.
-
-Roesler, R., on the origin of the name Magyar, 433 (_note_).
- on the Roumans, 435 (_note_).
-
-Roger I., count of Sicily, his conquests, 395.
-
-Roger II., king of Sicily, his conquests, 395.
-
-Romagna (Romania), represents the old Exarchate, 147, 238.
- origin of the name, 234, 364.
- cities in, 244.
- annexed to Piedmont, 257.
-
-Roman, name kept on in the Eastern Empire, 63, 363, 364, 366.
- continued under the Turks, 380.
-
-Roman Empire; _see_ EMPIRE, ROMAN.
-
-Romania, geographical name of the Eastern Empire, 364, 376.
- Latin Empire of, 383.
-
-Romania in Italy; _see_ ROMAGNA.
-
-Romano, lordship of, 237.
-
-Rome, the centre of European history, 9.
- origin of, 49.
- becomes the head of Italy, 50.
- nature of her provinces, 51.
- her Macedonian wars and conquests, 41.
- her rivalry with Parthia, _ib._
- wars of, with Persia, 81.
- Patriarchate of, 168, 171.
- her later history, 239.
- becomes the Tiberine Republic, 252.
- restored to the Pope, 253.
- incorporated with France, _ib._
- restored to the Pope, 256, 359.
- recovered by Italy, 258.
-
-Roskild, Treaty of, 508.
- bishopric of, 184.
-
-Rostock, 494.
-
-Rottweil, 274.
-
-Rouen, capital of Normandy, 142.
- ecclesiastical province of, 173.
-
-Roum, Sultan of, 380.
-
-Roumans, origin of the name, 71, 364, 435.
- their northern settlements, 435.
-
-Roumania, 436.
- principality of, 453.
- effects of the Treaty of Berlin on, 453.
-
-Roumelia, Eastern, 454.
-
-Roussillon, released from homage to France, 335, 531.
- recovered by Aragon, 537.
- finally annexed by France, 342, 348, 537.
-
-Rovigo, annexed by Venice, 244.
-
-Rügen, held by Denmark, 476, 490.
- by Sweden, 509.
-
-Rupertsland, 564.
-
-Russia, its origin, 158, 159, 480, 481.
- its relations towards the Turks, 449.
- geographical continuity of its conquests, 467.
- origin of the name, 480 (_note_), 481.
- ecclesiastical relations of, 465, 468, 480.
- its relations to the Eastern Empire, 159, 468.
- its imperial style, 468.
- Scandinavian settlement in, 472.
- advance of against Chazars and Fins, 481.
- its rulers become Slavonic, _ib._
- attempts on Constantinople, 482.
- its isolation, _ib._
- its first occupation of Bulgaria, 377.
- divided into principalities, 482, 483.
- becomes tributary to the Mongols, 483, 500.
- effect of the German conquest of Livland on, 487.
- revival of, 499 _et seq._
- delivered by Ivan the Great, 501.
- advance of, 505-507, 511-517, 521-523.
- compared with Sweden, 507.
- wars with Sweden, 508, 512, 518.
- conquered by Poland, 506.
- lands recovered by, _ib._
- assumes the title of Empire, 512.
- becomes a Baltic power, 512.
- its share in the partitions of Poland, 513-515.
- no original Polish territory gained at this time by, 515, 520.
- new kingdom of Poland united to, 520.
- extent and character of its dominion, 522.
- its territory in America sold to the United States, 523.
-
-Russia, Red; _see_ GALICIA.
-
-Ruthenians, 434.
-
-Rutland, formation of the shire, 556.
-
-Ryswick, Peace of, 349.
-
-
-Sabines, 46.
-
-Sachsen-Lauenburg; _see_ LAUENBURG.
-
-Saguntum, taken by Hannibal, 56.
-
-Saint Andrews, ecclesiastical province of, 183.
-
-Saint Asaph, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Saint Davids, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Saint Domingo, Spanish settlements in, 543.
- French settlement in, 353.
- distinct from Hayti, 544.
-
-Saint Gallen, abbey of, 216.
-
-Saint John, knights of, conquer Rhodes, 389, 415.
- their conquests, 415.
- Malta granted to, 398, 415.
- driven out of Rhodes, 447.
-
-Saint John of Maurienne, bishopric of, 173.
-
-Saint Lucia, kept by England, 360.
-
-Saint Omer, held by Spain, 349.
-
-Saint Petersburg, foundation of, 512.
-
-Saint Sava, duchy of; _see_ HERZEGOVINA.
-
-Saladin, takes Jerusalem, 400.
-
-Salamis, its position in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
-
-Salerno, principality of, 147, 152.
-
-Salisbury, diocese of, 182.
-
-Salona, Roman colony, 62.
- destroyed, 115.
-
-Salôna, principality of, 417.
- conquered by the Turks, 420.
-
-Saluzzo, disputed homage of, 283, 284, 287.
- annexed by France, 287.
- ceded to Savoy, 287, 347.
-
-Salzburg, archbishopric of, 176, 215.
- becomes a secular electorate, 220.
- annexed by Austria, 221, 322.
- by Bavaria, 222.
- recovered by Austria, 224, 322.
-
-Samaites, 484.
-
-Samigola, 484.
-
-Samland, Danish occupation of, 471.
-
-Samnites, 46.
- their wars with Rome, 51.
- conquered by Sulla, _ib._
-
-Samo, kingdom of, 473.
-
-Samogitia, purchased by the Teutonic knights, 496.
- restored to Lithuania, _ib._
-
-Samos, 32.
- theme of, 150.
- held by the Maona, 414.
-
-Sancho the Great, king of Navarre, extent of his dominion, 529.
-
-San Marino, independence of, 247, 255, 258.
-
-San Stefano, treaty of, 454.
-
-Santa Maura; _see_ LEUKAS.
-
-Saracens, their settlements in Europe, 16.
- rise of, 110.
- their conquests of Persia, Africa, and Spain, 111, 365.
- their province in Gaul, 112, 527.
- greatest extent of their power, 112, 526.
- conquest of Sicily, 370.
- compared with the Ottoman Turks, 442.
- end of their rule in Spain, 537.
-
-Sarai, capital of the Mongols, 500.
-
-Sardica; _see_ SOFIA.
-
-Sardinia, 44.
- its early inhabitants, 53.
- Roman conquest of, _ib._
- province of, 79.
- lost to the Eastern Empire, 369.
- occupied by Pisa, 238.
- conquered by Aragon, 245, 538.
- united to Savoy, 251.
- kingdom of, 257.
-
-Sathas, M., referred to, 460.
-
-Savona, march of, 236.
-
-Savoy, House of, 234.
- position and growth of, 277 _et seq._
- originally Burgundian, 278.
- its relations to Geneva, 281.
- annexes Nizza, 282.
- its claims on Saluzzo, 283.
- Bernese conquests from, 272.
- Italian and French influence on, 284.
- its decline, 285.
- its later history, 288-289.
- French annexations from, 344.
- French occupation of, 286, 346.
- Italian advance of, 248.
- its union with Sicily and Sardinia, 251.
- boundaries of, after the fall of Buonaparte, 359.
- annexed by France, 258, 359.
-
-Saxon Mark, the, 198.
-
-Saxons, 85, 91.
- their settlement in Britain, 97.
-
-Saxony, conquered by Charles the Great, 122, 126.
- duchy of, 140, 207.
- use of the name, 191, 207.
- break-up of the duchy, 207.
- new duchy and electorate of, 208, 209.
- circle of, _ib._
- kingdom of, 222, 226.
- dismemberment of, 224.
-
-Scanderbeg, revolt of Albania under, 421.
-
-Scandinavia, ecclesiastical provinces of, 184.
- its momentary union with Britain, 462.
- compared with Spain, 463.
- Eastern and Western aspects of, 464.
- its barbarian neighbours, 466.
- kingdoms of, 130, 468.
- its influence on the Baltic, compared with that of Germany, 486.
-
-Scania, originally Danish, 131, 184, 469.
- its momentary transfer to Sweden, 487.
- Hanseatic occupation of, 494.
- annexed to Sweden, 508.
-
-Schaffhausen, joins the Confederates, 272.
-
-Schlesien; _see_ SILESIA.
-
-Sclavinia, kingdom of, 476.
- Danish conquest of, 489.
-
-Scotland, origin of the name, 98, 549.
- dioceses of, 183.
- its greatness due to its English element, 548.
- historical position of, 549.
- analogy of Switzerland to, _ib._
- formation of the kingdom, 550, 551.
- settlements of the Northmen in, 550, 552.
- acknowledges the English supremacy, 550.
- different tenures of the dominions of its kings, 551.
- grant of Lothian and Cumberland to, 162, 550, 551.
- its shifting relations towards England, 552.
- its union with England, _ib._
-
-Scots, their settlement in Britain, 98, 548.
- their union with the Picts, 556.
-
-Scutari; _see_ SKODRA.
-
-Scythia, Roman province of, 77.
-
-Sebasteia, theme of, 150.
-
-Sebastopol, answers to old Cherson, 516 (_note_).
-
-Sebenico, under Venice, 411.
-
-Seleukeia, independence of, 39.
- annexed to the Empire by Trajan, 99.
- theme of, 150.
-
-Seleukids, extent and decline of their kingdom, 38.
-
-Selim I., Sultan, his conquests in Syria and Egypt, 447.
-
-Seljuk Turks, their invasions, 365, 379.
- driven back by the Komnênoi, 381.
- weakened by the Mongols, 443.
-
-Selsey, see of, 182.
-
-Selymbria, won back to the Empire, 387, 391.
-
-Semigallia, Semigola, part of the duchy of Curland, 514.
- dominion of the Sword-brothers in, 496.
-
-Semitic nations in Europe, 16.
-
-Sena Gallica (Sinigallia), Roman colony, 54.
-
-Sens, ecclesiastical province of, 173.
- divided, 174.
-
-Septimania (Gothia), 90, 154, 526.
- Saracen conquest of, 112, 118.
- recovered by the Franks, 113, 121.
- march of, 142.
-
-Servia, Slavonic character of, 114, 373, 423.
- conquered by Simeon, 377, 424.
- its relations to the Empire, 424.
- restored to the Empire, 378, 424.
- revolts from the Empire, 379, 424.
- recovered by Manuel, 381, 424.
- beginning of the house of Nemanja, 424.
- its possessions on the Hadriatic, 405.
- loses Bosnia, 424.
- advance of under Stephen Dushan, 389, 419-420, 425.
- Empire of, 420, 425.
- break up of the Empire, 426.
- later kingdom of, _ib._
- conquests and deliverances of, _ib._
- revolts and deliverance of, 452.
- enlarged by the Berlin Treaty, 453.
-
-Servians, never wholly enslaved, 429.
- fourfold separation of the nation, 453.
-
-Severia, conquered by Lithuania, 499.
-
-Severin, Banat of, attacked by Bulgaria, 430.
-
-Seven Weeks’ War, the, 228.
-
-Seville, ecclesiastical province of, 179.
- recovered by Castile, 534, 535.
-
-Sforza, House of, 241.
-
-Sherborne, see of, 182.
-
-Shetland, Scandinavian colony, 471.
- pledged to Scotland, 488.
-
-Shires, mentioned in Domesday, 555.
- two classes of, _ib._
-
-Shirwan, 521.
-
-Siberia, khanat of, 501.
- Russian conquest of, 511.
-
-Sicily, early inhabitants of, 45, 48.
- Phœnician colonies in, 35.
- Greek colonies in, 22, 34, 53.
- the first Roman province, 52, 79.
- state of under Rome, 53.
- theme of, 152.
- Saracen conquest of, 153, 370.
- recovered by George Maniakês, 370.
- Norman kingdom of, 250, 367, 371, 393-395.
- its conquests from the Eastern Empire, 397.
- never a fief of the Western Empire, 233.
- under Charles of Anjou, 250, 397.
- its revolt, _ib._
- its union with Aragon, 250, 538.
- united with Savoy, 251.
- with Austria, _ib._
- with Naples, 251, 540.
- its practical effacement, 398.
- compared with the Crusading states, _ib._
- compared with Venice, 402.
-
-Sicilies, The Two, kingdom of, 250, 251, 253, 398.
- union of with Aragon, 538.
- part of the Spanish monarchy, 240, 540.
- divided, 254.
- reunited, 256.
- joined to Italy, 257.
-
-Siculi; _see_ SZEKLERS.
-
-Sidon, Phœnician colony, 35.
-
-Siebenbürgen, origin of the name, 435 (_note_); _see_ TRANSSILVANIA.
-
-Siena, archbishopric of, 171.
- commonwealth of, 238, 245.
- annexed by Florence, 246.
-
-Sikanians, 48.
-
-Sikels, 48.
-
-Sikyôn, in the Homeric catalogue, 27.
- a Dorian city, 29.
-
-Silesia, its early relations to Poland, 200, 478, 479.
- passes under Bohemian supremacy, 200, 492.
- joined to the Bohemian kingdom, 493.
- becomes a dominion of the House of Austria, 493.
- the greater part conquered by Prussia, 211.
- Polish territory added to, 515.
-
-Silvas, conquered by Portugal, 533.
-
-Simeon, Tzar of Bulgaria, his conquests, 376.
-
-Sind, 113.
-
-Sinôpê, 39, 64, 422.
-
-Sirmium, 81.
-
-Sitten, see of, 173.
-
-Skipetars; _see_ ALBANIANS.
-
-Skodra (Scutari), kingdom of, 62.
- Servian, 406.
- dominion of the Balsa at, 428.
- sold to Venice, 410, 428.
- taken by Mahomet the Conqueror, 411.
-
-Skopia, 425.
-
-Slaves, their settlement and migrations, 14, 113, 133, 365.
- compared with those of the Teutons, 16, 114.
- their two main divisions, 114, 158.
- parted asunder by the Magyars, 158, 432.
- their settlements within the Eastern Empire, 115.
- in Greece and Macedonia, 116, 373, 374, 461.
- recovered to the Eastern Empire, 375.
- remain on Taÿgetos, _ib._
- their relations to the Western Empire, 159, 197, 199, 201, 465, 466.
- general history of the Northern Slaves, 472-485.
-
-Slavia, duchy of, 492.
-
-Slavinia, name of, 115.
-
-Slavonia, 323, 434.
-
-Slavonic Gulf, 476.
-
-Sleswick, duchy of, 213, 490.
- its relations with Denmark, 490.
- under Christian I., 491.
- effect of the Peace of Roskild on, 509.
- guaranteed to Denmark, 513.
- wars in, 228.
- transferred to Prussia, 228, 519.
-
-Slovaks, 434, 477.
-
-Smolensk, principality of, 483.
- conquered by Lithuania, 499.
- its shiftings between Russia and Poland, 506.
-
-Smyrna, 32.
- acquired by Genoa, 389.
-
-Sobrarbe, formation of the kingdom, 530.
- united to Aragon, 531.
-
-Social War, the, 51.
-
-Sofia (Sardica), taken by the Bulgarians, 376.
- by the Turks, 431.
-
-Solothurn, joins the Confederates, 262, 270.
-
-Sorabi, 474, 475.
-
-Spain, use of the name, 3 (_note_).
- its geographical character, 10.
- non-Aryan people in, 12, 13.
- Celtic settlements in, 14, 56.
- Greek and Phœnician settlements in, 35, 56.
- its connexion with Gaul, 55.
- first Roman province in, _ib._
- final conquest of, _ib._
- diocese of, 79.
- settlements of Suevi and Vandals in, 90.
- West-Gothic kingdom in, 89.
- southern part won back to the Empire, 105.
- reconquered by West-Goths, 108, 526.
- Saracen conquest of, 111, 154, 526.
- separated from the Eastern Caliphate, 113.
- conquests of Charles the Great in, 127, 527.
- foundation of its kingdoms, 154, 155, 549 _et seq._
- its ecclesiastical divisions, 178.
- its geographical relations with France, 342.
- its quasi-imperial character, 463.
- compared with Scandinavia, 463, 525.
- with South-eastern Europe, 525.
- nation of, grew out of the war with the Mussulmans, 526.
- king of, use of the title, 535.
- African Mussulmans in, 530, 532, 533.
- end of their rule in, 537.
- divides the Indies with Portugal, 542.
- extent of under Charles V., 247, 298, 539.
- its conquests in Africa, 543.
- its insular possessions, _ib._
- revolutions of its colonies, 544.
- its possessions in the West Indies, _ib._
-
-Spalato, its origin, 115.
- ecclesiastical province of, 186.
- under Venice, 44.
-
-Spanish March, the, conquered by Charles the Great, 122, 128, 529.
- remains part of Karolingia, 141, 155.
- division of, _ib._
-
-Spanish Monarchy, the greatest extent of, 539.
- partition of, _ib._
-
-Sparta, her supremacy, 29.
- joins the Achaian league, 40.
-
-Speyer, bishopric of, 175.
- annexed to France, 220.
- restored to Germany, 358.
- becomes Bavarian, 226.
-
-Spizza, originally Servian, 406.
- annexed by Austria, 324, 429, 441.
-
-Spoleto, Lombard duchy of, 108, 147.
-
-Stalbova, Peace of, 508.
-
-Stati degli Presidi, 246.
-
-Steiermark; _see_ STYRIA.
-
-Stephen Dushan, extent of the Servian Empire under, 389, 419, 420, 425.
-
-Stephen Tvartko, king of Bosnia, 426.
-
-Stephen Urosh, his conquest of Thessaly and title, 420, 426.
-
-Stettin, 210.
-
-Stormarn, 489, 490.
-
-Strabo, his description of Hellas, 18 (_note_).
-
-Stralsund, 494.
-
-Strassburg, bishopric of, 175.
- seized by Lewis XIV., 194, 350.
- restored to Germany, 229.
-
-Strathclyde, 130, 549, 550.
- acknowledges the English supremacy, 162.
- granted to Scotland, 162, 551.
-
-Strigonium (Gran), ecclesiastical province of, 186.
-
-Strymôn, theme of, 151.
-
-Styria (Steiermark), duchy of, 217, 308.
-
-Sudereys; _see_ HEBRIDES.
-
-Suevi, their settlements, 87, 90.
-
-Suleiman, the Lawgiver, his conquests, 438, 447.
- his African overlordship, 447.
-
-Sumatra, Dutch settlement in, 300.
-
-Surat, French factory at, 354.
-
-Susdal, 483.
-
-Sussex, kingdom of, 160, 555.
-
-Sutherland, 550.
-
-Sutorina, Ottoman frontier extends to, 412.
-
-Svealand, 131.
-
-Sviatopluk, founds the Great Moravian kingdom, 473.
-
-Sviatoslaf, overruns Bulgaria, 377.
- his Asiatic conquests, 482.
-
-Swabia, circle of, 216.
- ecclesiastical towns in, _ib._
-
-Sweden, 131, 159, 470.
- its position in the Baltic, 463.
- its relation to the Empire, 467.
- its conquest of Curland, 472.
- of Finland, 486, 488.
- joined with Norway and Denmark, 487.
- separated, 488.
- growth of, compared with Russia, 507.
- advance of under Gustavus Adolphus, _ib._
- wars of with Russia and Poland, 508.
- advance of against Denmark and Norway, _ib._
- its German territories, 213.
- greatest extent of, 509, 510.
- its settlements in America, 561.
- its decline, 512.
- its later wars with Russia, 512, 518.
- losses of, 512, 518.
- its union with Norway, 464, 518.
-
-Swiss League, beginning and growth of, 262, 268-274.
-
-Swithiod, 470.
-
-Switzerland, represents the Burgundian kingdom, 146, 259, 291.
- German origin of the Confederation, 262, 268, 269.
- popular errors about, 269.
- eight ancient cantons of, 270.
- effect of on the Austrian power, 217, 311.
- beginning of its Italian dominions, 271, 286.
- thirteen cantons of, 272, 274.
- its allied and subject lands, 272, 273.
- extent and position of the League, 275.
- its Savoyard conquests, 272, 273.
- its relations with France, 344.
- abolition of the federal system in, _ib._
- restored by the Act of Mediation, 276.
- Buonaparte’s treatment of, 355.
- nineteen cantons of, 276.
- present confederation of twenty-two cantons, 276, 359.
-
-Sword-Brothers, their connexion with the Empire, 495.
- established in Livland, _ib._
- extent of their dominion, 496.
- joined to the Teutonic Order, _ib._
- separated from them, 496, 503.
- fall of the Order, 504.
-
-Sybaris, Greek colony, 47.
-
-Syracuse, Greek colony, 48.
- Roman conquest of, 52.
- taken by the Saracens, 370.
- recovered and loss by the Eastern Empire, _ib._
- by the Normans, 395.
-
-Syria, kingdom of, 38, 61.
- Roman province of, 65.
- Saracen conquest of, 111.
- partially restored to the Empire, 379.
- conquered by Selim I., 447.
-
-Szeklers, settle in Transsilvania, 435.
-
-
-Tangier, 527, 541, 558.
-
-Tannenberg, battle of, 496.
-
-Taormina (Tauromenion), taken by the Saracens, 370.
-
-Tarantaise, ecclesiastical province of, 173.
-
-Tarentum, (Taras), early greatness of, 47.
- archbishopric of, 172.
- taken by the Normans, 394.
-
-Tarifa, taken by Castile, 534.
-
-Tarragona, ecclesiastical province of, 178.
- joined to Barcelona, 532.
-
-Tarsos, restored to the Empire, 153, 379.
-
-Tartars; _see_ MONGOLS.
-
-Tasmania, 566.
-
-Tauros, Mount, 61.
-
-Tauromenion; _see_ TAORMINA.
-
-Taÿgetos, Slave settlement on, 375.
-
-Tchernigof, principality of, 483.
- lost and recovered by Poland, 506.
-
-Temeswar, 440.
-
-Tenda, county of, 287.
-
-Tênos, held by Venice, 409, 411.
-
-Terbounia (Trebinje), 405, 425.
-
-Terra Firma, compared with ἤπειρος, 26 (_note_).
-
-Teutonic Knights, their connexion with the Western Empire, 495.
- effects of their rule, _ib._
- extent of their dominion, 496.
- joined to the Sword-brothers, _ib._
- separated from them, 496.
- their losses, 496, 497.
- their cessions to Poland, 497.
- their vassalage to Poland, _ib._
- secularization of their dominion, 503.
-
-Teutons, their settlements, 15, 16, 82, 87, 96.
- their wars with Rome, 84.
- confederacies among, _ib._
-
-Thasos, 32.
-
-Thebes, head of the Boiôtian League, 27, 30.
- destroyed by Alexander, 31.
-
-Theodore Laskaris, founds the Empire of Nikaia, 386.
-
-Theodoric, King of the East Goths, his reign in Italy, 95.
-
-Thermê, 33; _see_ THESSALONIKÊ.
-
-Thesprotians, in the Homeric catalogue, 26.
- invade Thessaly, 30.
-
-Thessalonikê, theme of, 151.
- kingdom of, 384.
- its effects on the Latin Empire, _ib._
- its extent under Boniface, 385.
- taken by Michael of Epeiros, 385.
- Empire of, _ib._
- separated from Epeiros, _ib._
- incorporated with the Empire of Nikaia, 387.
- sold to Venice, 404, 410.
- taken by the Turks, 391, 404, 446.
-
-Thessaly, Thesprotian invasion of, 30.
- subservient to Macedonia, 37, 40.
- province of, 78.
- part of the kingdom of Thessalonikê, 385.
- added to Servia by Stephen Urosh, 420.
- Turkish conquest of, _ib._
-
-Thionville, 301.
-
-Thirty Years’ War, the, 203, 347.
-
-Thopia, House of, Albanian kings in Epeiros, 420.
-
-Thorn, Peace of, 497.
- recovered by Prussia, 520.
-
-Thrace, Greek colonies in, 20, 33.
- its geography, _ib._
- conquered by Rome, 68.
- diocese of, 76.
- theme of, 151.
-
-Thracians, in the Homeric catalogue, 28.
-
-Thrakêsion, theme of, 151.
-
-Thurgau, won from Austria by the Confederates, 271, 313.
-
-Thuringians, 91.
- conquered by the Franks, 117.
-
-Tiberine Republic, 252.
-
-Tigranes, king of Armenia, subdued by the Romans, 65.
-
-Timour, overthrows Bajazet, 390, 445.
-
-Tingitana, province of, 79.
-
-Tirnovo, kingdom of, 430.
-
-Tobago, 360.
-
-Tocco, House of, effects of their rule in Western Greece, 421.
-
-Toledo, archbishopric of, 178.
- conquered by Alfonso VI., 532, 535.
-
-Tortona, 237, 249.
-
-Tortosa, Aragonese conquest of, 532.
-
-Toul, annexed by France, 193, 346.
-
-Toulouse, Roman colony, 57.
- capital of the West Gothic kingdom, 90.
- county of, 142, 330.
- ecclesiastical province of, 174.
- annexed to France, 335.
-
-Touraine, united to Anjou, 330.
- annexed by Philip Augustus, 333.
-
-Τοῠρκοι, 433 (_note_).
-
-Tournay, becomes French, 349.
-
-Tours, battle of, 113.
- bishopric of, 173.
-
-Trajan, Emperor, his conquests, 70, 99.
- forms the province of Dacia, _ib._
-
-Transpadane Republic, 252.
-
-Transsilvania, 323.
- conquered by the Magyars, 435.
- Teutonic colonies in, 435.
- tributary to the Turk, 439.
- incorporated with Hungary, 440.
-
-Transvaal, annexation of, 566.
-
-Traü, 406.
-
-Trebinje; _see_ TERBOUNIA.
-
-Trebizond (Trapezous), city of, 36, 150.
- Empire of, 386, 422.
- acknowledges the Eastern Emperor, _ib._
- conquered by the Turks, 423.
-
-Trent, county of, 235.
- bishopric of, 147, 195, 237.
- fluctuates between Germany and Italy, 195.
- within the Austrian circle, 217.
- annexed by Bavaria, 221.
- recovered by Austria, 224, 255, 318.
-
-Triaditza; _see_ SOFIA.
-
-Trier, taken by the Franks, 92.
- ecclesiastical province of, 175.
- chancellorship of Gaul held by its archbishops, 176.
- annexed to France, 220.
- restored to Germany, 358.
-
-Trieste, commends itself to Austria, 232, 312.
-
-Trinidad, 544.
-
-Tripolis (Asia), county of, 399.
-
-Tripolis (Africa), conquered by Suleiman, 447.
-
-Trojans, 28.
-
-Trondhjem (Nidaros), ecclesiastical province of, 184.
-
-Trondhjemlän, ceded to Sweden, 508.
- restored to Norway, 509.
-
-Troyes, treaty of, 338.
-
-Tuam, ecclesiastical province of, 183.
-
-Tunis, conquests and losses of by the Turk, 447.
- conquered by Charles V., 447, 543.
-
-Turanian nations in Europe, 17, 365.
-
-Turks, Magyars so called, 379, 433 (_note_).
- _see also_ OTTOMANS and SELJUKS.
-
-Tuscany, use of the name, 234.
- commonwealths of, 238.
- grand duchy of, 249, 256.
- exchanged for Lorraine, 321.
- annexed to Piedmont, 257.
-
-Tver, annexed by Muscovy, 501.
-
-Tyre, Phœnician colony, 35.
-
-Tyrol, within the circle of Austria, 217.
- taken by Bavaria, 221.
- recovered by Austria, 224, 323.
-
-Tzar, origin of the title, 512 (_note_).
-
-Tzernagora; _see_ MONTENEGRO.
-
-Tzernojevich, dynasty of, 428.
-
-Tzetinje, foundation of, 428.
-
-
-Ukraine Cossacks, 506.
-
-Ulster, province of, 183.
-
-United Provinces, the, 299.
- recognition of their independence, 300.
- colonies of, 300, 561.
-
-United States of America, the greatest colony of England, 559.
- formation of, 560-562.
- acknowledgement of their independence, 562.
- their extension to the West, 563.
- their lack of a name, _ib._
- cessions to by Spain, 544.
-
-Upsala, archbishopric of, 184.
-
-Urbino, duchy of, 244.
- annexed by the Popes, 249.
-
-Uri, obtains the Val Levantina, 271.
-
-Utica, Phœnician colony, 35.
-
-Utrecht, its bishops, 294.
- annexed to Burgundy, 298.
- archbishopric of, 177.
- peace of, 301, 349, 352.
-
-
-Val Levantina, won by Uri, 271.
-
-Valence, annexed to the Dauphiny, 264.
-
-Valencia, ecclesiastical province of, 178.
- conquered by Aragon, 533, 536.
-
-Valenciennes, annexed by France, 349.
-
-Valentia, province of, 80.
-
-Valladolid, bishopric of, 178.
-
-Valois, county of, 330.
- added to France, 331.
-
-Valtellina, won by Graubünden, 273.
- united to the French kingdom of Italy, 253.
- to the kingdom of Lombardy and Venice, 256.
-
-Vandals, 87.
- their settlements in Spain and in Africa, 89, 90.
- end of their kingdom, 105.
-
-Varna, battle of, 426, 438.
-
-Varus, defeated by Arminius, 67.
-
-Vasco de Gama, discovers Cape of Good Hope, 541.
-
-Vasto, 236.
-
-Vaud, conquered from Savoy, 273.
- freed, 275.
-
-Veii, conquered by Rome, 50.
-
-Venaissin, annexed to France, 265, 355.
-
-Veneti, 46.
-
-Venetia, 47, 235.
- Roman conquests of, 55.
- province of, 79.
-
-Venice, her origin, 94.
- patriarchal see of, 170.
- her greatness, 241, 367.
- relations to the Eastern Empire, 233, 369, 378.
- compared with Genoa and Sicily, 402.
- her first conquests in Dalmatia and Croatia, 406, 407.
- her share in the Latin conquest of Constantinople, 383.
- compared with Sicily, 402.
- effect of the fourth Crusade on, 402, 403.
- inherits the position of the Eastern Empire, 403, 410.
- her dominion primarily Hadriatic, 404, 405.
- her possession of Crete, Cyprus, and Thessalonikê, _ib._
- her Greek and Albanian possessions, 408-410.
- loses and recovers Dalmatia, 409, 410.
- acquires Skodra, 410, 428.
- her losses, 411.
- her Italian dominions, 241, 242, 248.
- losses of by the treaty of Bologna, 248.
- conquest and loss of the Peloponnêsos, 412.
- annexed to Austria, 252.
- part of the French kingdom of Italy, 253.
- restored to Austria, 255.
- momentary republic of, 267.
- united to Italy, 232, 258.
-
-Verden, bishopric of, 208, 213.
- held and lost by Sweden, 509, 513.
-
-Verdun, division of, 136.
- bishopric of annexed by France, 193, 346.
-
-Vermandois, annexed to France, 331.
-
-Verona, fluctuates between Germany and Italy, 139, 195.
- history of, 237.
- subject to Venice, 241.
- to Austria, 252.
- restored to Italy, 232.
-
-Vespasian, his annexations, 41.
-
-Viatka, commonwealth of, 483.
- annexed by Muscovy, 501.
-
-Victoria (Australia), 566.
-
-Vienna, Congress of, 520
- battle of, 439.
-
-Vienne, 93, 263.
- ecclesiastical province of, 173.
- annexed to France, 264.
-
-Viennois, Dauphiny of, 263.
- annexed to France, 264, 344.
-
-Vindelicia, conquest of, 68.
-
-Visconti, House of, 240.
-
-Vlachia; _see_ WALLACHIA AND ROUMANIA.
-
-Vlachia, Great; _see_ THESSALY.
-
-Vlachs, use of the name, 366.
- _see_ ROUMANS.
-
-Vladimir, first Christian prince of Russia, takes Cherson, 378, 482.
-
-Vladimir, on the Kiasma, supremacy of, 482.
-
-Vladimir (Lodomeria) annexed by Lewis the Great, 437.
- under Austria, 323, 440, 514.
-
-Volhynia, conquered by Lithuania, 498.
- recovered by Russia, 514.
-
-Volscians, 46.
- their wars with Rome, 50.
-
-Vratislaf, king of Bohemia, 492 (_note_).
-
-
-Wagri, Wagria, 474, 489.
-
-Waldemar, king of Denmark, conquests and losses, 489.
-
-Wales, North, use of the name, 130.
-
-Wales, Harold’s conquests from, 553.
- conquest of, 554.
- full incorporation of, 555.
-
-Wales, principality of, 554.
-
-Wallachia, formation of, 436.
- shiftings of, 438-440.
- its union with Moldavia, 453.
-
-Wallis, League of, 272.
- its conquests from Savoy, 273.
- united with France, 274.
- becomes a Swiss Canton, 276, 359.
-
-‘Wandering of the Nations,’ 83.
-
-Warsaw, duchy of, 223, 519.
- extent of, 520.
-
-Weleti, Weletabi, Wiltsi, 474.
-
-Wells, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Welsh, use of the name, 98.
-
-Wessex, kingdom of, 97, 129.
- its growth and supremacy, 130, 160, 161, 162.
-
-Westfalia, duchy of and circle, 207.
- kingdom of, 222.
-
-Westfalia, Peace of, 215, 346, 509.
-
-West Indies, French colonies in, 353.
- British possessions in, 360, 565.
-
-Westmoreland, formation of the shire, 556.
-
-Widdin, twice annexed by Hungary, 430, 431, 437.
-
-William the Conqueror, his continental conquests, 332.
- England united by, 163.
-
-William of Hauteville, founds the county of Apulia, 394.
-
-William the Good, king of Sicily, his Epeirot conquests, 396.
-
-Winchester, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Wismar, 494.
-
-Witold, of Lithuania, his conquests, 499.
-
-Worcester, bishopric of, 182.
-
-Worms, bishopric of, 175.
- annexed to France, 220.
- restored to Germany, 358.
-
-Württemberg, county of, 216.
- electorate and kingdom of, 220.
- its extent, 226.
-
-Würzburg, bishopric of, 226.
- its Bishops Dukes of East Francia, 206, 214.
- Grand Duchy of, 221, 222.
-
-
-York, archbishopric of, 182.
-
-
-Zabljak, ancient capital of Montenegro, 428.
-
-Zaccaria, princes of, hold Chios, 414.
-
-Zachloumia, 405, 425.
-
-Zagrab; _see_ AGRAM.
-
-Zähringen, dukes of, 261, 262.
-
-Zakynthos (Zante), conquered by William the Good, 396.
- held in fief by Margarito, 397.
- commended to Venice, 410.
- tributary to the Sultan, 411.
-
-Zalacca, battle of, 532.
-
-Zante; _see_ ZAKYNTHOS.
-
-Zara (Jadera), Roman colony, 62.
- ecclesiastical province of, 186.
- held by Venice, 405, 411.
- Peace of, 409.
-
-Zaragoza, ecclesiastical province of, 178.
- conquered by Aragon, 532.
-
-Zealand, province of, 218.
-
-Zealand, Danish island, 469.
-
-Zeno, reunion of the Empire under, 94.
-
-Zeugmin, recovered by Manuel Komnênos, 381.
-
-Zips, pledged to Poland, 437, 499.
-
-Zug, joins the Confederates, 270.
-
-Zürich, minster of, 216.
- joins the Confederates, 270.
-
-Zutphen, county of, annexed to Burgundy, 298.
-
-Zuyder-Zee, inroads of, 293.
-
-
-_Spottiswoode & Co., Printers, New-street Square, London._
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Transcriber’s note: The following changes have been made to this text:
-
-Page ix: ‘Kyrêne’ to ‘Kyrênê’—‘Crete, Cyprus, Kyrênê’.
-
-Page xxviii: ‘Brobant’ to ‘Brabant’—‘Brabant; Hainault’.
-
-Page xlii: ‘Lauenberg’ to ‘Lauenburg’—‘Saxony; Lauenburg;’.
-
-Page 31: ‘Peloponnêsian’ to ‘Peloponnesian’—‘Peloponnesian cities’.
-
-Page 94, sidenote: ‘B.C. 476-493’ to ‘A.D. 476-493’.
-
-Page 114, sidenote: ‘South-eastern’ to ‘South-western’.
-
-Page 208, sidenote: ‘121.’ to ‘1212.’—‘1180-1212.’
-
-Page 217: ‘Görtz’ to ‘Görz’—‘borderlands of _Görz_’.
-
-Page 240, sidenote: ‘Palaiologioi’ to ‘Palaiologoi’—‘Palaiologoi at
-Montferrat, 1306.’
-
-Page 320: ‘at’ to ‘as’—‘as it stood.’
-
-Page 352: ‘Napoleone’ to ‘Napoleon’—‘Napoleon Buonaparte was born’.
-
-Page 354: ‘theatened’ to ‘threatened’—‘seriously threatened’.
-
-Page 368: ‘setttlement’ to ‘settlement’—‘conquest and settlement’.
-
-Page 372: ‘begining’ to ‘beginning’—‘beginning of the eleventh’.
-
-Page 373: missing word ‘time’ added—‘to time enforced.’
-
-Page 379: ‘posssession’ to ‘possession’—‘Imperial possession’.
-
-Page 389: ‘Nikomédeia’ to ‘Nikomêdeia’—‘_Nikaia_, _Nikomêdeia_’.
-
-Page 396, sidenote: ‘Epirot’ to ‘Epeirot’—‘Epeirot conquests of William’.
-
-Page 407: ‘Kommênos’ to ‘Komnênos’—‘Under Manuel Komnênos’.
-
-Page 418, sidenote: ‘1343.’ to ‘1383.’—‘1348-1383.’
-
-Page 428: ‘Balza’ to ‘Balsa’—‘the house of Balsa’.
-
-Page 432, sidenote: ‘84’ to ‘884’—‘884-894.’
-
-Page 493: ‘burggraves’ to ‘burgraves’—‘burgraves of Nürnberg.’
-
-Page 512: ‘Ăbo’ to ‘Åbo’—‘Peace of Åbo’.
-
-Page 539, sidenote: ‘possesions’ to ‘possessions’—‘outlying possessions’.
-
-Page 550: ‘Northhumberland’ to ‘Northumberland’—‘part of
-Northumberland’.
-
-Page 561, sidenote: ‘1346’ to ‘1646’—’Maryland. 1646.’
-
-Page 564, sidenote: ‘Dependen’ to ‘Dependent’—‘Dependent confederacy.’
-
-Page 580: ‘ecclesiastial’ to ‘ecclesiastical’—‘Embrun, ecclesiastical
-province’.
-
-Page 583: ‘Geatas’ to ‘Geátas’—‘Gauts, Geátas’.
-
-Page 586: ‘Jagerndorf’ to ‘Jägerndorf’—‘Jägerndorf, principality of’.
-
-Page 587: ‘Kamenietz’ to ‘Kamienetz’—‘Kamienetz, ceded by Poland’.
-
-Page 587: ‘Korônê’ to ‘Kôrônê’—‘Kôrônê; _see_ CORON.’
-
-Page 587: ‘Koloneia’ to ‘Kolôneia’—‘Kolôneia, theme of’.
-
-Page 589: ‘Luzelburg’ to ‘Lüzelburg’—‘Luxemburg (Lüzelburg)’.
-
-Page 590: ‘Monbeliard’ to ‘Montbeliard’—‘Montbeliard, county of’.
-
-Page 592: ‘Komnenos’ to ‘Komnênos’—‘Alexios Komnênos, 381.’
-
-Page 594: ‘Phokaia’ to ‘Phôkaia’—‘Phôkaia, held by’.
-
-Page 594: ‘Julii’ to ‘Julia’—‘Pietas Julia; _see_ POLA.’
-
-Page 595: ‘remain’ to ‘remains’—‘long remains heathen’.
-
-Page 595: ‘Bradenburg’ to ‘Brandenburg’—‘united with Brandenburg’.
-
-Page 599: ‘Maniakes’ to ‘Maniakês’—‘recovered by George Maniakês’.
-
-Page 599: ‘Sinopê’ to ‘Sinôpê’—‘Sinôpê, 39’.
-
-Page 600: ‘Soluthurn’ to ‘Solothurn’—‘Solothurn, joins the
-Confederates’.
-
-Page 600: ‘610’ to ‘10’—‘its geographical character, 10’.
-
-Page 600: ‘Califate’ to ‘Caliphate’—‘Eastern Caliphate, 113.’
-
-Page 600: ‘Presidenti’ to ‘Presidi’—‘Stati degli Presidi’.
-
-Page 603: ‘Tzernoievich’ to ‘Tzernojevich’—‘Tzernojevich, dynasty of’.]
-
-
-
-
-
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-Project Gutenberg's The Historical Geography of Europe., by Edward A. Freeman
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Historical Geography of Europe.
- Vol. I.&mdash;Text
-
-Author: Edward A. Freeman
-
-Release Date: February 11, 2020 [EBook #61375]
-
-Language: English
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY I ***
-
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-Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
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-</pre>
-
-<hr class="chap" /><div class="chap">
-
-<div class="all">
-
-<h1>THE<br />
-<br />
-HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE<br />
-<br />
-VOL. I.</h1>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-
-<p class="center">
-LONDON: PRINTED BY<br />
-SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br />
-AND PARLIAMENT STREET
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p class="center">
-THE<br />
-<br />
-<span class="xx-largetext">HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY</span><br />
-<br />
-OF<br />
-<br />
-<span class="xx-largetext">EUROPE</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">BY<br />
-<br />
-<span class="largetext">EDWARD A. FREEMAN, D.C.L., LL.D.</span><br />
-<br />
-HONORARY FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, OXFORD</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">IN TWO VOLUMES</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><span class="largetext"><i>VOL. I.—TEXT</i></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">LONDON<br />
-LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.<br />
-1881<br />
-<br />
-<i>All rights reserved</i>
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is now several years since this book was begun. It
-has been delayed by a crowd of causes, by a temporary
-loss of strength, by enforced absence from England, by
-other occupations and interruptions of various kinds.
-I mention this only because of the effect which I fear
-it has had on the book itself. It has been impossible
-to make it, what a book should, if possible, be, the
-result of one continuous effort. The mere fact that the
-kindness of the publishers allowed the early part to be
-printed some years back has, I fear, led to some
-repetition and even contradiction. A certain change
-of plan was found unavoidable. It proved impossible
-to go through the whole volume according
-to the method of the earlier chapters. Instead of
-treating Europe as a whole, I found it needful to divide
-it into several large geographical groups. The result
-is that each of the later chapters has had to go over
-again some small amount of ground which had been
-already gone over in the earlier chapters. In some
-cases later lights have led to some changes of view
-or expression. I have marked these, as far as I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">{i}</a></span>
-could, in the Additions and Corrections. If in any
-case I have failed to do so, the later statement is the
-one which should be relied on.</p>
-
-<p>I hope that I have made the object of the work
-clear in the Introductory Chapter. It is really a very
-humble one. It aims at little more than tracing out
-the extent of various states at different times, and at
-attempting to place the various changes in their due
-relation to one another and to their causes. I am not,
-strictly speaking, writing history. I have little to do
-with the internal affairs of any country. I have looked
-at events mainly with reference to their effect on the
-European map. This has led to a reversal of what to
-many will seem the natural order of things. In a
-constitutional history of Europe, our own island would
-claim the very first place. In my strictly geographical
-point of view, I believe I am right in giving it the last.</p>
-
-<p>I of course assume in the reader a certain elementary
-knowledge of European history, at least as
-much as may be learned from my own General Sketch.
-Names and things which have been explained there I
-have not thought it needful to explain again. I need
-hardly say that I found myself far more competent to
-deal with some parts of the work than with others.
-No one can take an equal interest in, or have an
-equal knowledge of, all branches of so wide a subject.
-Some parts of the book will represent real original
-research; others must be dealt with in a far less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">{ii}</a></span>
-thorough way, and will represent only knowledge got
-up for the occasion. In such cases the reader will
-doubtless find out the difference for himself. But
-I have felt my own deficiencies most keenly in the
-German part. No part of European history is to me
-more attractive than the early history of the German
-kingdom as such. No part is to me less attractive than
-the endless family divisions and unions of the smaller
-German states.</p>
-
-<p>In the Slavonic part I have found great difficulty
-in following any uniform system of spelling. I consulted
-several Slavonic scholars. Each gave me advice,
-and each supported his own advice by arguments
-which I should have thought unanswerable, if I had
-not seen the arguments in support of the wholly different
-advice given me by the others. When the teachers
-differ so widely, the learner will, I hope, be forgiven,
-if the result is sometimes a little chaotic. I have tried
-to write Slavonic names so as to give some approach to
-the sound, as far as I know it. But I fear that I have
-succeeded very imperfectly.</p>
-
-<p>In such a crowd of names, dates, and the like, there
-must be many small inaccuracies. In the case of the
-smaller dates, those which do not mark the great
-epochs of history, nothing is easier than to get wrong
-by a year or so. Sometimes there is an actual difference
-of statement in different authorities. Sometimes there
-is a difference in the reckoning of the year. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">{iii}</a></span>
-instance, In what year was Calais lost to England?
-We should say 1558. A writer at the time would say
-1557. Then again there is no slip of either pen or
-press so easy as putting a wrong figure, and, except in
-the case of great and obvious dates, or again when the
-mistake is very far wrong indeed, there is no slip of pen
-or press so likely to be passed by in revision. And again
-there is often room for question as to the date which
-should be marked. In recording a transfer of territory
-from one power to another, what should be the date
-given? The actual military occupation and the formal
-diplomatic cession are often several years apart. Which
-of these dates should be chosen? I have found it hard
-to follow any fixed rule in such matters. Sometimes
-the military occupation seems the most important point,
-sometimes the diplomatic cession. I believe that in
-each case where a question of this sort might arise, I
-could give a reason for the date which has been chosen;
-but here there has been no room to enter into discussions.
-I can only say that I shall be deeply thankful
-to any one who will point out to me any mistakes or
-seeming mistakes in these or any other matters.</p>
-
-<p>The maps have been a matter of great difficulty.
-I somewhat regret that it has been found needful to
-bind them separately from the text, because this looks
-as if they made some pretensions to the character of
-an historical atlas. To this they lay no claim. They
-are meant simply to illustrate the text, and in no way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">{iv}</a></span>
-enter into competition either with such an elaborate
-collection as that of Spruner-Menke, or even with
-collections much less elaborate than that. Those maps
-are meant to be companions in studying the history of the
-several periods. Mine do not pretend to do more than
-to illustrate changes of boundary in a general way. It
-was found, as the work went on, that it was better on
-the whole to increase the number of maps, even at the
-expense of making each map smaller. There are disadvantages
-both ways. In the maps of South-Eastern
-Europe, for instance, it was found impossible to show
-the small states which arose in Greece after the Latin
-conquest at all clearly. But this evil seemed to be
-counterbalanced by giving as many pictures as might be
-of the shifting frontier of the Eastern Empire towards
-the Bulgarian, the Frank, and the Ottoman.</p>
-
-<p>In one or two instances I have taken some small
-liberties with my dates. Thus, for instance, the map of
-the greatest extent of the Saracen dominion shows all
-the countries which were at any time under the Saracen
-power. But there was no one moment when the
-Saracen power took in the whole extent shown in the
-map. Sind and Septimania were lost before Crete and
-Sicily were won. But such a view as I have given
-seemed on the whole more instructive than it would
-have been to substitute two or three maps showing the
-various losses and gains at a few years’ distance from
-one another.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">{v}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have to thank a crowd of friends, including some
-whom I have never seen, for many hints, and for much
-help given in various ways. Such are Professor Pauli
-of Göttingen, Professor Steenstrup of Copenhagen,
-Professor Romanos of Corfu, M. J.-B. Galiffe of
-Geneva, Dr. Paul Turner of Budapest, Professor A. W.
-Ward of Manchester, the Rev. H. F. Tozer, Mr.
-Ralston, Mr. Morfill, Mrs. Humphry Ward, and my
-son-in-law Arthur John Evans, whose praise is in all
-South-Slavonic lands.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="smcap ml2">Somerleaze, Wells:</span><br />
-<span class="ml4"><i>December 16, 1880.</i></span>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">{vi}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</a></h2>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER I.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">INTRODUCTION.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right" class="td_page_col">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Definition of Historical Geography</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Its relation to kindred studies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1-2</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Distinction between geographical and political names</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_3">3-5</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>Geographical Aspect of Europe.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Boundaries of Europe and Asia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_5">5-6</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">General geography of the two continents—the great peninsulas</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_6">6-7</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>Effects of Geography on History.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beginnings of history in the southern peninsulas—characteristics
-of Greece and Italy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_7">7-8</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance and extent of the Roman dominion; the Mediterranean lands, Gaul, and Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_8">8-9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the geographical position of Germany, France,
-Spain, Scandinavia, Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_9">9-10</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effect of geographical position on the colonizing powers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Joint working of geographical position and national character</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>Geographical Distribution of Races.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Europe an Aryan continent—non-Aryan remnants and
-latter settlements</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fins and Basques</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Order of Aryan settlements; Greeks and Italians</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Celts, Teutons, Slaves, Lithuanians</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_14">14-15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Displacement and assimilation among the Aryan races</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Intrusion of non-Aryans; Saracens</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turanian intrusions; Bulgarians; Magyars; Ottomans;
-differences in their history</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_17">17</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">{vii}</a></span></td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER II.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">GREECE AND THE GREEK COLONIES.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Eastern or Greek Peninsula.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Geographical and historical characteristics of the Eastern,
-Greek, or Byzantine peninsula</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_18">18-19</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Its chief divisions; Thrace and Illyria; their relations to
-Greece</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_19">19-20</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greece Proper and its peninsulas</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_20">20-21</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peloponnêsos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>Insular and Asiatic Greece.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of <i>Continuous Hellas</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Asiatic Greece</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_22">22-23</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>Ethnology of the Eastern Peninsula.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Greeks and the kindred races</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Illyrians, Albanians, or Skipetar</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Inhabitants of Epeiros, Macedonia, Sicily, and Italy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Pelasgians</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_24">24-25</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Greek Nation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>Earliest Geography of Greece and the Neighbouring Lands.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Homeric Greece: its extent and tribal divisions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_25">25-27</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the name <i>Epeiros</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The cities: their groupings unlike those of later times;
-supremacy of Mykênê</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of Greek colonization in Homeric times</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Asiatic catalogue</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Probable kindred of all the neighbouring nations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Phœnician and Greek settlements in the islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>Change from Homeric to Historic Greece.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Changes in Peloponnêsos; Dorian and Aitolian settlements</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Later divisions of Peloponnêsos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_29">29-30</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Change in Northern Greece; Thessaly</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Akarnania and the Corinthian colonies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Foundation and destruction of cities</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>The Greek Colonies.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Ægæan and Asiatic colonies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32-33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Early greatness of the Asiatic cities; Milêtos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">{viii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Their submission to Lydians and Persians</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32-33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Thracian colonies; abiding greatness of Thessalonikê
-and Byzantion</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">More distant colonies; Sicily, Italy, Dalmatia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_33">33-34</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Parts of the Mediterranean not colonized by the Greeks;
-Phœnician settlements; struggles in Sicily and
-Cyprus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_34">34-35</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greek colonies in Africa, Gaul, and Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Colonies on the Euxine; abiding greatness of Cherson and
-Trebizond</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beginning of the artificial Greek nation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 7. <i>Growth of Macedonia and Epeiros.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of Macedonia; Philip; Alexander and the Successors;
-effects of their conquests</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Epeiros under Pyrrhos; Athamania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Macedonian kingdoms; Egypt; Syria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Independent states in Asia; Pergamos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Asiatic states; advance of Greek culture</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Free cities; Hêrakleia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Sinôpê; Bosporos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 8. <i>Later Geography of Independent Greece.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Confederations; Achaia, Aitolia; smaller confederations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Macedonian possessions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First Roman possessions east of the Hadriatic</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Progress of Roman conquest in Macedonia and Greece</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Special character of Greek history</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER III.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">FORMATION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Meanings of the name Italy; its extent under the Roman
-commonwealth</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Characteristics of the Italian peninsula; the great islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Inhabitants of Italy and Sicily.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Ligurians and Etruscans</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Italian nations; Latins and Oscans</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_45">45-46</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Other nations; Iapygians; Gauls; Veneti; use of the name
-<i>Venetia</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_46">46-47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greek colonies in Italy; Kymê and Ankôn</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The southern colonies; their history</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_47">47-48</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">{ix}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Inhabitants of Sicily; Sikanians and Sikels</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Phœnician and Greek settlements; rivalry of Aryan and
-Semitic powers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_48">48-49</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>Growth of the Roman Power in Italy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Gradual conquest of Italy; different positions of the Italian
-states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Origin of Rome; its Latin element dominant</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_49">49-50</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Early Latin dominion of Rome</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Veii; more distant wars</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Incorporation of the Italian states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_50">50-51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Western Provinces.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Nature of the Roman provinces</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Eastern and Western provinces</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First Roman possessions in Sicily; conquest of Syracuse</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">State of Sicily; its Greek civilization</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Sardinia and Corsica</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_53">53-54</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cisalpine Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_54">54-55</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Liguria; Venetia; Istria; foundation of Aquileia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Spain; its inhabitants; Iberians; Celts; Greek and Phœnician
-colonies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_55">55-56</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest and Romanization of Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_56">56-57</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Transalpine Gaul; the Province</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Cæsar; threefold division of Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_57">57-58</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Boundaries of Gaul purely geographical; survival of nomenclature</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_57">57-58</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Roman Africa; restoration of Carthage</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_58">58-60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>The Eastern Provinces.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Contrast between the Eastern and Western provinces; Greek
-civilization in the East</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Distinctions among the Eastern provinces; boundary of
-Tauros</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_60">60-61</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Illyrian provinces; kingdom of Skodra; conquest of
-Dalmatia and Istria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_62">62-63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The outlying Greek lands: Crete, Cyprus, Kyrênê</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Asiatic provinces; province of Asia; Mithridatic War;
-independence of Lykia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Syria; Palestine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rome and Parthia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Egypt; the Roman Peace</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_66">66</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">{x}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>Conquests under the Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests from Augustus to Nero; incorporation of vassal
-kingdoms</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_66">66-67</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Attempted conquest of Germany; frontiers of Rhine and
-Danube; conquests on the Danube</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_67">67-68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Attempt on Arabia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of Thrace and Byzantion</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Britain; the wall</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Trajan; his Asiatic conquests surrendered by
-Hadrian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Arabia Petræa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dacia; change of the name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_70">70-71</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Roman, Greek, and Oriental parts of the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER IV.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE DISMEMBERMENT OF THE EMPIRE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Later Geography of the Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Changes under the Empire; loss of old divisions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New divisions of Italy under Augustus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of the Empire under Diocletian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74-75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The four Prætorian Prefectures</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Prefecture of the East; its character</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75-76</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Its dioceses; the East; Egypt, Asia, Pontos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Diocese of Thrace; provinces of Scythia and Europa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76-77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Great cities of the Eastern prefecture</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Prefecture of Illyricum; position of Greece</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_77">77-78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dioceses of Macedonia and Dacia; province of Achaia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Prefecture of Italy; its extent</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dioceses of Italy, Illyricum, and Africa; greatness of Carthage</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Prefecture of Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Diocese of Spain; its African territory</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dioceses of Gaul and Britain; province of Valentia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79-80</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Division of the Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Change in the position of Rome</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of the Empire, <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;395</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rivalry with Parthia and Persia inherited by the Eastern
-Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_81">81-82</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Teutonic invasions; no Teutonic settlements in the East</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_82">82-83</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">{xi}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Teutonic Settlements within the Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Wandering of the Nations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New nomenclature of the Teutonic nations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83-84</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Warfare on the Rhine and Danube; Roman outposts beyond
-the rivers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Teutonic confederations; Marcomanni; Quadi</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_84">84-85</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Franks, Alemans, Saxons; Germans within the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_85">85-86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beginning of national kingdoms</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of the Western provinces of Rome</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlements within the Empire by land and by sea</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Franks, Burgundians, Goths, Vandals</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_87">87-88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Early history of the Goths</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_88">88-89</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The West-Gothic kingdom in Gaul and Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_89">89-90</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Alans, Suevi, Vandals; the Vandals in Africa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_89">89-90</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Franks; use of the name <i>Francia</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Alemans, Thuringians; Low-Dutch tribes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Frankish dominions; Roman Germany Teutonized
-afresh; peculiar position of the Franks</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_91">91-93</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Celtic remnant in Armorica or Britanny</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Burgundians; various uses of the name <i>Burgundy</i>;
-separate history of Provence</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_93">93-94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Inroads of the Huns; battle of Châlons; origin of Venice</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Nominal reunion of the Empire in 476</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Reigns of Odoacer and Theodoric</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_94">94-95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>Settlement of the English in Britain.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Withdrawal of the Roman troops from Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Special character of the English Conquest of Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Low-Dutch settlers, Angles, Saxons, Jutes; origin of
-the name <i>English</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Welsh and Scots</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The Eastern Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of the two Empires; no Teutonic settlements
-in the Eastern</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Tetraxite Goths</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rivalry with Parthia continued under the revived Persian
-kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98-99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Position of Armenia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Momentary conquests of Trajan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Marcus, Severus, and Diocletian; cessions of
-Jovian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of Armenia; Hundred Years’ Peace</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Summary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101-102</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">{xii}</a></span></td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER V.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE FINAL DIVISION OF THE EMPIRE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Reunion of the Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Continued existence of the Empire; position of the Teutonic
-kings</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the Empire at the accession of Justinian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Justinian; their effects</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_104">104-106</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Provence ceded to the Franks</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>Settlement of the Lombards in Italy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Early history of the Lombards; Gepidæ, Avars</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_106">106-107</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Possibility of Teutonic powers on the Danube</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lombard conquest of Italy; its partial nature; territory
-kept by the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_107">107-108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>Rise of the Saracens.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of the Spanish province by the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Wars of Chosroes and Heraclius</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extension of Roman power on the Euxine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_109">109-110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relation of the Arabs to Rome and Persia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of the Arabs under Mahomet; renewed Aryan and
-Semitic strife</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of the Eastern and African provinces of Rome</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Saracen conquest of Persia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Spain; Saracen province in Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_111">111-112</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the Saracen conquests; distinction between the
-Latin, Greek, and Eastern provinces</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatest extent of Saracen provinces</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of Septimania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>Settlements of the Slavonic Nations.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Movements of the Slaves; Avars, Magyars, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_113">113-114</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Geographical separation of the Slaves</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Analogy between Teutons and Slaves</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Slavonic settlements under Heraclius; the Dalmatian cities;
-displacement of the Illyrians</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Slavonic settlements in Greece</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_115">115-116</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlement of the Bulgarians</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Curtailment of the Empire; moral influence of Constantinople</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116-117</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">{xiii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The Transfer of the Western Empire to the Franks.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of the Franks in Germany and Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_117">117-119</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Their position in Germany, Northern Gaul, and Southern
-Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_119">119-120</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of the Frankish dominion; Austria and Neustria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_120">120-121</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the name <i>Francia</i>; Teutonic and Latin <i>Francia</i>;
-modern forms of the name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Karlings; their conquests; German character of their
-power</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_121">121-122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The great powers of the eighth century: Romans, Franks,
-Saracens</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Character of the Caliphate; its divisions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations between the Franks and the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lombard conquest of the Exarchate</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of the Lombards by Charles the Great; he holds
-Lombardy as a separate kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">His Roman title of Patrician</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_123">123-124</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of his Imperial coronation; final division of the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The two Empires become severally German and Greek; their
-separation and rivalry</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_124">124-125</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The two Empires and the two Caliphates</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_125">125-126</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the Carolingian Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Saxony; dealings with Scandinavia; frontier of
-the Eider</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_126">126-127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations with the Slaves; overthrow of the Avars</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Spanish March</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Divisions of the Empire; kingdoms of Aquitaine and
-Italy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the names <i>Francia</i>, <i>Gallia</i>, <i>Germania</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>Northern Europe.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lands beyond the Empire: Scandinavia and Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Stages of English Conquest in Britain; Teutonic and Celtic
-states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_129">129-130</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Supremacy of Wessex</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Denmark; Norway; Sweden</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_130">130-131</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Different directions of the Scandinavian settlements</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Summary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_131">131-133</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Religious changes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Note on the Slavonic settlements</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_133">133</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">{xiv}</a></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER VI.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE BEGINNING OF THE MODERN EUROPEAN STATES.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Division of the Frankish Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the Frankish power; origin of the states of
-modern Europe</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdoms of Italy and Aquitaine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of 817</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Neustria and Aquitaine; first glimpses of modern
-France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of Verdun; Eastern and Western <i>Francia</i>; <i>Lotharingia</i>;
-the Western Kingdom or Karolingia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Middle Kingdom or <i>Burgundy</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union under Charles the Fat; division on his deposition</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">No formal titles used; various names for the German
-Kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Connexion between the German Kingdom and the Roman
-Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the German Kingdom; its duchies and <i>marks</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_139">139-140</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lotharingia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_140">140-141</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the Western Kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_141">141</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Its great fiefs; Aquitaine; France; Normandy cut off from
-France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Origin of the French kingdom and nation; union of the
-duchy of France with the Western kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_143">143</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New use of the word <i>France</i>; title of <i>Rex Francorum</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_143">143-144</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Paris the kernel of France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Various uses of the name <i>Burgundy</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The French Duchy; the Middle Kingdom; Transjurane
-and Cisjurane Burgundy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_144">144-145</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Great cities of the Burgundian kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Separation of Burgundy from the Frankish kingdom; its
-union with Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_145">145-146</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Its later history; mainly swallowed up by France, but
-partly represented by Switzerland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Italy; its extent; separate principalities</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_146">146-147</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Italy represents the Lombard kingdom; Milan its capital</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Abeyance of the Western Empire; its restoration by Otto
-the Great; the three Imperial kingdoms</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_147">147-148</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rivalry between France and the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_148">148</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">{xv}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Eastern Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rivalry of the Eastern and Western Empires and Churches;
-Greek character of the Eastern Empire; fluctuations in
-its extent</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The <i>Themes</i>; Asiatic Themes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_149">149-151</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The European Themes; Hellas; Lombardy; Sicily</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_151">151-152</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Older Greek names supplanted by new ones</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Character of the European and Asiatic dominion of the Empire;
-its supremacy by sea</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses and gains; Crete; Sicily; Italy; Dalmatia; Greece;
-Syria; Bulgaria; Cherson</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_152">152-153</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatness of the Empire under Basil the Second</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>Origin of the Spanish Kingdoms.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Special position of Spain; the Saracen conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_153">153-154</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of the Christian states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_154">154-155</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Castile; Aragon; Portugal</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the Western Caliphate</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>Origin of the Slavonic States.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Slavonic and Turanian invasions of the Eastern Empire;
-Bulgarians; Magyars; Great Moravia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_156">156-157</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Special character of the Hungarian kingdom; effects of its
-religious connexion with the West</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Northern and Southern Slaves split asunder by the
-Magyars</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The South-eastern Slaves</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The North-western Slaves; Bohemia; Poland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Special position of Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>Northern Europe.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Scandinavian settlements</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159-160</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of the kingdom of England</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Danish invasions; division between Ælfred and Guthrum;
-Bernicia; Cumberland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second West-Saxon advance; Wessex grows into England;
-submission of Scotland and Strathclyde; Cumberland
-and Lothian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the Imperial titles by the English kings; Northern
-Empire of Cnut; England finally united by the Norman
-Conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_162">162-163</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Summary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_163">163-165</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">{xvi}</a></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER VII.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE ECCLESIASTICAL GEOGRAPHY OF WESTERN EUROPE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Permanence of ecclesiastical divisions; they preserve earlier
-divisions; case of Lyons and Rheims</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_166">166-167</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Patriarchates, Provinces, Dioceses</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bishoprics within and without the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_167">167-168</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Great Patriarchates.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Patriarchates suggested by the Prefectures</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_168">168</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rome, Constantinople, Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_168">168-169</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Later Patriarchates</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_169">169-170</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Italy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Great numbers and smaller importance of the Italian
-bishoprics</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rivals of Rome; Milan, Aquileia, Ravenna</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The immediate Roman province; other metropolitan sees</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171-172</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Gaul and Germany.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Gaulish and German dioceses</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Provinces of Southern Gaul; position of Lyons</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_172">172-173</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New metropolitan sees; Toulouse, Alby, Avignon, Paris;
-comparison of civil and ecclesiastical divisions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Provinces of Northern Gaul and Germany; history of Mainz</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_178">178-179</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The archiepiscopal electors; other German provinces; Salzburg,
-Bremen, Magdeburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_176">176-177</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Modern arrangements in France, Germany, and the Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Spain.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peculiarities of Spanish ecclesiastical geography; effects of
-the Saracen conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Gothic and later dioceses; neglect of the Pyrenæan barrier</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_178">178-179</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of the British Islands.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Analogy between Britain and Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tribal nature of the Celtic episcopate</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_179">179-180</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Scheme of Gregory the Great; the two English provinces;
-relation of Scotland to York</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_180">180-181</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">{xvii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Foundation of the English sees; territorial bishoprics</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Canterbury and its suffragan; effects of the Norman Conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_181">181-182</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Province of York; Scotland and Ireland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_182">182-183</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Northern and Eastern Europe.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Scandinavian provinces; Lund, Upsala, Trondhjem</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Poland and neighbouring lands; Gnezna, Riga, Leopol</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_184">184-185</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Provinces of Hungary and Dalmatia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER VIII.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE IMPERIAL KINGDOMS.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The German Kingdom; its relation to the Western Empire;
-falling off of Italy and Burgundy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_188">188-190</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of territory by the German kingdom; its extension to
-the north-east</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_190">190-191</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Geographical contrast of the earlier and the later Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Kingdom of Germany.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Changes of boundaries and nomenclature in Germany;
-Saxony; Bavaria; Austria; Burgundy; Prussia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_191">191-192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the Kingdom; fluctuations of its western boundary;
-Lorraine; Elsass; the left bank of the Rhine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192-194</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fluctuations on the Burgundian frontier; union of Burgundy
-with the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Frontier of Germany and Italy; union of the crowns</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Northern and eastern advance of the Empire; the <i>marks</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Hungarian frontier; marks of Austria, Carinthia, and Carniola</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Danish frontier; Danish mark; boundary of the Eider</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Slavonic frontier</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Saxon mark; Slavonic princes of Mecklenburg,
-Lübeck; the Hansa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_198">198-199</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Marks of Brandenburg, Lausitz, and Meissen</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bohemia and Moravia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Polish frontier; Pomerania, Silesia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Germanization of the Slavonic lands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_200">200-201</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Internal geography; growth of the principalities</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of the marchlands; Brandenburg or Prussia, and
-Austria; analogies elsewhere</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Decline of the duchies; end of the <i>Gauverfassung</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_202">202</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">{xviii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of the House of Austria; separation of Switzerland
-and the Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Circles</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Powers holding lands within and without the Empire;
-Austria; Sweden; Brandenburg and Prussia; Hannover
-and Great Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_203">203-204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dissolution of the kingdom; the Confederation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatness of Prussia and Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The new Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Germany under the Saxon and Frankish kings; vanishing
-of Francia; analogy of Wessex</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_205">205-206</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Changes in the twelfth century; beginning of Brandenburg
-and Austria; the duchies and the circles</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_206">206-207</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duchy of Saxony; its divisions and growth</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the duchy; Westfalia; the new Saxony</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duchy of Brunswick; electorate and kingdom of Hannover</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The new Saxony; Lauenburg; the Saxon Electorate</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_208">208-209</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The North Mark of Saxony or Mark of Brandenburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">House of Hohenzollern; union of Brandenburg and Prussia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advances in Pomerania, Westfalia, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">German character of the Prussian state; its contrast with
-Austria; use of the name <i>Prussia</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_210">210-211</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Silesia; Polish acquisitions of Prussia; East
-Friesland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_211">211-212</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Saxon Possessions of Denmark and Sweden</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_212">212-213</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Free cities of Saxony; the Hansa; the cities and the
-bishoprics</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_213">213-214</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duchy of <i>Francia</i>; held by the bishops of Würzburg; the
-Franconian circle</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Rhenish circles; Hessen; Bamberg; Nürnberg; the
-ecclesiastical states on the Rhine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_214">214-215</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Palatinate of the Rhine; Upper Palatinate</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bavaria; its relations towards the Palatinate and towards
-Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Archbishopric of Salzburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lotharingia; falling off from the Empire; the later Lorraine
-and Elsass</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Swabia; ecclesiastical powers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Swabian lands of the Confederates</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Baden and Württemberg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Circle of Austria; house of Habsburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of its German lands; Tyrol; Elsass; loss of Swabian
-lands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bohemia and its dependencies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_217">217</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">{xix}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Trent and Brixen</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Circle of Burgundy; not purely German; its origin</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Confederation and Empire of Germany.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Germany changes from a kingdom to a confederation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The <i>Bund</i>; the new Confederation and Empire; the Empire
-still federal</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Wars of the French Revolution; loss of the left bank of the
-Rhine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Suppression of free cities and ecclesiastical states; new
-electorates</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peace of Pressburg; new kingdoms; cessions made by Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Title of ‘Emperor of Austria;’ Confederation of the Rhine;
-end of the Western Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">German territories of Denmark and Sweden</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_221">221-222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses of Prussia and Austria; French annexations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdoms of Saxony and Westfalia; Grand duchy of
-Frankfurt</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Germany wiped out of the map</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses of Prussia; Danzig; duchy of Warsaw</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_222">222-223</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The German Confederation; princes holding lands within
-and without the Confederation; kingdom of Hanover</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Increase of Prussian territory; dismemberment of Saxony</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lands recovered by Austria; German possessions of Denmark
-and the Netherlands; Sweden withdraws from
-Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_224">224-225</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of Prussia and Austria; Hannover</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdoms of Bavaria, Saxony, Württemberg; other German
-states; the free cities; Lüttich passes to Belgium</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_226">226-227</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Revival of German national life</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Affairs of Luxemburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228-229</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">War of Sleswick and Holstein; the duchies ceded to
-Austria and Prussia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">War of 1866; North German Confederation; exclusion of
-Austria; great advance of Prussia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228-229</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">War with France; the new German Empire; recovery of
-Elsass-Lothringen</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_229">229-230</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of the old kingdom and the new Empire; name
-of <i>Prussia</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_230">230-231</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Kingdom of Italy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Small geographical importance of the kingdom; changes on
-the Alpine frontier</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_231">231-232</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Case of Trieste</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_233">233</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">{xx}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Apulia, Sicily, Venice, no part of the kingdom; their relation
-to the Eastern Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_233">233-234</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Special history of the house of Savoy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the kingdom; Neustria and Austria; Æmilia,
-Tuscany; Romagna</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_234">234-235</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lombardy proper; the marches</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of Germany and Italy; the commonwealths, the
-tyrants, the Popes; four stages of Italian history</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235-236</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Northern Italy; the Marquesses of Montferrat; the Lombard
-cities; the Veronese march</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_236">236-238</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Central Italy; Romagna and the march of Ancona; the
-Tuscan commonwealths; Pisa and Genoa; Rome and
-the Popes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_238">238-239</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The tyrannies; Spanish dominion: practical abeyance of the
-Empire in Italy; Imperial and Papal fiefs</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_239">239-240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Palaiologoi at Montferrat; house of Visconti at Milan; the
-duchy of Milan; its dismemberment; duchy of Parma
-and Piacenza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_240">240-242</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Land power of Venice</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_242">242-243</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Other principalities; duchy of Mantua, of Ferrara and
-Modena; difference in their tenure</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_243">243-244</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Romagna; Bologna; Urbino; advance of the Popes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_244">244</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Tuscan cities; Lucca; rivalry of Pisa and Genoa; Siena;
-Florence</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_245">245</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duchy of Florence; grand duchy of Tuscany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_246">246</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>The Later Geography of Italy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The kingdom practically forgotten; position of Charles the
-Fifth</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_246">246</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Italy a geographical expression; changes in the Italian
-states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_246">246-247</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dominion of the two branches of the house of Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Italy mapped into larger states; exceptions at Monaco and
-San Marino</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Venice; Milan Spanish and Austrian; its dismemberment
-in favour of Savoy; end of Montferrat and Mantua</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_248">248-249</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Parma and Piacenza; separation of Modena and Ferrara;
-Genoa and Lucca; Grand Duchy of Tuscany; advance
-of the Popes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Norman kingdom of Sicily; Benevento</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Two Sicilies; their various unions and divisions;
-their relations to the houses of Austria, Savoy and
-Bourbon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_250">250-251</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the name <i>Sardinia</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_251">251</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">{xxi}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Wars of the French Revolution; the new republics; Treaty
-of Campo Formio; Piedmont joined to France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_251">251-253</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Restoration of the Pope and the King of the Two Sicilies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The French kingdoms; Etruria; Italy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Various annexations; Rome becomes French; Murat King
-of Naples</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_253">253-254</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Italy under French dominion; revival of the Italian name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_254">254-255</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlement of 1814-1815; the princes restored, but not the
-commonwealths</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Austrian kingdom of Lombardy and Venice; Genoa annexed
-by Piedmont</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_255">255-256</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The smaller states; the Papal states; Kingdom of the Two
-Sicilies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Italy comes from Piedmont; earlier movements;
-war of 1859; Kingdom of Italy: Savoy and Nizza
-ceded to France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_257">257-258</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Recovery of Venetia and Rome; parts of the kingdom not
-recovered</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Freedom of San Marino</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The Kingdom of Burgundy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Burgundy with Germany; dying out of the kingdom;
-chiefly swallowed up by France, but represented
-by Switzerland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_258">258-259</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Boundaries of the kingdom; fluctuation; Romance tongue
-prevails in it</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of the Burgundian Palatinate; Besançon; Montbeliard</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Lesser Burgundy; partly German</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Dukes of Zähringen; the ecclesiastical states; the free
-cities; the free lands; growth of the Old League of
-High Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of Savoy; Burgundian possessions of its counts</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">States between the Palatinate and the Mediterranean; Bresse
-and Bugey; principalities and free cities</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">County of Provence; its connexion with France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_263">263-264</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Progress of French annexation: 1310-1791: Lyons; the
-Dauphiny: Vienne; Valence; Provence; Avignon and
-Venaissin</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_264">264-265</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Nizza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of Orange</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_265">265-266</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">States which have split off from the Imperial kingdoms:
-Switzerland; Savoy; the duchy of Burgundy by Belgium
-and the Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_266">266-267</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">{xxii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Austrian power; its position as a marchland; its union
-with Hungary; its relation to Eastern Europe</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_267">267-268</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>The Swiss Confederation.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">German origin of the Confederation; popular errors; sketch
-of Swiss history</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_268">268-270</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Three Lands; the cities: Luzern, Zürich, Bern; the
-Eight Ancient Cantons</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Allies and subjects; dominion of Zürich and Bern; conquests
-from Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_270">270-271</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Italian conquests; first conquests from Savoy; League of
-Wallis</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_271">271-272</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Thirteen Cantons</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">League of Graubünden; further Italian and Savoyard conquests</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_272">272-273</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of Geneva; territory restored to Savoy; division of
-Gruyères</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_273">273-274</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Allied States; Neufchâtel; Constanz</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Confederation independent of the Empire; its position
-as a middle state</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_274">274-275</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Wars of the French Revolution; Helvetic Republic; freedom
-of the subject lands; annexations to France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_275">275-276</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Act of Mediation; the nineteen cantons</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The present Swiss Confederation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of Neufchâtel</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 7. <i>The State of Savoy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Position and growth of Savoy; three divisions of the Savoyard
-lands; popular confusions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_277">277-278</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Savoyard power originally Burgundian; Maurienne;
-Aosta</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First Italian possessions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Burgundian advance; lands north of the lake</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_280">280-281</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations to Geneva, France, and Bern</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_281">281-282</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Acquisition of Nizza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_282">282</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Italian advance of Savoy; principally of Achaia, of Piedmont;
-Saluzzo</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_283">283-284</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Savoy a middle state</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French influence and occupation; decline of Savoy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_285">285</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of lands north of the lake; further losses to Bern and
-her allies; recovery of the lands south of the lake;
-the Savoyard power becomes mainly Italian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Savoy falls back in Burgundy and advances in Italy; history
-of Saluzzo; finally acquired in exchange for Bresse, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_287">287</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">{xxiii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duchy of Savoy annexed to France; restored; annexed again</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French annexation of Nizza; Aosta the one Burgundian
-remnant</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Savoyard advance in Italy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 8. <i>The Duchy of Burgundy and the Low Countries.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Position of the Valois dukes as a middle power; result of
-their twofold vassalage</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_290">290</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Schemes of a Burgundian kingdom; their final effects;
-Belgium and the Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_290">290-291</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of the duchy of Burgundy; its union with Flanders,
-Artois, and the county of Burgundy; relations to France
-and the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_292">292-293</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Netherlands; the counts of Flanders; their Imperial fiefs</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Holland and Friesland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Brabant; Hainault; union of Holland and Hainault</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_294">294</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Common points in all these states; the great cities; Romance
-and Teutonic dialects</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_294">294-295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">South-western states; Liége; Luxemburg; Limburg; duchy
-of Geldern</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Middle position of these states; French influence; union
-under the Burgundian dukes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_296">296</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance under Philip the Good; Namur, Brabant, and
-Limburg, Holland and Hainault</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_296">296-297</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The towns on the Somme; Flanders and Artois released
-from homage</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_297">297-298</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Philip’s last acquisition of Luxemburg; advance under
-Charles the Bold and Charles the Fifth; union of the
-Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_298">298</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Netherlands pass to Spain; war of independence; its
-imperfect results</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_299">299</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Seven United Provinces; their independence of the
-Empire; their colonies; lack of a name; use of the
-word <i>Dutch</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_299">299-300</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Spanish Netherlands; English possession of Dunkirk;
-advance of France; the Spanish Netherlands pass to
-Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_301">301</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation by France; kingdom of Holland; all the Burgundian
-possessions French</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of the Netherlands; Liége incorporated; relation
-of Luxemburg to Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of the Netherlands and Belgium; separation of
-Luxemburg from Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">General history and result of the Burgundian power</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_303">303-304</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">{xxiv}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 9. <i>The Dominions of Austria.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Origin of the name <i>Austria</i>; anomalous position of the
-Austrian power; the so-called ‘Empire’ of Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_305">305-307</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The <i>Eastern Mark</i>; becomes a duchy; division of Carinthia;
-union of Austria and Styria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_307">307-308</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">County of Görz</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_309">309</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Austria, &amp;c., annexed by Bohemia; great power of Ottokar</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_309">309</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">House of Habsburg; their Swabian and Alsatian lands;
-their loss</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_309">309-311</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">King Rudolf; break-up of the power of Ottokar; Albert
-duke of Austria and Styria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_310">310</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations between Austria and the Empire; division of the
-Austrian dominions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_311">311-312</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Acquisition of Carinthia and Tyrol; commendation of
-Trieste; loss of Thurgau</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_312">312-313</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Austrian kings and emperors; possessions beyond the
-Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_313">313-315</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union with Bohemia and Hungary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_314">314-317</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Consequences of the union with Hungary; slow recovery
-of the kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Acquisition of Görz; advance towards Italy; Austrian
-dominion and influence in Italy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_318">318</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Connexion of Austria and Burgundy; the Austrian Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_318">318-319</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of Elsass; of Silesia; acquisition of Poland;
-Dalmatia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Position and dominions of Maria Theresa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_320">320-321</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New use of the name <i>Austria</i>; the Austrian ‘Empire’
-in 1811</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_321">321-322</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Misuse of the Illyrian name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_322">322</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Austria in 1814-1815; recovery of Dalmatia; annexation
-of Ragusa; of Cracow</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_322">322-323</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Separation from Hungary; reconquest; the ‘Austro-Hungarian
-Monarchy;’ Bosnia, Herzegovina, Spizza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_323">323-324</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER IX.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE KINGDOM OF FRANCE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Origin and growth of France; comparison with Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">How far Karolingia split off from the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_326">326</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">France a nation as well as a power</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_326">326-327</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the name of <i>France</i>; its dukes acquire the western
-kingdom; extent of their dominion</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_327">327-328</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">{xxv}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Two forms of annexation; first, of fiefs of the crown;
-secondly, of lands beyond the kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_328">328</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Distinctions among the fiefs; the great vassals; Normandy;
-Britanny</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_328">328</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Twelve Peers; different position of the bishops in Germany
-and Karolingia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_328">328-329</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>Incorporation of the Vassal States.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The duchy of France in 987; the King cut off from the sea</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_329">329-330</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The neighbouring states; position of the Parisian kings</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_330">330</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The kings less powerful than the dukes; advantages of their
-kingship; first advances of the kings</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_331">331</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The House of Anjou; gradual union of Normandy, Anjou,
-Maine, Aquitaine, and Gascony</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_331">331-333</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Acquisition of continental Normandy, Anjou, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_333">333-334</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The English kings keep Aquitaine and insular Normandy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Sudden greatness of France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fiefs of Aragon in Southern Gaul; counts of Toulouse and
-Barcelona</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_334">334-335</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the Albigensian war; French annexations;
-Roussillon and Barcelona freed from homage</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_335">335</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Languedoc</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_335">335</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Other annexations of Saint Lewis</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_335">335-336</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of Champagne; temporary possession of Navarre</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_336">336-337</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Hundred Years’ War; relations between France and
-Aquitaine; momentary possession of Aquitaine by
-Philip the Fair</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_337">337</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peace of Bretigny; Aquitaine and other lands freed from
-homage</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_337">337-338</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peace of Troyes; momentary union of the French and
-English crowns</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_338">338</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Final annexation of Aquitaine; beginning of the modern
-French kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_338">338-339</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growths of the Dukes of Burgundy; the towns on the Somme;
-momentary annexation of Artois and the County of
-Burgundy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_339">339-340</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of the duchy of Burgundy; Flanders and Artois
-released from homage; analogy with Aquitaine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_340">340-343</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>Foreign Annexations of France.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations between France and England; Boulogne; Dunkirk</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_341">341-342</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">{xxvi}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations between France and Spain; Roussillon; Navarre;
-Andorra</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_342">342-343</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance at the cost of the Imperial kingdoms, first Burgundy,
-then Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_343">343</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effect of the Burgundian conquests of France; relations with
-Savoy and Switzerland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of the <i>Langue d’oc</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French dominion in Italy; slight extent of real annexation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_345">345-346</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French annexations from Germany; the Three Bishoprics;
-effect of isolated conquests</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_346">346</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French acquisitions in Elsass; France reaches and passes the
-Rhine; increased isolation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_347">347-348</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Temporary annexation of Bar; annexation of Roussillon;
-advance in the Netherlands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_348">348-349</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of Franche Comté and Besançon; seizure of
-Strassburg; annexation of Orange</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_349">349-350</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of Lorraine; thorough incorporation of French
-conquests; effect of geographical continuity</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_350">350-351</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Purchase of Corsica; its effects; birth of Buonaparte</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_351">351-352</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Colonial Dominion of France.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French colonies in North America; Acadia; Canada;
-Louisiana</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_352">352</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Colonial rivalry of France and England; English conquest
-of Canada</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_353">353</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">French West India Islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_353">353</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The French power in India; Bourbon and Mauritius</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_353">353-354</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>Acquisitions of France during the Revolutionary Wars.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Distinction between the Republican and ‘Imperial’ Conquests</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_355">355-356</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First class of annexations; Avignon, Mülhausen, Montbeliard;
-Geneva; bishopric of Basel</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_355">355</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second zone; traditions of Gaul and the Rhine; Netherlands;
-Savoy, &amp;c.; feelings of Buonaparte towards Switzerland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_355">355-356</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Character of Buonaparte’s conquests; dependent and incorporated
-lands; division of Europe between France and
-Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_356">356-357</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The French power in 1811</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_357">357-358</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Arrangements of 1814-1815</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_358">358-359</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Later changes; annexation of Savoy, Nizza, and Mentone;
-loss of Elsass and Lorraine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_359">359</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvii" id="Page_xxvii">{xxvii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses among the colonies; independence of Hayti; sale of
-Louisiana</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_359">359-360</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Algeria; character of African conquests</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_360">360</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER X.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE EASTERN EMPIRE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of the Eastern and Western Empires; the Western
-falls to pieces from within; the Eastern is broken to
-pieces from without</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_362">362-363</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tendencies to separation in the Eastern Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_363">363</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Closer connexion of the East with the elder Empire; retention
-of the Roman name; <i>Romania</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_363">363-364</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Importance of the distinction of races in the East</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The original races; Albanians, Greeks, Vlachs</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Slavonic settlers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turanian invasions from the North; Bulgarians, Magyars, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_365">365</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Saracens</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_365">365</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Seljuk and Ottoman Turks; comparison of Bulgarians,
-Magyars, and Ottomans</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_365">365</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Eastern Empire became nearly conterminous with the
-Greek nation; reappearance of the other original races</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_366">366</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Latin Conquest, and the revived Byzantine Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_366">366-367</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">States which arose out of the Empire or on its borders;
-Sicily; Venice; Bulgaria; Hungary; Asiatic powers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_367">367-368</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Distinction between conquest and settlement</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_368">368</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>Changes in the Frontier of the Empire.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Power of revival in the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_369">369</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Western possessions of the Empire; losses in the islands;
-advance in the mainland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_369">369</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of Sardinia; gradual loss and temporary partial recovery
-of Sicily</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_369">369-370</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fluctuations of the Imperial power in Italy; the Normans</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_370">370-371</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss and recovery of Crete and Cyprus; separation of
-Cyprus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_371">371-372</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Summary of the history of the great islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_372">372-373</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations to the Slavonic powers; three Slavonic groups</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_373">373</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bulgarian migrations; White Bulgaria; the first Bulgarian
-kingdom south of the Danube</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_373">373-374</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the Bulgarian name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_374">374</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The slaves of Macedonia, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_375">375</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations between the Empire and the Bulgarian kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_375">375</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxviii" id="Page_xxviii">{xxviii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Recovery of Macedonia and Greece; use of the name
-<i>Hellênes</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_375">375-376</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Servia, Croatia, and Dalmatia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_376">376</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatest extent of the first Bulgarian kingdom under
-Simeon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_376">376-377</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First conquest of Bulgaria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_377">377</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second Bulgarian kingdom under Samuel; second conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_377">377-378</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Venice and Cherson</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_378">378</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Asiatic conquests; annexation of Armenia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_378">378-379</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New enemies; Magyars; Turks</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_379">379</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Revolt of Servia; loss of Belgrade</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_379">379</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of the Seljuk Turks; Sultans of <i>Roum</i>; loss of
-Antioch</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_379">379-380</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Normans advance; loss of Corfu and Durazzo</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_380">380</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Revival under John and Manuel, Komnênos; recovery of lands
-in Asia and Europe</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_381">381</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Splitting off of distant possessions; loss of Dalmatia; Latin
-Kingdom of Cyprus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_381">381</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Third Bulgarian kingdom; the Empire more thoroughly
-Greek</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_382">382</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Latin conquest of Constantinople; Act of Partition</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_383">383</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Latin Empire of Romania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_383">383-384</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Latin kingdom of Thessalonikê</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_384">384-385</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Despotat of Epeiros; Greek Empire of Thessalonikê; their
-separation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_385">385</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Empire of Trebizond; loss of its western dominion</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_386">386</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The old Empire continued in the Empire of Nikaia; its advance
-in Europe and Asia; recovery of Constantinople</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_386">386-387</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss in Asia and advance in Europe; recovery of Peloponnêsos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_387">387-388</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance in Macedonia and Epeiros</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_388">388</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses in Asia; Knights of Saint John; advance of the Turks</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_389">389</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses towards Servia and Bulgaria; conquests of Stephen
-Dushan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_389">389-390</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fragmentary dominion of the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_390">390</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of the Turks in Europe; loss of Hadrianople; loss
-of Philadelphia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_390">390</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Recovery of territory after the fall of Bajazet</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_390">390-391</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turkish conquest of Constantinople; of Peloponnêsos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_391">391</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">States which grew out of the Empire; Slavonic, Hungarian,
-and Rouman; Greek; Latin; Turkish</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_391">391-393</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Kingdom of Sicily.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Norman Power in Italy and Sicily; its relations to the
-Eastern and Western Empires</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_393">393</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxix" id="Page_xxix">{xxix}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of the Normans in Italy; Aversa and Capua;
-duchy of Apulia; Robert Wiscard in Epeiros</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_394">394-395</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Norman conquest of Sicily</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_395">395</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Roger King of Sicily; his conquests in Italy, Corfu, and
-Africa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_395">395-396</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Eastern dominion of the two Sicilian crowns; kingdom of
-Margarito</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_396">396-397</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Acre; Malta</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_398">398</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Crusading States.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison between Sicily and the crusading states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_398">398</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Jerusalem; Cyprus; Armenia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_399">399</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the Kingdom of Jerusalem; other Latin states in
-Syria; loss and recovery of Jerusalem, final loss; loss
-of Acre</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_399">399-400</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Cyprus; its relations to Jerusalem and Armenia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_401">401</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Frank principalities in Greece; possessions of the maritime
-commonwealths</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_401">401-402</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>The Eastern Dominion of Venice and Genoa.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The historic position of Venice springs from her relation to
-the Eastern Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_402">402-403</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Connexion of her Greek and Dalmatian rule</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_402">402</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison between Venice and Sicily</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_402">402</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Her share in the Act of Partition compared with her real
-dominion; her main position Hadriatic</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_403">403-405</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Venetian possessions not assigned by the partition; Crete;
-Cyprus; Thessalonikê</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_404">404</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Taking of Zara in the fourth crusade</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_405">405</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations of the Dalmatian cities to Servia, Croatia, Venice,
-Hungary, and the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_405">405-407</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Pagania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_406">406</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Magyar Kingdom of Croatia; struggles between Venice and
-Hungary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_407">407</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Independence of Ragusa; Polizza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_407">407</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of Corfu</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_408">408</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Venetian posts in Peloponnêsos: history of Euboia; loss
-of the Ægæan islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_409">409</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Venice and Dalmatia, Peloponnêsos, and the
-Western islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_410">410</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Venice the champion against the Turk; losses of Venice;
-fluctuations in the Western Islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_410">410-412</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest and loss of Peloponnêsos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_412">412</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Frontier of Ragusa</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_412">412</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxx" id="Page_xxx">{xxx}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Venetian fiefs; history of the duchy of Naxos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_413">413</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Possessions of Genoa; Galata; her dominions in the Euxine</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_413">413-414</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Genoese fiefs; Lesbos; Chios; the Maona</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_414">414</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Revolutions of Rhodes; knights of Saint John; their removal
-to Malta; revolutions of Malta</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_414">414-415</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The Principalities of the Greek Mainland.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greek and Latin states; use of the name <i>Môraia</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_415">415-416</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lordship and duchy of Athens; the Catalans; the later
-dukes; Ottoman conquest; momentary Venetian occupations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_416">416-417</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Salôna and Bodonitza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_417">417</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Principality of Achaia; recovery of Peloponnesian lands by
-the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_417">417-418</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Angevin overlordship in Achaia; dismemberment of the
-principality</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_418">418</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Patras under the Pope</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_418">418</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Constantine Palaiologos</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_418">418</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turkish conquest of Peloponnêsos; independence of Maina</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_419">419</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Revolutions of Epeiros; dismemberment of the despotat;
-recovery of Epeiros by the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_419">419</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Servian conquests; beginning of the Albanian power; kings
-of the house of Thopia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_419">419-420</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Servian dynasty in southern Epeiros; kingdom of Thessaly;
-Turkish conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_420">420</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Buondelmonti in Northern Epeiros; history of the
-house of Tocco; <i>Karlili</i>; effects of their rule</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_420">420-421</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turkish conquest of Albania; revolt of Scanderbeg; Turkish
-reconquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_421">421</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Empire of Trebizond; its relations to Constantinople</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_422">422</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turkish conquest of Trebizond; of Perateia or Gothia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_422">422-423</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>The Slavonic States.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the Latin conquest on the Slavonic states</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_423">423</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of Servia and Bulgaria; extent of Servia; its
-relation to the Empire; conquest by Manuel Komnênos;
-Servia independent</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_423">423-424</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations towards Hungary; shiftings of Rama or Bosnia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_424">424-425</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Southern advance of Servia; Empire of Stephen Dushan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_425">425</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the Servian power; the later Servian kingdom;
-conquests and deliverances of Servia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_426">426</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Bosnia; loss of Jayce; duchy of Saint Saba or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxi" id="Page_xxxi">{xxxi}</a></span>
-Herzegovina; Turkish conquest of Bosnia; of Herzegovina</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_426">426-427</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Balsa at Skodra; loss of Skodra; beginning of Tzernagora
-or Montenegro</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_428">428</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of Zabljak; establishment of Tzetinje</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_428">428</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Vladikas; the lay princes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_429">429</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Montenegrin conquests and losses</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_428">428-429</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatest extent of the third Bulgarian kingdom; its decline;
-shiftings of the frontier towards the Empire;
-Philippopolis</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_429">429-430</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the kingdom; principality of Dobrutcha;
-Turkish conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_430">430-431</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 7. <i>The Kingdom of Hungary.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Character and position of the Hungarian kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_431">431-432</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Great Moravia overthrown by the Magyars; their relations
-to the two Empires</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_432">432-433</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The two Chrobatias separated by the Magyars; their geographical
-position</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_433">433-434</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Hungary; its relations to Croatia and Slavonia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_434">434</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Transsilvania or Siebenbürgen; origin of the name; German
-and other colonies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_435">435</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Origin of the Roumans; their northern migration</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_435">435-436</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rouman element in the third Bulgarian kingdom; occupation
-of the lands beyond the Danube; Great and Little
-Wallachia; Transsilvania; Moldavia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_436">436-437</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Lewis the Great; Dalmatia; occupation of
-Halicz and Vladimir; pledging of Zips</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_437">437</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Turkish invasion; disputes for Dalmatia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_438">438</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Reign of Matthias Corvinus; extension of Hungary east
-and west</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_438">438</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Loss of Belgrade; the Austrian kings; Turkish conquest
-of Hungary; fragment kept by the Austrian kings;
-their tribute to the Turk; the Rouman lands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_438">438-439</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Recovery of Hungary from the Turk; peace of Carlowitz;
-of Passarowitz; losses at the peace of Belgrade</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_439">439-440</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Galicia and Lodomeria; Bukovina; Dalmatia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_440">440-441</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of Spizza; administration of Bosnia and Herzegovina;
-renewed vassalage to the Turk</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_440">440-441</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 8. <i>The Ottoman Power.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Ottoman Turks; special character of their invasion;
-contrast with other Turanian invasions; comparison
-with the Saracens in Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_442">442-443</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxii" id="Page_xxxii">{xxxii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of the Ottoman dominions with the Eastern
-Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_443">443</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the Mongolian invasion; origin of the Ottomans;
-their position in Europe and Asia; break-up and reunion
-of their dominion; its permanence</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_443">443-444</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of the Ottomans in Asia; in Europe; dominion of
-Bajazet</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_444">444-445</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Victory of Timour; reunion of the Ottoman power under
-Mahomet the First</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_445">445-446</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mahomet the Second; taking of Constantinople; extent of
-his dominion; taking of Otranto</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_446">446</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Syria and Egypt</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_447">447</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Reign of Suleiman; his conquests; Hungary; Rhodes;
-Naxos; his African overlordship</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_447">447</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Cyprus; decline of the Ottoman power</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_447">447-448</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatest extent of the Ottoman power; Crete and Podolia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_448">448</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Ottoman loss of Hungary; loss and recovery of Peloponnêsos;
-Bosnia and Herzegovina; union of inland and maritime
-Illyria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_448">448</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">English vassalage in Cyprus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_449">449</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations between Russia and the Turk; Azof; Treaty of
-Kainardji; Crim; Jedisan; Bessarabia; shiftings of
-the Moldavian frontier</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_449">449-450</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 9. <i>The Liberated States.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lands liberated from the Turk; comparison of Hungary
-with Greece, Servia, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_450">450</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Servian people the first to revolt</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_450">450</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Ionian Islands the first liberated state; the Septinsular
-Republic; overlordship of the Turk</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_451">451</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Venetian outposts given to the Turk; surrender of
-Parga; last Ottoman encroachment</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_451">451</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Ionian Islands under British protection</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_451">451</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Greek War of Independence; extent of the Greek nation;
-extent of the liberated lands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_451">451-452</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Greece; addition of the Ionian Islands; promised
-addition in Thessaly and Epeiros</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_452">452</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First deliverance and reconquest of Servia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_453">453</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second deliverance; Servia a tributary principality</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_452">452-453</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Withdrawal of Turkish garrisons</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_453">453</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Independence and enlargement of Servia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_453">453</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fourfold division of the Servian nation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_453">453</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Rouman principalities; union of Wallachia and Moldavia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_453">453</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiii" id="Page_xxxiii">{xxxiii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Independence and new frontier of Roumania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_453">453-454</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Deliverance of part of Bulgaria; the Bulgaria of San
-Stefano</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_454">454</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Treaty of Berlin; division of Bulgaria into free, half-free,
-and enslaved</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_454">454-455</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Principality of Bulgaria; Eastern Roumelia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_454">454</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">General survey</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_455">455-460</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Note on M. Sathas</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_460">460-461</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER XI.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE BALTIC LANDS.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lands beyond the two Empires; the British islands; Scandinavia;
-Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_462">462-463</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Quasi</i>-imperial position of certain powers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_462">462-463</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of Scandinavia and Spain; of Aragon and
-Sweden</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_463">463-464</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Eastern and Western aspect of Scandinavia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_464">464</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">General view of the Baltic lands; the Northern Slavonic
-lands, their relations to Germany and Hungary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_465">465</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Characteristics of Poland and Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_465">465</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The primitive nations, Aryan and non-Aryan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_455">455-466</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Central position of the North-Slavonic lands; barbarian
-neighbours of Russia and Scandinavia; Russian conquest
-and colonization by land</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_467">467</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relation of the Baltic lands to the two Empires; Norway
-always independent; relations of Sweden and Denmark
-to the Western Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_467">467</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Western Empire and the West-Slavonic lands; relations
-of Poland to the Western Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_467">467</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations of Russia to the Eastern Church and Empire;
-Imperial style of Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_468">468</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Scandinavian Lands after the Separation of the Empires.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Baltic still mainly held by the earlier races; formation
-of the Scandinavian kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_468">468-499</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Formation of the Danish kingdom; its extent; frontier of
-the Eider; the Danish march</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_469">469</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the name <i>Northmen</i>; formation of the kingdom of
-Norway</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_469">469-470</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Swedes and Gauts; the Swedish kingdom</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_470">470</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Its fluctuations towards Norway and Denmark; its growth
-towards the north</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_470">470</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiv" id="Page_xxxiv">{xxxiv}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Western conquests and settlements of the Danes and Northmen</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_471">471</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlements in Britain and Gaul</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_471">471</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlements in Orkney, Man, Iceland, Ireland, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_471">471</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Expeditions to the East; Danish occupation of Samland;
-Jomsburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_471">471</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Swedish conquest of Curland; Scandinavians in Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_472">472</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Lands East and South of the Baltic at the Separation
-of the Empires.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Slaves between Elbe and Dnieper; their lack of sea-board</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_472">472-473</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Samo; Great Moravia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_473">473</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Four Slavonic groups</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_473">473-474</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Polabic group; Sorabi, Leuticii, Obotrites; their relations to
-the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_474">474-475</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Early conquest of the Sorabi; marks of Meissen and Lusatia;
-long resistance of the Leuticians; takings of Branibor;
-mark of Brandenburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_475">475-476</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mark of the Billungs; kingdom of Sclavinia; house of Mecklenburg;
-relations to Denmark</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_476">476</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bohemia and Moravia; their relations to Poland, Hungary,
-and Germany</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_477">477</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Polish kingdom; its relations to Germany; rivalry of
-Poland and Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_478">478</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lechs or Poles; their various tribes</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_478">478</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beginning of the Polish state; its conversion and relations
-to the Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_479">479</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests of Boleslaf; union of the Northern Chrobatia with
-Poland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_479">479</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Polish state survives, though divided</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_479">479-480</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Relations of Russia to the Eastern Church and Empire;
-Russia created by the Scandinavian settlement; origin
-of the name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_480">480</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First centre at Novgorod; Russian advance; union of the
-Eastern Slaves</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_481">481</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second centre at Kief; the princes become Slavonic; attacks
-on Constantinople and Cherson</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_481">481-482</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests on the Caspian; isolation of Russia; Russian lands
-west of Dnieper</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_482">482</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russian principalities; supremacy of Kief</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_482">482</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Supremacy of the northern Vladimir; commonwealths of
-Novgorod and Pskof; various principalities; kingdom
-of Halicz or Galicia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_483">483</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxv" id="Page_xxxv">{xxxv}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Cuman power; Mongol invasion; Russia tributary to
-the Mongols; Russia represented by Novgorod</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_483">483-484</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The earlier races; Finns in Livland and Esthland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_484">484</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Lettic nations; Lithuania; Prussia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_484">484</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Survey in the twelfth century</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_485">485</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>German Dominion on the Baltic.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Time of Teutonic conquest on the Baltic; comparison of
-German and Scandinavian influence; German influence
-the stronger</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_485">485-486</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beginning of Swedish conquest in Finland; German conquest
-in Livland; its effect on Lithuania and Russia; the
-Military orders</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_487">487</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Polish gains and losses</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_487">487</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Character of the <i>Hansa</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_487">487</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Temporary Swedish possession of Scania; union of Calmar;
-division and reunion; abiding union of Denmark and
-Norway</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_487">487-488</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Iceland with Norway; loss of the Scandinavian
-settlements in the British isles</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_488">488</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Swedish advance in Finland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_488">488</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Temporary greatness of Denmark, settlement of Esthland;
-conquest of Sclavinia; Danish advance in Germany;
-Holstein, &amp;c.; long retention of Rügen</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_488">488-490</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duchy of South-Jutland or Sleswick; its relations to Denmark
-and Holstein; royal and ducal lines; conquest
-of Ditmarschen</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_490">490-491</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effect of the Danish advance on the Slavonic lands; western
-losses of Poland; Pomerania; Silesia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_491">491-492</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Kingdom of Bohemia; dominion of Ottocar; the Luxemburg
-kings</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_492">492-493</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Annexation of Silesia and Lusatia; territory lost to Matthias
-Corvinus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_493">493</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union with Austria; later losses</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_493">493</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">German corporations; the Hansa; its nature; not strictly
-a territorial power</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_494">494-495</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Military Orders; Sword-brothers and Teutonic
-knights; their connexion with the Empire; effects of
-their rule</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_495">495</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Sword-brothers in Livland and Esthland; extent of
-their dominion</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_495">495-496</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Teutonic order in Prussia; union with the Sword-brothers;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxvi" id="Page_xxxvi">{xxxvi}</a></span>
-acquisition of Culm, Pomerelia, Samogitia,
-Gotland; the New Mark</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_496">496</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Losses of the order; cession of Pomerelia and part of Prussia
-to Poland; the remainder a Polish fief</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_496">496-497</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Christianity; Lithuania the last heathen power;
-its great advance</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_497">497-498</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Consolidation of Poland; conquests of Casimir the Great;
-shiftings of Red Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_498">498</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Poland and Lithuania; recovery of the Polish
-duchies; Lithuanian advance; closer union</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_498">498-499</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Revival of Russia; power of Moscow; name of <i>Muscovy</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_499">499-500</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the Mongol power; the Khanats of Crim, Kazan,
-Siberia, Astrakhan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_501">501</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Deliverance of Russia; Crim dependent on the Turk</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_501">501</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Moscow; annexation of Novgorod, &amp;c.; Russia
-united and independent</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_501">501</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Survey at the end of the fifteenth century</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_502">502</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>The Growth of Russia and Sweden.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Growth of Russia; creation of Prussia; temporary greatness
-of Sweden</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_503">503</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Separation of the Prussian and Livonian knights; duchy of
-Prussia; union of Prussia and Brandenburg; Prussia
-independent of Poland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_503">503-504</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fall of the Livonian knights; partition of their dominions;
-duchy of Curland; shares of Denmark, Sweden, Poland,
-and Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_504">504</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatest Baltic extent of Poland and Lithuania; union of
-Lublin</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_505">505</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Russia; its order; the Euxine reached last</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_505">505-506</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Recovery of Russian lands from Lithuania; Polish conquest
-of Russia; second Russian advance; Peace of Andraszovo;
-recovery of Kief</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_506">506</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russian superiority over the Cossacks; Podolia ceded to the
-Turk</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_506">506-507</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of Swedish and Russian advance</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_507">507</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance under and after Gustavus Adolphus; conquests
-from Russia and Poland; Ingermanland; Livland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_507">507-508</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquests from Denmark and Norway; Dago and Oesel;
-Scania, &amp;c.; restoration of Trondhjem</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_508">508-509</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fiefs of Sweden within the Empire; Pomerania; Bremen and
-Verden</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_509">509</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fluctuations in the duchies; Danish possession of Oldenburg</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_509">509</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxvii" id="Page_xxxvii">{xxxvii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Sweden after the peace of Oliva</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_510">510</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Eastern advance of Russia; Kasan and Astrakhan; Siberia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_511">511</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The Decline of Sweden and Poland.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Decline of Sweden; extinction of Poland; kingdom of
-Prussia; empire of Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_511">511-512</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russia on the Baltic; conquest of Livland, &amp;c.; foundation
-of Saint Petersburg; advance in Finland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_512">512</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">German losses of Sweden: Bremen, Verden, part of
-Pomerania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_513">513</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of the Gottorp lands and Denmark</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_513">513</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First partition of Poland; recovery of lost lands by Russia;
-geographical union of Prussia and Brandenburg; Polish
-and Russian lands acquired by Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_513">513-514</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second partition: Russian and Prussian shares</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_514">514</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Third partition: extinction of Poland and Lithuania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_514">514-515</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">No strictly Polish territory acquired by Russia; the old
-Poland passes to Prussia, Chrobatia to Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_515">515</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russian advance on the Euxine, Azof; Crim; Jedisan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_515">515-516</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Temporary Russian advance on the Caspian; superiority
-over Georgia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_516">516</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Survey at the end of the eighteenth century</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_517">517</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>The Modern Geography of the Baltic Lands.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the fall of the Empire; incorporation of the German
-lands of Sweden and Denmark</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_518">518</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russian conquest of Finland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_518">518</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Sweden and Norway; loss of Swedish Pomerania</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_518">518-519</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Denmark enters the German Confederation for Holstein and
-Lauenburg; loss of these duchies and of Sleswick</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_519">519</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Polish losses of Prussia; commonwealth of Danzig; Duchy
-of Warsaw</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_519">519-520</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Polish territory recovered by Prussia; Russian kingdom of
-Poland; commonwealth of Cracow; its annexation by
-Austria</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_520">520</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fluctuation on the Moldavian border</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_521">521</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russian advance in the Caucasus and on the Caspian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_521">521</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance in Turkestan and Eastern Asia; extent and character
-of the Russian dominion</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_522">522-523</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Russian America</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_523">523</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Final survey of the Baltic lands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_523">523-524</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxviii" id="Page_xxxviii">{xxxviii}</a></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER XII.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE SPANISH PENINSULA AND ITS COLONIES.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Analogy between Spain and Scandinavia; slight relation of
-Spain with the Empire; break between its earlier and
-later history</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_525">525</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Comparison of Spain and the Eastern Empire; the Spanish
-nation formed by the Saracen wars; analogy between
-Spain and Russia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_525">525-526</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of West-Gothic and Saracen dominions; two centres
-of deliverance, native and Frankish</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_526">526-527</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of Aragon, Castile, and Portugal; use of the phrase
-‘Spain and Portugal’</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_527">527-528</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Navarre</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_528">528</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Foundation of the Spanish Kingdoms.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beginning of the kingdom of Leon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_529">529</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Ommiad emirate; the Spanish March; its divisions</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_529">529</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Navarre under Sancho the Great</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_529">529-530</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Break-up of the kingdom of Navarre, and of the Ommiad
-caliphate; small Mussulman powers</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_530">530</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Invasion of the Almoravides; use of the name <i>Moors</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_530">530</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New kingdoms: Castile, Aragon, and Sobrarbe; union of
-Aragon and Sobrarbe</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_530">530</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Shiftings of Castile, Leon, and Gallicia; final union; Castilian
-Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_531">531</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Decline of Navarre; growth of Aragon; union of Aragon
-and Barcelona; end of French superiority</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_531">531</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">County and kingdom of Portugal</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_532">532</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Castile; taking of Toledo; checked by the
-Almoravides</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_532">532</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Aragon; taking of Zaragoza</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_532">532</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Portugal; taking of Lisbon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_533">533</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second advance of Castile; invasion of the Almohades;
-their decline</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_533">533</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Aragon and Portugal</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_533">533</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Final advance of Castile; kingdom of Granada; Gibraltar</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_534">534</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Geographical position of the Spanish kingdoms</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_534">534-535</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Title of ‘King of Spain;’ the lesser kingdoms</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_535">535-536</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>Growth and Partition of the Great Spanish Monarchy.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Little geographical change in the peninsula; territories
-beyond the peninsula; the great Spanish Monarchy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_536">536</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxix" id="Page_xxxix">{xxxix}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Conquest of Granada; end of Mussulman rule</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_536">536-537</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Union of Castile and Aragon; loss, recovery, and final loss of
-Roussillon; annexation and separation of Portugal</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_537">537-538</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Gibraltar and Minorca</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_537">537</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance of Aragon beyond the peninsula; union with the
-Sicilies and Sardinia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_538">538</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extension of Castile dominion; the Burgundian inheritance;
-duchy of Milan</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_539">539</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Extent of the Spanish Monarchy; loss of the United Netherlands;
-lands lost to France</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_539">539</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Partition of the Spanish Monarchy; later relations with the
-Sicilies; duchy of Parma</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_539">539-540</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>The Colonial Dominion of Spain and Portugal.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Character of the outlying dominion of Portugal</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_540">540</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">African conquests of Portugal; kingdom of Algarve beyond
-the Sea; Ceuta, Tangier</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_541">541</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Advance in Africa and the islands; Cape of Good Hope;
-dominion in India and Arabia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_541">541-542</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlement and history of Brazil; the one American monarchy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_542">542</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Division of the Indies between Spain and Portugal; African
-and insular dominion of Spain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_542">542-543</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">American dominions of Spain; revolutions of the Spanish
-colonies; two Empires of Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_543">543-544</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Spanish West Indies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_544">544</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">CHAPTER XIII.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2">THE BRITISH ISLANDS AND COLONIES.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Isolation and independence of Britain; late Roman conquest
-and early loss; Britain another world and Empire</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_545">545</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Shiftings of the Celtic and Teutonic kingdoms; little geographical
-change in later times</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_546">546</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">English settlements beyond sea; new English nations</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_547">547</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 1. <i>The Kingdom of Scotland.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greatness of Scotland due to its English elements; two English
-kingdoms in Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_548">548</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Use of the Scottish name</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_549">549</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Analogy with Switzerland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_549">549</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The three elements in the later Scotland; English, British,
-Irish; Lothian, Strathclyde, Scotland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_549">549</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xl" id="Page_xl">{xl}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Picts; their union with the Scots; Scottish Strathclyde;
-Galloway</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_550">550</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Scandinavian settlements; Caithness and Sutherland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_550">550</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">English supremacy; taking of Edinburgh; grants of Cumberland
-and Lothian</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_550">550-551</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Difference of tenure gradually forgotten</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_551">551</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Effects of the grant of Lothian; shiftings of Cumberland,
-Carlisle, and Northumberland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_551">551-552</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Boundary of England and Scotland; relations between the
-kingdoms</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_552">552</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Struggle with the Northmen; recovery of Caithness, Galloway,
-and the Sudereys</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_553">553</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">History of Man; of Orkney</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_553">553</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 2. <i>The Kingdom of England.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Changes of boundary toward Wales; conquests of Harold</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_553">553</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Norman conquest of North Wales</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_554">554</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Princes of North Wales; English conquest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_554">554</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The principality of Wales; full incorporation with
-England</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_554">554-555</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The English shires; two classes of shires; ancient principalities;
-shires mapped out in the tenth century</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_555">555</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The new shires; Cumberland, Westmoreland, Lancashire,
-Rutland</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_555">555-556</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 3. <i>Ireland.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Ireland the first Scotland; its provinces</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_556">556</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlements of the Ostmen; increasing connexion with England;
-the English conquest; fluctuations of the Pale</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_556">556-557</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lordship and kingdom of Ireland; its relations to England
-and Great Britain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_557">557</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 4. <i>Outlying European Possessions of England.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Norman Islands; Aquitaine, Calais, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_558">558</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Outposts and islands</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_558">558</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greek possessions; the Ionian Islands; Cyprus</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_558">558-559</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 5. <i>The American Colonies of England.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The United States of America</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_559">559</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">First English settlements; Virginia; the New England
-States; Maryland; Carolina</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_559">559-561</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Settlements of the United Provinces and Sweden; New
-Netherlands; New Sweden; New York</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_561">561</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Jerseys; Pennsylvania; Delaware; Georgia</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_561">561-562</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xli" id="Page_xli">{xli}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The thirteen Colonies; their independence</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_562">562</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Nova Scotia; Canada; Louisiana; Florida</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_562">562-563</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A new English nation formed; lack of a name; use of the
-name <i>America</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_563">563-564</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Second English nation in North America; the Canadian
-confederation</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_564">564</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The West India Islands, &amp;c.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_565">565</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2" class="row_space">§ 6. <i>Other Colonies and Possessions of England.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Australian colonies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_565">565-566</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The South-African colonies</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_566">566</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Europe extended by colonization; contrast with barbaric
-dominion; Empire of India</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_567">567</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Summary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_568">568-569</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_571">571</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xlii" id="Page_xlii">{xlii}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ADDITIONS_AND_CORRECTIONS" id="ADDITIONS_AND_CORRECTIONS">ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.</a></h2>
-
-<p>[Transcriber’s note: These additions and corrections have not been made in this
-electronic version of the text. Page numbers and line numbers reflect the pagination
-of the original text and may not reflect the structure of this version.]</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_19">P. 19</a>, l. 10. Latterly the name <i>Balkan Peninsula</i> has come
-into more general use.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_38">P. 38</a>, side-note. For ‘Cities of independent state’ read
-‘Growth of independent states.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_41">P. 41</a>, l. 10 from bottom. This is true in a rough practical
-way. But when I wrote this, I hardly took in the fact that not
-a few Greek cities, though practically subject to the Empire, were
-not finally incorporated with it till ages later, perhaps never formally
-incorporated at all.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_55">P. 55</a>, l. 7. For ‘south-east’ read ‘south-west.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_55">P. 55</a>, l. 8. For ‘north-west’ read ‘north-east.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_71">P. 71</a>. When I wrote this, I had not taken in the true history
-of the Rouman people. See below, <a href="#Page_435">p. 435</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_88">P. 88</a>, l. 14. Since this was written, I wrote the article
-‘Goths,’ in the Encyclopædia Britannica, where I have gone rather
-more fully into their history from later and minuter study.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_90">P. 90</a>, l. 4 from the bottom. I believe the existence of a
-<i>Gothia</i> by that name in Spain is a little doubtful. As to the
-<i>Gothia</i> in Gaul, otherwise <i>Septimania</i>, and the other <i>Gothia</i> in
-the Tauric Chersonêsos, there is no doubt.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_105">P. 105</a>, l. 14 from bottom. I believe however that the coins of
-some of the Provençal cities point to a retention of allegiance to
-the Empire much later. Still there is no doubt as to the formal
-cession.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_115">P. 115</a>, l. 5 from bottom. I now see no reason to believe in any
-Albanian migrations into Greece till long afterwards. But I
-still have no doubt that the Albanians strictly represent the old
-Illyrians.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_119">P. 119</a>. Dele side-note, ‘The cession of Gaulish possessions.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_126">P. 126</a>, l. 6. For ‘<i>the</i> great Mahometan powers’ read ‘<i>the two</i>
-great Mahometan powers.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_138">P. 138</a>, l. 9. Dele ‘much as.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_154">P. 154</a>. The growth of the Christian states in Spain will be
-found more fully and accurately given in the specially Spanish
-chapter, <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">Chapter XII</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xliii" id="Page_xliii">{xliii}</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_156">P. 156</a>, l. 4. It will be at once seen that this was written before
-the events of 1877-8. The later changes in these lands will
-be found described in <a href="#CHAPTER_X">Chapter X</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_167">P. 167</a>, l. 10. For ‘division’ read ‘divisions.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_172">P. 172</a>, side-note. For ‘province’ read ‘provinces.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_180">P. 180</a>, side-note. For ‘schemes’ read ‘scheme.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_189">P. 189</a>, l. 12. For ‘were’ read ‘some were.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_216">P. 216</a>, side-note. For ‘ecclesiastical towns’ read ‘ecclesiastical
-powers.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_221">P. 221</a>, side-note. For ‘kingdom’ read ‘kingdoms.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_258">P. 258</a>, l. 14. I was here speaking purely geographically, before
-much, if anything, had been heard of the cry of <i>Italia irredenta</i>.
-How far I go with that cry, how far not, I have explained
-in Historical Essays, Third Series, p. 206.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_261">P. 261</a>, l. 1. For ‘Montbeilliard,’ read ‘Montbeliard.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_263">P. 263</a>, side-note. For ‘Burgundian possession of its county’
-read ‘Burgundian possessions of its counts.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_267">P. 267</a>, l. 1. For ‘maps’ read ‘map.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_288">P. 288</a>, l. 11 from bottom. For ‘High and Low Savoy’ read
-‘Savoy and High Savoy.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_300">P. 300</a>, side-note. For ‘1662’ read ‘1663.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_306">P. 306</a>, l. 8. At present it would seem that this mysterious
-name takes in all those kingdoms, counties, lordships, &amp;c., which
-are held by the Archduke of Austria, and which do not form part
-of the kingdom of Hungary and its <i>partes annexæ</i>. For these I
-have elsewhere, according to an old analogy, suggested the more
-intelligible name of <i>Nungary</i>.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_319">P. 319</a>, l. 3. That is Philip ‘the Handsome,’ son of Maximilian
-and father of Charles the Fifth.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_334">P. 334</a>, l. 9. Aquitaine, the inheritance of Eleanor, did not
-come under the forfeiture of the fiefs actually held by John.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_340">P. 340</a>, l. 4 from bottom. Roussillon is another case of a land
-freed from homage and afterwards annexed as a foreign conquest.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_369">P. 369</a>, l. 17. For ‘farther’ read ‘further.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_389">P. 389</a>, side-note. For ‘conquest’ read ‘conquests of.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_408">P. 408</a>, side-note. For ‘final’ read ‘first.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_413">P. 413</a>, side-note. For ‘possession of Venetian cities’ read
-‘possessions of Venetian families.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_429">P. 429</a>, l. 15. Since this was printed, Dulcigno has been restored
-to Montenegro, in exchange for some inland Albanian
-territory given back to the Turk. The formation of the Albanian
-League is not unlikely to affect the geography of Herzegovina;
-but no change has yet (January 1881) taken place which can be
-shown on the map.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xliv" id="Page_xliv">{xliv}</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_441">P. 441</a>, l. 8. How unpleasant this truth is felt to be in certain
-quarters, is shown by a small incident of last year. I sent a set
-of manuscript maps of Dalmatia to Mr. Arthur Evans for his
-suggestions. Those maps vanished in the Imperial, Royal, and
-Apostolic post-office, and never reached his address at Ragusa.
-If therefore the revolutions of Dalmatian geography are less
-accurately marked in this book than they should be, the fault is
-not mine. In Imperial, Royal, and Apostolic quarters it is
-doubtless inconvenient to allow any memory of days when free
-Ragusa had not bowed to any self-styled Emperor, either from
-Corsica or from Lorraine, or of still later days when free Tzernagora
-reached to her own sea at Cattaro. Those who have made it
-their business to filch the substance may naturally enough think
-it their business to filch the picture also.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_450">P. 450</a>, l. 5 from bottom. It is quite accurate to say that the
-Turk has never ruled at Tzetinje. It is perfectly true that the
-Turk has more than once harried Montenegro and Tzetinje itself;
-the Turk has professed to consider the land as included in a
-pashalik; but Montenegro has never been a regularly and avowedly
-tributary state, as Servia and Roumania were, as free Bulgaria
-is still.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_452">P. 452</a>, l. 7 from bottom. The promises of Europe on this
-head still remain unfulfilled (January 1881). It is hardly
-needful to notice the diplomatic quibble that the European order
-for the liberation of these lands was not contained in the document
-strictly called the Treaty of Berlin, but in another paper
-signed at the same time and place. The order has been renewed
-during the present year at the Second Berlin Conference.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_492">P. 492</a>, side-note. For ‘and’ read ‘under.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_529">P. 529</a>, l. 9 from bottom. For ‘western’ read ‘eastern.’</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_554">P. 554</a>, side-note. For ‘Northerners,’ read ‘Northmen.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">{1}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="HISTORICAL_GEOGRAPHY" id="HISTORICAL_GEOGRAPHY">HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
-OF EUROPE.</a></h2>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div>
-
-<div class="main">
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">INTRODUCTION.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Definition
-of Historical
-Geography.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The work</span> which we have now before us is to trace
-out the extent of territory which the different states
-and nations of Europe and the neighbouring lands have
-held at different times in the world’s history, to mark
-the different boundaries which the same country has
-had, and the different meanings in which the same name
-has been used. It is of great importance carefully to
-make these distinctions, because great mistakes as to the
-facts of history are often caused through men thinking
-and speaking as if the names of different countries, say
-for instance England, France, Burgundy, Austria, have
-always meant exactly the same extent of territory. Historical
-geography, in this sense, differs from physical
-geography which regards the natural features of the
-earth’s surface. It differs also from studies like ethnology
-and comparative philology, which have to do directly
-with the differences between one nation and another, with
-their movements from one part of the world to another,
-and with the relations to be found among the languages
-spoken by them. But, though it is distinct from these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">{2}</a></span>
-studies, it makes much use of them. For the physical
-geography of a country always has a great effect upon
-its political history, and the dispersions and movements
-of different nations are exactly those parts of history
-which have most to do with fixing the names and the
-boundaries of different countries at different times.
-<i>England</i>, for instance, is, in strictness, the land of the
-English wherever they may settle, whether in their
-old home on the European continent, or in the isle of
-Britain, or in New England beyond the Ocean. But
-the extent of territory which was in this way to become
-England was largely determined by the physical circumstances
-of the countries in which the English
-settled. And the history of the English nation has
-been influenced, above all things, by the fact that the
-great English settlement which has made the English
-name famous was made in an island. But, when
-England had become the name of a distinct political
-dominion, its meaning was liable to change as that
-dominion advanced or went back. Thus the borders
-of England and Scotland have greatly changed at
-different times, and forgetfulness of this has led to
-many misunderstandings in reading the history of
-the two countries. And so with all other cases of the
-kind; the physical nature of the country, and the settlements
-of the different nations which have occupied it,
-have always been the determining causes of its political
-divisions. But it is with the political divisions that
-historical geography has to deal in the first place.
-With the nature of the land, and with the people who
-occupy it, it has to deal only so far as they have influenced
-the political divisions. Our present business
-in short is, first to draw the map of the countries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">{3}</a></span>
-with which we are concerned as it appeared after each
-of the different changes which they have gone through,
-and then to point out the historical causes which have
-led to the changes on the map. In this way we shall
-always see what was the meaning of any geographical
-name at any particular time, and we shall thus avoid
-mistakes, some of which have often led to really important
-practical consequences.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Distinction
-of Geographical
-and Political
-Names.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>From this it follows that, in looking at the geography
-of Europe for our present purpose, we must look first
-at the land itself, and then at the nations which occupy
-it. And, in so doing, it may be well first of all
-to distinguish between two kinds of names which we
-shall have to use. Some names of countries are strictly
-geographical; they really mean a certain part of the
-earth’s surface marked out by boundaries which cannot
-well be changed. Others simply mean the extent of
-country which is occupied at any time by a particular
-nation, and whose boundaries may easily be changed.
-Thus <i>Britain</i> is a strictly geographical name, meaning
-an island whose shape and boundaries must always be
-nearly the same. <i>England</i>, <i>Scotland</i>, <i>Wales</i>, are names
-of parts of that island, called after different nations
-which have settled in it, and the boundaries of all of
-which have differed greatly at different times. <i>Spain</i>
-again is the geographical name of a peninsula which is
-almost as well marked out by nature as the island of
-Britain. <i>Castile</i>, <i>Aragon</i>, <i>Portugal</i>, are political names
-of parts of the peninsula of Spain. They are the names
-of states whose boundaries have greatly varied, and
-which have sometimes formed separate governments
-and sometimes have been joined together.<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> <i>Gaul</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">{4}</a></span>
-again is the geographical name of a country which
-is not so clearly marked out all round by nature as
-the island of Britain and the peninsula of Spain, but
-which is well marked on three sides, to the north,
-south, and west. Within the limits of Gaul, names like
-<i>France</i>, <i>Flanders</i>, <i>Britanny</i>, <i>Burgundy</i>, and <i>Aquitaine</i>,
-are political names of parts of the country, whose limits
-have varied as much at different times as those of the
-different parts of Britain and Spain. This is the difference
-between strictly geographical names which do not
-alter and political names which do alter. No doubt
-<i>Gaul</i> and <i>Britain</i> were in the beginning political names,
-names given to the land from those who occupied it,
-just as much as the names <i>France</i> and <i>England</i>. But
-the settlements from which those lands took the names
-of Gaul and Britain took place long before the beginning
-of trustworthy history, while the settlements from
-which parts of those lands took the names of France
-and England happened in times long after trustworthy
-history began, and for which we are therefore ready
-with dates and names. Thus Gaul and Britain are the
-oldest received names of those lands; they are the
-names which those lands bore when we first hear
-of them. It is therefore convenient to keep them
-in use as strictly geographical names, as always meaning
-that part of the earth’s surface which they meant
-when we first hear of them. In this book therefore,
-<i>Gaul</i>, <i>Britain</i>, <i>Spain</i>, and other names of the same kind,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">{5}</a></span>
-will always be used to mean a certain space on the
-map, whoever may be its inhabitants, or whatever
-may be its government, at any particular time. But
-names like <i>France</i>, <i>England</i>, <i>Castile</i>, will be used to
-mean the territory to which they were politically applied
-at the time of which we may be speaking, a territory
-which has been greater and less at different times.
-Thus, the cities of Carlisle and Edinburgh have always
-been in <i>Britain</i> since they were built. They have
-sometimes been in <i>England</i> and sometimes not. The
-cities of Marseilles, Geneva, Strassburg, and Arras have
-always been in <i>Gaul</i> ever since they were built.
-They have sometimes been in <i>France</i> and sometimes
-not, according to political changes.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>Geographical Aspect of Europe.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Our present business is with the Historical Geography
-of Europe, and with that of other parts of the world
-only so far as they concern the geography of Europe.
-But we shall have to speak of all the three divisions
-of the Old World, Europe, Asia, and Africa, in those
-parts of the three which come nearest to one another,
-and in which the real history of the world begins.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Mediterranean Lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These are those parts of all three which lie round the
-Mediterranean sea, the lands which gradually came to
-form the Empire of Rome. In these lands the boundaries
-between the three great divisions are very easily marked.
-Modern maps do not all place the boundary between
-Europe and Asia at the same point; some make the
-river Don the boundary and some the Volga. But
-this question is of little importance for history. In the
-earliest historical times, when we have to do only with
-the countries round the Mediterranean sea, there can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">{6}</a></span>
-be no doubt how much is Europe and how much is
-Asia and Africa. Europe is the land to the north of
-the Mediterranean sea and of the great gulfs which
-run out of it. If an exact boundary is needed in the barbarous
-lands north of the Euxine, the Tanais or Don is
-clearly the boundary which should be taken. In all these
-lands the Mediterranean and its gulfs divide Europe from
-Asia. But the northern parts of the two continents really
-form one geographical whole, the boundary between
-them being one merely of convenience. A vast central
-mass of land, stretching right across the inland parts of
-the two continents, sends forth a system of peninsulas
-and islands, to the north and south. And it is in the
-peninsular lands of Europe that European history begins.</p>
-
-<p>Alike in Europe and in Asia, the southern or peninsular
-part of the continent is cut off from the central
-mass by a mountain chain, which in Europe is nearly unbroken.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The peninsulas
-of
-Europe and
-Asia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the southern part of Europe consists of
-the three great peninsulas of <i>Spain</i>, <i>Italy</i>, and what
-we may, in a wide sense, call <i>Greece</i>. These answer
-in some sort to the three great Oceanic peninsulas of
-Asia, those of <i>Arabia</i>, <i>India</i>, and <i>India</i> beyond the
-<i>Ganges</i>. But the part of Asia which has historically
-had most to do with Europe is its Mediterranean peninsula,
-the land known as <i>Asia Minor</i>. In the northern
-part of each continent we find another system of
-great gulfs or inland seas; but those in Asia have
-been hindered by the cold from ever being of any
-importance, while in Europe the Baltic sea and the
-gulfs which run out of it may be looked on as forming
-a kind of secondary Mediterranean. We may thus
-say that Europe consists of two insular and peninsular
-regions, north and south, with a great unbroken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">{7}</a></span>
-mass of land between them. But there are some parts
-of Europe which seem as it were connecting links between
-the three main divisions of the continent. Thus
-we said that the three great peninsulas are cut off
-from the central mass by a nearly unbroken mountain
-chain. But the connexion of the central peninsula,
-that of Italy, with the eastern one or Greece, is far
-closer than its connexion with the western one, or
-Spain. Italy and Spain are much further apart than
-Italy and Greece, and between the Alps and the Pyrenees
-the mountain chain is nearly lost. We might
-almost say that a piece of central Europe breaks through
-at this point and comes down to the Mediterranean.
-This is the south-eastern part of Gaul; and Gaul may in
-this way be looked on as a land which joins together the
-central and the southern parts of Europe. But this is
-not all; in the north-western corner of Europe lies that
-great group of islands, two large ones and many small,
-of which our own Britain is the greatest. The British
-islands are closely connected in their geography and
-history with Gaul on one side, and with the islands
-and peninsulas of the North on the other. In this way
-we may say that all the three divisions of Europe are
-brought closely together on the western side of the
-continent, and that the lands of Gaul and Britain are
-the connecting links which bind them together.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>Effect of Geography on History.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of history
-in the
-European
-peninsulas.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Now this geographical aspect of the chief lands of
-Europe has had its direct effect on their history. We
-might almost take for granted that the history of Europe
-should begin in the two more eastern among the three
-great southern peninsulas. Of these two, Italy and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">{8}</a></span>
-Greece, each has its own character. Greece, though it
-is the part of Europe which lies nearest to Asia, is in a
-certain sense the most European of European lands.
-The characteristic of Europe is to be more full of peninsulas
-and islands and inland seas than the rest of the Old
-World.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Characteristics
-of
-Greece;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And Greece, the peninsula itself and the neighbouring
-lands, are fuller of islands and promontories
-and inland seas than any other part of Europe. On
-the other hand, Italy is the central land of all southern
-Europe, and indeed of all the land round the Mediterranean.
-It was therefore only natural that Greece
-should be the part of Europe in which all that is most
-distinctively European first grew up and influenced other
-lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And so, if any one land or city among the Mediterranean
-lands was to rule over all the rest, it is in Italy,
-as the central land, that we should naturally look for
-the place of dominion. The destinies of the two peninsulas
-and their relations to the rest of the world were
-thus impressed on them by their geographical position.</p>
-
-<p>If we turn to recorded history, we find that it is only
-a working out of the consequences of these physical facts.
-Greece was the first part of Europe to become civilized
-and to play a part in history; but it was Italy, and in
-Italy it was its most central city, Rome, which came to
-have the dominion over the civilized world of early
-times—that is, over the lands around the Mediterranean.
-These two peninsulas have, each in its own
-way, ruled and influenced the rest of Europe as no
-other parts have done. All the other parts have been,
-in one way or another, their subjects or disciples.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Roman
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-effect of the geographical position of these countries is
-also marked in the stages by which Rome advanced
-to the general dominion of the Mediterranean lands.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></span>
-She first subdued Italy; then she had to strive for
-the mastery with her great rival Carthage, a city
-which held nearly the same central position on the
-southern coast of the Mediterranean which she herself
-did on the northern. Then she subdued, step by step,
-the peninsulas on each side of her and the other coast
-lands of the Mediterranean—European, Asiatic, and
-African. Into the central division of Europe she did not
-press far, never having any firm or lasting dominion
-beyond the Rhine and the Danube. Into Northern Europe,
-properly so called, her power never reached at all.
-But she subdued the lands which we have seen act as
-a kind of connecting link between the different parts of
-Europe, namely Gaul and the greater part of Britain.
-Thus the Roman Empire, at its greatest extent, consisted
-of the lands round the Mediterranean, together
-with Gaul and Britain. For the possession of the Mediterranean
-land would have been imperfect without the
-possession of Gaul, and the possession of Gaul naturally
-led to the possession of Britain.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-the geographical
-position of<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In this way the early history of Greece and Italy,
-and the formation of the Roman Empire, were affected
-by the geographical character of the countries themselves.
-The same was the case with the other European
-lands when they came to share in that importance which
-once belonged to Greece and Italy only.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germany,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus Germany,
-as being the most central part of Europe, came
-at one time to fill something like the same position
-which Italy had once held. It came to be the country
-which had to do with all parts of Europe, east, west,
-north, and south, and even to be a ruler over some of
-them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>France,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So, as France became the chief state of Gaul, it
-took upon it something like the old position of Gaul as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></span>
-a means of communication between the different parts
-of Western Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spain and
-Scandinavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, as the Scandinavian
-and Spanish peninsulas are both cut off in such a marked
-way from the mainland of Europe, each of them has
-often formed a kind of world of its own, having much
-less to do with other countries than Germany, France,
-and Italy had. The same was for a long time the case
-with our own island. Britain was looked on as lying
-outside the world.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the geographical position of the European
-lands influenced their history while their history was
-still purely European. And when Europe began to send
-forth colonies to other continents, the working of geographical
-causes came out no less strongly. Thus the
-position of Spain on the Ocean led Castile and Portugal
-to be foremost among the colonizing nations of Europe.
-For the same reason, our own country was one of the
-chief in following their example, and so was France also
-for a long time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The colonizing
-powers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Holland too, when it rose into importance,
-became a great colonizing power, and so did Denmark
-and Sweden to some extent. But an Italian colony
-beyond the Ocean was never heard of, nor has there
-ever been a German colony in the same sense in which
-there have been Spanish and English colonies. Meanwhile,
-the north-eastern part of Europe, which in early
-times was not known at all, has always lagged behind
-the rest, and has become of importance only in later
-times. This is mainly because its geographical position
-has almost wholly cut it off both from the Mediterranean
-and from the Ocean.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we see how, in all these ways, both in
-earlier and in later times, the history of every country
-has been influenced by its geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Influence
-of national
-character.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-No doubt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span>
-the history of each country has also been largely
-influenced by the disposition of the people who have
-settled in it, by what is called the national character.
-But then the geographical position itself has often
-had something to do with forming the national character,
-and in all cases it has had an influence upon
-it, by giving it a better or a worse field for working
-and showing itself. Thus it has been well said that
-neither the Greeks in any other country nor any
-other people in Greece could have been what the
-Greeks in Greece really were. The nature of the
-country and the nature of the people helped one
-another, and caused Greece to become all that it was
-in the early times of Europe. It is always useful to
-mark the points both of likeness and unlikeness of the
-different nations whose history we study. And of this
-likeness and unlikeness we shall always find that the
-geographical character, though only one cause out of
-several, is always one of the chief causes.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>Geographical Distribution of Races.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Our present business then is with geography as influenced
-by history, and with history as influenced by
-geography. With ethnology, with the relations of nations
-and races to one another, we have to deal only
-so far as they form one of the agents in history. And
-it will be well to avoid, as far as may be, all obscure
-or controverted points of this kind. But the great results
-of comparative philology may now be taken for
-granted, and a general view of the geographical disposition
-of the great European races is needful as an
-introduction to the changes which historical causes have
-wrought in the geography of the several parts of Europe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In European ethnology one main feature is that
-the population of Europe is, and from the very beginnings
-of history has been, more nearly homogeneous,
-at least more palpably homogeneous, than that of any
-other great division of the world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Europe an
-Aryan
-continent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Whether we look
-at Europe now, or whether we look at it at the earliest
-times of which we have any glimmerings, it is pre-eminently
-an Aryan continent. Everything non-Aryan
-is at once marked as exceptional. We cannot say
-this of Asia, where, among several great ethnical elements,
-none is so clearly predominant as the Aryan
-element is in Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Non-Aryan
-remnants.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There are in Europe non-Aryan
-elements, both earlier and later than the Aryan settlement;
-but they have, as a rule, been assimilated to the
-prevailing Aryan mass. The earlier non-Aryan element
-consists of the remnants which still remain of
-the races which the Aryan settlers found in Europe,
-and which they either exterminated or assimilated to
-themselves. The later elements consist of non-Aryan
-races which have made their way into Europe within
-historical times, in whose case the work of assimilation
-has been much less complete. It follows almost naturally
-from the position of Europe that the primæval
-non-Aryan element has survived in the west and in the
-north, while the later or intrusive non-Aryan element
-has made its way into the east and the south. In
-the mountains of the western peninsula, in the border
-lands of Spain and Gaul, the non-Aryan tongue
-of the <i>Basque</i> still survives. In the extreme north
-of Europe the non-Aryan tongue of the <i>Fins</i> and
-<i>Laps</i> still survives. The possible relations of these
-tongues either to one another or to other non-Aryan
-tongues beyond the bounds of Europe is a question of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
-purely philological concern, and does not touch historical
-geography. But historical geography is touched
-by the probability, rising almost to moral certainty,
-that the isolated populations by whom these primitive
-tongues are still spoken are mere remnants of the primitive
-races which formed the population of Europe at
-the time when the Aryans first made their way into
-that continent. Everything tends to show that the
-<i>Basques</i> are but the remnant of a great people whom
-we may set down with certainty as the præ-Aryan
-inhabitants of Spain and a large part of Gaul, and
-whose range we may, with great probability, extend
-over Sicily, over part at least of Italy, and perhaps as far
-north as our own island. Their possible connexion with
-the early inhabitants of northern Africa hardly concerns
-us. The probability that they were themselves preceded
-by an earlier and far lower race concerns us not at
-all. The earliest historical inhabitants of south-western
-Europe are those of whom the Basques are the surviving
-remnant, those who, under the names of <i>Iberians</i>
-and <i>Ligurians</i>, fill a not unimportant place in
-European history.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Order of
-the Aryan
-settlement.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>When we come to the Aryan settlements, we cannot
-positively determine which among the Aryan races of
-Europe were the earliest settlers in point of time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greeks and
-Italians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great race which, in its many sub-divisions, contains
-the <i>Greeks</i>, the <i>Italians</i>, and the nations more
-immediately akin to them, are the first among the
-European Aryans to show themselves in the light of
-history; but it does not necessarily follow that
-they were actually the first in point of settlement.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Celts.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It may be that, while they were pressing through
-the Mediterranean peninsulas and islands, the <i>Celts</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></span>
-were pressing their way through the solid central
-land of Europe. The Celts were clearly the vanguard
-of the Aryan migration within their own range, the
-first swarm which made its way to the shores of
-the Ocean. Partially in Spain, more completely in
-Gaul and the British Islands, they displaced or assimilated
-the earlier inhabitants, who, under their pressure
-and that of later conquerors, have been gradually
-shut up in the small mountainous region which they
-still keep. Of the Celtic migration we have no historical
-accounts, but all probability would lead us to
-think that the Celts whom in historic times we find
-on the Danube and south of the Alps were not emigrants
-who had followed a backward course from the
-great settlement in Transalpine Gaul, but rather detachments
-which had been left behind on the westward
-journey. Without attempting to settle questions as to
-the traces of Celtic occupancy to be found in other
-lands, it is enough for our purpose that, at the beginnings
-of their history, we find the Celts the chief
-inhabitants of a region stretching from the Rubico to
-the furthest known points of Britain. Gaul, Cisalpine
-and Transalpine, is their great central land, though
-even here they are not exclusive possessors; they share
-the land with a non-Aryan remnant to the south-west,
-and with the next wave of Aryan new-comers to the
-north-east.</p>
-
-<p>The settlements of these two great Aryan races
-come before authentic history. After them came the
-<i>Teutonic</i> races, who pressed on the Celts from the east;
-and in their wake, to judge from their place on the
-map, must have come the vast family of the <i>Slavonic</i>
-nations.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Teutons
-and Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the migrations of the Teutons and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></span>
-Slaves come, for the most part, within the range of
-recorded history. Our first glimpse of the Teutons
-shows them in their central German land, already
-occupying both sides of the Rhine, though seemingly
-not very old settlers on its left bank. The long
-wanderings of the various Teutonic and Slavonic
-tribes over all parts of central Europe, their settlements
-in the southern and western lands, are all
-matters of history. So is the great Teutonic settlement
-in the British islands, which partly exterminated,
-partly assimilated, their Celtic inhabitants, so as to
-leave them as mere a remnant, though a greater remnant,
-as they themselves had made the Basques. And,
-as the process which made the north-western islands
-of Europe Teutonic is a matter of history, so also
-are the later stages of the process which made
-the northern peninsulas Teutonic. But it is only the
-later stages which are historical; we know that in
-the strictly Scandinavian peninsula the Teutonic invaders
-displaced non-Aryan Fins; we have only to guess
-that in the Cimbric Chersonêsos they displaced Aryan
-Celts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lithuanians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But beyond the Teutons and Slaves lies yet
-another Aryan settlement, one which, in a purely philological
-view, is the most interesting of all, the small and
-fast vanishing group which still survives in <i>Lithuania</i> and
-the neighbouring lands. Of these there is historically
-really nothing to be said. On the eastern shores of the
-Baltic we find people whose tongue comes nearer than
-any other European tongue to the common Aryan
-model; but we can only guess alike at the date when
-they came thither and at the road by which they came.</p>
-
-<p>These races then, Aryan and non-Aryan, make up
-the immemorial population of Europe. The remnants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span>
-of the older non-Aryan races, and the successive waves
-of Aryan settlement, are all immemorial facts which we
-must accept as the groundwork of our history and our
-geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Movements
-among the
-Aryan
-races.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They must be distinguished from other
-movements which are strictly matters of written history,
-both movements among the Aryan nations themselves
-and later intrusions of non-Aryan nations. Thus the
-Greek colonies and the conquests of the Hellenized
-Macedonians Hellenized large districts of Europe,
-Asia, and Africa, partly by displacement, partly by
-assimilation. The conquests of Rome, and the Teutonic
-settlements within the Roman Empire, brought about
-but little in the way of displacement, but a great deal
-in the way of assimilation. The process indeed was
-opposite in the two cases. The Roman conqueror
-assimilated the conquered to himself; the Teutonic
-conqueror was himself assimilated by those whom
-he conquered. Britain and the Rhenish and Danubian
-lands stand out as marked exceptions. The Slavonic
-settlements in the East wrought far more of displacement
-than the Teutonic settlements in the West. Vast
-regions, once Illyrian or Thracian—that is, most likely,
-more or less nearly akin to the Greeks—are now
-wholly Slavonic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later intrusion
-of
-Non-Aryan
-races.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly come the incursions on European
-lands made by non-Aryan settlers in historic times.
-Their results have been widely different in different
-cases.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Semitic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Semitic <i>Saracens</i> settled in Spain and
-Sicily, bringing with them and after them their African
-converts, men possibly of originally kindred race with
-the first inhabitants both of the peninsula and of the
-island. These non-Aryan settlers have vanished. The
-displacement of large bodies of them is a fact of comparatively
-recent history, but it can hardly fail that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
-some degree of assimilation must also have taken place.
-Then come the settlements, chiefly in eastern Europe,
-of those whom for our purpose it is enough to group
-together as the Turanian nations. The <i>Huns</i> of Attila
-have left only a name. The more lasting settlement
-of the <i>Avars</i> has vanished, how far by displacement,
-how far by assimilation, it might be hard to say. <i>Chozars</i>,
-<i>Patzinaks</i>, a crowd of other barbarian races,
-have left no sign of their presence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turanian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Bulgarians</i>,
-originally Turanian conquerors, have been assimilated
-by their Slavonic subjects. The Finnish <i>Magyars</i>
-have received a political and religious assimilation;
-their kingdom became a member of the commonwealth
-of Christian Europe, though they still keep
-their old Turanian language. The latest intruders
-of all, the <i>Ottoman Turks</i>, still remain as they were
-when they first came, aliens on Aryan and Christian
-ground. But here again is a case of assimilation
-the other way; the Ottoman Turks are an artificial
-nation which has been kept up by the constant incorporation
-of European renegades who have thrown
-aside the speech, the creed, and the civilization of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">GREECE AND THE GREEK COLONIES.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Eastern or Greek Peninsula.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Characteristics
-of the
-Eastern
-peninsula.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Historical Geography of Europe, if looked at in
-chronological order, must begin with the most eastern
-of the three peninsulas of Southern Europe. Here the
-history of Europe, and the truest history of the world,
-began. It was in the insular and peninsular lands between
-the Ionian and Ægæan seas that the first steps
-towards European civilization were taken; it is there
-that we see the first beginnings of art, science, and
-political life. But Greece or <i>Hellas</i>, in the strict sense
-of the name, forms only a part of the lands which
-must be looked on as the great Eastern peninsula.
-It is however its leading and characteristic portion.
-As the whole peninsular land gradually tapers southwards
-from the great mass of central Europe, it becomes
-at each stage more and more peninsular, and
-it also becomes at each stage more and more Greek.
-Greece indeed and the neighbouring lands form,
-as was long ago remarked by Strabo,<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> a series of
-peninsulas within peninsulas. It is not easy to find<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
-a name for the whole region, as it stretches far beyond
-any limits which can be given to Greece in any age of
-the world or according to any use of the name. But
-the whole land seems to have been occupied by nations
-more or less akin to the Greeks. The history of those
-nations chiefly consists of their relations to the Greeks,
-and all of them were brought more or less within the
-range of Greek influences. We may therefore not
-improperly call the whole land, as opposed to Italy
-and Spain, the <i>Greek</i> peninsula. It has also been
-called the <i>Byzantine peninsula</i>, as nearly answering to
-the European part of the Eastern division of the Roman
-Empire, when its seat of government was at Byzantion,
-Constantinople, or New Rome.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its chief
-divisions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Taking the great range of mountains which divides
-southern from central Europe as the northern
-boundary of the eastern or Greek peninsula, it may be
-said to take in the lands which are cut off from the
-central mass by the <i>Dalmatian Alps</i> and the range of
-<i>Haimos</i> or <i>Balkan</i>. It is washed to the east, west, or
-south, by various parts of the Mediterranean and its
-great gulf the Euxine. But the northern part of this
-region, all that lies north of the Ægæan Sea, taking
-in therefore the whole of the Euxine coast, still keeps
-much of the character of the great central mass of
-Europe, and forms a land intermediate between that
-and the more strictly peninsular lands to the south.
-Still the boundary is a real one, for all the lands south
-of this range have come more or less within Greek
-influences, and have played their part in Grecian history.
-But when we get beyond the mountains, into
-the valley of the Danube, we find ourselves in lands
-which, excepting a few colonies on the coast, have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span>
-hardly at all come under Greek influences till quite
-modern times. This region between Haimos and the
-more strictly Greek lands takes in <i>Thrace</i>, <i>Paionia</i>,
-and <i>Illyria</i>. Of these, Thrace and Illyria, having a
-sea coast, received many Greek colonies, especially on
-the northern coast of the Ægæan and on the <i>Propontis</i>
-or Sea of Marmora. The Thracian part of this region,
-as bordering on these more distinctly Grecian seas,
-became more truly a part of the Grecian world than
-the other lands to the west of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Thrace and
-Illyria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Yet geographically
-Thrace is more widely cut off from Greece than Illyria is.
-For there is no such great break on the western shore
-of the great peninsula as that which, on the eastern side,
-marks the point where we must draw the line between
-Greece and its immediate neighbours and the lands to
-the north of them. This is at the point where a peninsula
-within a peninsula breaks off to the south, comprising
-<i>Greece</i>, <i>Macedonia</i>, and <i>Epeiros</i>. There is here
-no very special break on the Illyrian coast, but the
-Ægæan coast of Thrace is fenced in as it were at its two
-ends, to the east by the long narrow peninsula known
-specially as the <i>Chersonêsos</i>, and to the west by the group
-of peninsulas called <i>Chalkidikê</i>. These have nothing
-answering to them on the Illyrian side beyond the
-mere bend in the coast above Epidamnos. This last
-point however marks the extent of the earlier Greek
-colonization in those regions, and which has become
-a still more important boundary in later times.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Chalkidikê to the west, the specially
-Greek peninsula projects to the south, being itself
-again composed of peninsulas within peninsulas.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greece
-proper and
-its peninsulas.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-<i>Ambrakian Gulf</i> on the west and the <i>Pagasaian</i> on
-the east again fence off a peninsula to the south, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span>
-which the more purely Greek lands are fenced off
-from <i>Macedonia</i>, <i>Epeiros</i>, and <i>Thessaly</i>. Within this
-peninsula again another may be marked off by a line
-drawn from <i>Thermopylai</i> to the <i>Corinthian</i> gulf near
-Delphoi. This again shuts out to the east <i>Akarnania</i>,
-<i>Aitolia</i>, and some other of the more backward divisions
-of the Greek name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peloponnêsos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus <i>Phôkis</i>, <i>Boiôtia</i>, and
-<i>Attica</i> form a great promontory, from which Attica
-projects as a further promontory to the south-east,
-while the great peninsula of <i>Peloponnêsos</i>—itself made
-up on its eastern and southern sides of smaller
-peninsulas—is joined on by the narrow isthmus of
-Corinth. In this way, from Haimos to <i>Tainaros</i>, the
-land is ever becoming more and more broken up by
-greater or smaller inlets of the sea. And in proportion
-as the land becomes more strictly peninsular, it also
-becomes more strictly Greek, till in Peloponnêsos we
-reach the natural citadel of the Greek nation.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>Insular and Asiatic Greece.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Continuous
-Hellas.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Greece Proper then, what the ancient geographers
-called <i>Continuous Hellas</i> as distinguished from the Greek
-colonies planted on barbarian shores, is, so far as it is
-part of the mainland, made up of a system of peninsulas
-stretching south from the general mass of eastern Europe.
-But the neighbouring islands equally form a part of
-continuous Greece; and the other coasts of the Ægæan,
-Asiatic as well as Thracian, were so thickly strewed
-with Greek colonies as to form, if not part of continuous
-Greece, yet part of the immediate Greek world. The
-western coast, as it is less peninsular, is also less insular,
-and the islands on the western side of Greece did not
-reach the same importance as those on the eastern side.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
-Still they too, the Ionian islands of modern geography,
-form in every sense a part of Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the north of
-<i>Korkyra</i> or <i>Corfu</i> there are only detached Greek
-colonies, whether on the mainland or in the islands;
-but all the islands of the Ægæan are, during historical
-times, as much part of Greece as the mainland; and
-one island on each side, <i>Leukas</i> on the west and the
-greater island of <i>Euboia</i> on the east, might almost be
-counted as parts of the mainland, as peninsulas rather
-than islands. To the south the long narrow island of
-<i>Crete</i> forms a sort of barrier between Greek and barbarian
-seas. It is the most southern of the purely
-Greek lands. <i>Sicily</i> to the east and <i>Cyprus</i> to the
-west received many Greek colonies, but they never
-became purely Greek in the same way as Crete and the
-islands to the north of it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Asiatic
-Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But, besides the European peninsulas and the islands,
-part of Asia must be looked on as forming part of the immediate
-Greek world, though not strictly of continuous
-Greece. The peninsula known as <i>Asia Minor</i> cannot be
-separated from Europe either in its geography or in its
-history. With its central mass we have little or nothing
-to do; but its coasts form a part of the Greek world, and
-its Ægæan coast was only less thoroughly Greek than
-Greece itself and the Greek islands. It would seem that
-the whole western coast of Asia Minor was inhabited by
-nations which, like the European neighbours of Greece,
-were more or less nearly akin to the Greeks. And the
-Ægæan coast of Asia is almost as full of inlets of the
-sea, of peninsulas and promontories and islands near to
-the shore, as European Greece itself. All these shores
-therefore received Greek colonies. The islands and
-the most tempting spots on the mainland were occupied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></span>
-by Greek settlers, and became the sites of Greek cities.
-But Greek influence never spread very far inland, and
-even the coast itself did not become so purely Greek
-as the islands. When we pass from the Ægæan coast
-of Asia to the other two sides of the peninsula,
-to its northern coast washed by the Euxine and its
-southern coast washed by the Mediterranean, we
-have passed out of the immediate Greek world.
-Greek colonies are found on favourable spots here
-and there; but the land, even the coast as a whole, is
-barbarian.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>Ethnology of the Eastern Peninsula.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Greeks
-and the
-kindred
-races.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The immediate Greek world then as opposed to
-the outlying Greek colonies, consists of the shores
-of the Ægæan sea and of the peninsulas lying between
-it and the Ionian sea. Of this region a great part
-was exclusively inhabited by the Greek nation, while
-Greek influences were more or less dominant throughout
-the whole. But it would further seem that the
-whole, or nearly the whole, of these lands were inhabited
-by races more or less akin to the Greeks.
-They seem to have been races which had a good
-deal in common with the Greeks, and of whom
-the Greeks were simply the foremost and most fortunate,
-their higher developement being doubtless greatly
-favoured by the geographical nature of the country
-which they occupied. But a distinction must be drawn
-between the nearer and the more remote neighbours
-of Greece. It is hardly necessary for our present purpose
-to determine whether the Greeks had or had not
-any connexion with Thracians, European or Asiatic, with
-Phrygians and Lydians, and other neighbouring nations.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nations
-more remote,
-but
-probably
-kindred.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these were in Greek eyes simply Barbarians, but
-modern scholarship has seen in them signs of a kindred
-with the Greek nation nearer than the share of both
-in the common Aryan stock. We need not settle here
-whether all the inhabitants of the geographical district
-which we have marked out were, or were not, kinsmen
-in this sense; but with some among them the question
-assumes a deeper interest and a nearer approach to
-certainty.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Illyrians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great Illyrian race, of whom the
-Albanians or <i>Skipetars</i> are the modern representatives,
-a race which has been so largely displaced by
-Slaves at one end and assimilated by Greeks at the
-other, can hardly fail to have had a nearer kindred with
-the Greeks than that which they both share with Celts
-and Teutons. When we come to the lands which are
-yet more closely connected with Greece, both in geographical
-position and in their history, the case becomes
-clearer still.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Epeiros,
-Macedonia,
-Sicily and
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We can hardly doubt of the close connexion
-between the Greeks and the nations which
-bordered on Greece immediately to the north in
-Epeiros and Macedonia, as well as with some at
-least of those which they found occupying the opposite
-coasts of the Ægæan, as well as in Sicily
-and Italy. The Greeks and Italians, with the nations
-immediately connected with them, clearly belong to
-one, and that a well marked, division of the Aryan
-family. Their kindred is shown alike by the evidence
-of language and by the remarkable ease with
-which in all ages they received Greek civilization.
-Into more minute inquiries as to these matters it
-is hardly our province to go here.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pelasgians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is perhaps
-enough to say that the <i>Pelasgian</i> name, which has
-given rise to so much speculation, seems to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span>
-been used by the Greeks themselves in a very
-vague way, much as the word <i>Saxon</i> is among ourselves.
-It is therefore dangerous to form any theories
-about the matter. Sometimes the Pelasgians seem to
-be spoken of simply as <i>Old-Hellênes</i>, sometimes as a
-people distinct from the Hellênes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Greek
-nation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Whether the Hellênes,
-on their entering into Greece, found the land
-held by earlier inhabitants, whether Aryan or non-Aryan,
-is a curious and interesting speculation, but one
-which does not concern us. It is enough for our
-purpose that, as far back as history or even legend can
-carry us, we find the land in the occupation of a branch
-of the Aryan family, consisting, like all other nations,
-of various kindred tribes. It is a nation which is as
-well defined as any other nation, and yet it shades off,
-as it were, into the other nations of the kindred stock.
-Clearly marked as Greek and Barbarian are from the
-beginning, there still are frontier tribes in Epeiros and
-Macedonia which must be looked on as forming an
-intermediate stage between the two classes, and which
-are accordingly placed by different Greek writers sometimes
-in one class and sometimes in the other.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>The Earliest Geography of Greece and the Neighbouring Lands.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Homeric
-map of
-Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Our first picture of Greek geography comes from
-the Homeric catalogue. Whatever may be the historic
-value of the Homeric poems in general, it is clear that
-the catalogue in the second book of the Iliad must represent
-a real state of things. It gives us a map of Greece
-so different from the map of Greece at any later time
-that it is inconceivable that it can have been invented
-at any later time. We have in fact a map of Greece at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span>
-a time earlier than any time to which we can assign
-certain names and dates. Within the range of Greece
-itself the various Greek races often changed their
-settlements, displacing or conquering earlier Greek
-settlers; and the different states which they formed
-often changed their boundaries by bringing other
-states into subjection or depriving them of parts of
-their territory. The Homeric catalogue gives us a
-wholly different arrangement of the various branches
-of the nation from any that we find in the Greece of
-historic times. The <i>Dorian</i> and <i>Ionian</i> names, which
-were afterwards so famous, are hardly known; the
-name of <i>Hellênes</i> itself belongs only to a small district.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tribal divisions
-of
-Homeric
-Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The names for the whole people are <i>Achaians</i>, <i>Argeians</i>
-(<i>Argos</i> seeming to mean all Peloponnêsos), and
-<i>Danaoi</i>, the last a name which goes quite out of use
-in historic times. The boundary of Greece to the west
-is narrower than it was in later times. The land called
-<i>Akarnania</i> has not yet got that name, if indeed it was
-Greek at all. It is spoken of vaguely as <i>Epeiros</i> or
-the mainland,<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and it appears as part of the possessions
-of the king of the neighbouring islands, <i>Kephallênia</i>
-and <i>Ithakê</i>. The islands to the north, <i>Leukas</i> and <i>Korkyra</i>,
-were not yet Greek. The <i>Thesprotians</i> in Epeiros
-are spoken of as a neighbouring and friendly
-people, but they form no part of the Greek nation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></span>
-The <i>Aitolians</i> appear as a Greek people, and so do
-most of the other divisions of the Greek nation, only
-their position and relative importance is often different
-from what it was afterwards. Thus, to mention a few
-examples out of many, the <i>Lokrians</i>, who, in historic
-times, appear both on the sea of Euboia and on the
-Corinthian gulf, appear in the catalogue in their
-northern seats only.</p>
-
-<p>When we turn from tribes to cities, the difference
-is still greater.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Groupings
-of cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The cities which held the first place in
-historic times are not always those which are greatest
-in the earlier time, and their grouping in federations or
-principalities is wholly unlike anything in later history.
-Thus in the historic <i>Boiotia</i> we find <i>Orchomenos</i> as
-the second city of a confederation of which <i>Thebes</i>
-is the first. In the catalogue Orchomenos and the
-neighbouring city <i>Aspledôn</i> form a separate division,
-distinct from Boiôtia. Euboia forms a whole; and,
-what is specially to be noticed, <i>Attica</i>, as a land,
-is not mentioned, but only the single city of <i>Athens</i>,
-with <i>Salamis</i> as a kind of dependency. Peloponnêsos
-again is divided in a manner quite different from
-anything in later times. The ruling city is <i>Mykênê</i>,
-whose king holds also a general superiority over
-all Hellas, while his immediate dominion takes in
-<i>Corinth</i>, <i>Kleônai</i>, <i>Sikyôn</i>, and the whole south coast of
-the Corinthian Gulf, the <i>Achaia</i> of later times. The
-rest of the cities of the Argolic peninsula are grouped
-round <i>Argos</i>. Northern Greece again is divided into
-groups of cities which answer to nothing in later times.
-And its relative importance in the Greek world is
-clearly far greater than it was in the historic period.</p>
-
-<p>The catalogue also helps us to our earliest picture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
-of the northern and eastern coasts of the Ægæan and
-of the Ægæan islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Greek colonization.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We see the extent which Greek
-colonization had already made. It had as yet taken
-in only the southern islands of the Ægæan. <i>Crete</i> was
-already Greek; so were <i>Rhodes</i>, <i>Kôs</i>, and the neighbouring
-islands; but these last are distinctly marked
-as new settlements. The coast of Asia and the northern
-islands are still untouched, except through the events of
-the Trojan war itself, in which the Greek conquest of
-<i>Lesbos</i> is distinctly marked.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Asiatic
-Catalogue.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Asia, besides <i>Trojans</i>
-and <i>Dardanians</i>, we find <i>Pelasgians</i> as a distinct
-people, as also <i>Paphlagonians</i>, <i>Mysians</i>, <i>Phrygians</i>,
-<i>Maionians</i>, <i>Karians</i>, and <i>Lykians</i>. We find in short
-the nations which fringe the whole Ægæan coast of
-Asia and the south-western coast of the Euxine. In
-Europe again we have Thracians and Paionians, names
-familiar in historic times, and whose bearers seemingly
-occupied nearly the same lands which they do in later
-times. The presence of Thracians in Asia is implied
-rather than asserted. The <i>Macedonian</i> name is not
-found. The northern islands of the Ægæan are mentioned
-only incidentally. Everything leaves us to believe
-that the whole region, European and Asiatic, to which
-we are now concerned, was, at this earliest time of
-which we have any glimpses, occupied by various races
-more or less closely allied to each other.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Phœnician
-and Greek
-settlements
-in the islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The islands
-were largely Karian, but the <i>Phœnicians</i>, a Semitic
-people from the eastern coast, seem to have planted
-colonies in several of the Mediterranean islands. But
-Karians and Phœnicians had now begun to give way to
-Greek settlements. The same rivalry in short between
-Greeks and Phœnicians must have gone on in the earliest
-times in the islands of the Ægæan which went on in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></span>
-historical times in the greater islands of Cyprus and
-Sicily.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>Change from Homeric to Historic Greece.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The state of things which is set before us in the
-catalogue was altogether broken up by later changes,
-but changes which still come before the beginnings of
-contemporary history, and which we understand chiefly
-by comparing the geography of the catalogue with the
-geography of later times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes in
-Peloponnêsos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-According to received tradition,
-a number of <i>Dorian</i> colonies from Northern
-Greece were gradually planted in the chief cities of
-Peloponnêsos, and drove out or reduced to subjection
-their older <i>Achaian</i> inhabitants. Mykênê from this time
-loses its importance; Argos, Sparta, Corinth, and Sikyôn
-become Dorian cities; and Sparta gradually wins the
-dominion over all the towns, whether Dorian or Achaian,
-within her immediate dominion of Lakonia. To the west
-of Lakonia arises the Dorian state of <i>Messênê</i>, which is
-the name only of a district, as there was as yet no
-city so called. As part of the same movement, an
-Aitolian colony is said to have occupied <i>Êlis</i> on the
-west coast of Peloponnêsos. Elis again was at this
-time the name of a district only; the cities both of
-Messênê and Êlis are of much later date. First Argos,
-and then Sparta, rises to a supremacy over their fellow-Dorians
-and over the whole of Peloponnêsos. Historical
-Peloponnêsos thus consists (i) of the cities, chiefly
-Dorian, of the Argolic <i>Aktê</i> or peninsula, together with
-<i>Corinth</i> on the Isthmus and <i>Megara</i>, a Dorian outpost
-beyond the Isthmus; (ii) of <i>Lakonikê</i>, the district immediately
-subject to Sparta, with a boundary towards
-Argos which changed as Sparta advanced and Argos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
-went back; (iii) of <i>Messênê</i>, which was conquered by
-Sparta before the age of contemporary history, and was
-again separated in the fourth century <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>; (iv) of <i>Elis</i>,
-with the border-districts between it and Messênê; (v)
-of the <i>Achaian</i> cities on the coast of the Corinthian
-Gulf; (vi) of the inland country of <i>Arkadia</i>. The
-relations among these districts and the several cities
-within them often fluctuated, but the general aspect of
-the map of Peloponnêsos did not greatly change from
-the beginning of the fifth century to the later days of
-the third.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes in
-Northern
-Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>According to the received traditions, migrations of
-the same kind took place in Northern Greece also between
-the time of the catalogue and the beginning of
-contemporary history. Thus Thessaly, whose different
-divisions form a most important part of the catalogue, is
-said to have suffered an invasion at the hands of the half
-Hellenic <i>Thesprotians</i>. They are said to have become
-the ruling people in Thessaly itself, and to have held a
-supremacy over the neighbouring lands, including the
-peninsula of Magnêsia and the Phthiôtic Achaia. It is
-certain that in the historical period Thessaly lags in the
-back ground, and that the true Hellenic spirit is much
-less developed there than in other parts of Greece. There
-is less reason to accept the legend of a migration out of
-Thessaly into Boiôtia; but in historic times Orchomenos
-no longer appears as a separate state, but is the second
-city of the Boiotian confederacy, yielding the first place
-to Thebes with great unwillingness. The Lokrians
-also now appear on the Corinthian gulf as well as on
-the sea of Euboia. And the land to the west of Aitôlia,
-so vaguely spoken of in the catalogue, has become the
-seat of a Greek people under the name of <i>Akarnania</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
-The Corinthian colonies along this coast, the city of
-<i>Ambrakia</i>, the island or peninsula of <i>Leukas</i>, the
-foundation of which is placed in the eighth century
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>, come almost within the time of trustworthy
-history. They are not Greek in the catalogue; they
-are Greek when we first hear of them in history.
-Ambrakia forms the last outpost of continuous Hellas
-towards the north-west; beyond that are only outlying
-settlements on the Illyrian coasts and islands.</p>
-
-<p>These changes in the geography of continental
-Greece, both within and without Peloponnêsos, make
-the main differences between the Greece of the Homeric
-catalogue and the Greece of the Persian and
-Peloponnesian wars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes in
-later times.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the sixth, fifth, and fourth
-centuries before Christ there were constant changes in
-political relations of the Greek states to one another;
-but there were not many changes which greatly affected
-the geography. Cities were constantly brought in subjection
-to one another, and were again relieved from
-the yoke.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;370-369.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course of the fourth century two new
-Peloponnesian cities, <i>Messênê</i> and <i>Megalopolis</i>, were
-founded. In Boiotia again, <i>Plataia</i> and <i>Orchomenos</i>
-were destroyed by the Thebans, and Thebes itself was
-destroyed by Alexander, but these were afterwards
-rebuilt.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;468.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Peloponnêsos Mykênê was destroyed by
-the Argeians, and never rebuilt. But most of these
-changes do not affect geography, as they did not involve
-any change in the seats of the great divisions
-of the Greek name. The only exception is that of
-the foundation of <i>Messênê</i>, which was accompanied by
-the separation of the old Messenian territory from
-Sparta, and the consequent establishment of a new or
-restored division of the Greek nation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>The Greek Colonies.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Ægæan
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It must have been in the time between the days represented
-by the catalogue and the beginnings of contemporary
-history, that most of the islands of the Ægæan
-became Greek, and that the Greek colonies were planted
-on the Ægæan coast of Asia. We have seen that the
-southern islands were already Greek at the time of the
-catalogue, while some of the northern ones, <i>Thasos</i>,
-<i>Lêmnos</i>, and others, did not become Greek till times to
-which we can give approximate dates, from the eighth
-to the fifth centuries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies
-in Asia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During this period, at some time
-before the eighth century, the whole Ægæan coast of
-Asia had become fringed with Greek cities, <i>Dorian</i> to
-the south, <i>Aiolian</i> to the north, <i>Ionian</i> between the
-two. The story of the Trojan war itself in the land
-is most likely a legendary account of the beginning of
-these settlements, which may make us think that the
-Greek colonization of this coast began in the north, in
-the lands bordering on the Hellespont. At all events,
-by the eighth century these settlements had made the
-Asiatic coast and the islands adjoining it a part, and a
-most important part, not only of the Greek world, but
-we may almost say of Greece itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their early
-greatness.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ionian cities,
-above all, <i>Smyrna</i>, <i>Ephesos</i>, <i>Milêtos</i>, and the islands of
-<i>Chios</i> and <i>Samos</i>, were among the greatest of Greek
-cities, more flourishing certainly than any in European
-Greece. Milêtos, above all, was famous for the number
-of colonies which it sent forth in its own turn. But, if
-their day of greatness came before that of the European
-Greeks, they were also the first to come under
-the power of the Barbarians.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lydian and
-Persian
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course of the fifth
-century the Greek cities on the continent of Asia came
-under the power, first of the <i>Lydian</i> kings and then of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span>
-their <i>Persian</i> conquerors, who subdued several of the
-islands also. It was this subjection of the Asiatic
-Greeks to the Barbarians which led to the Persian
-war, with which the most brilliant time in the history
-of European Greece begins. We thus know the Asiatic
-cities only in the days of their decline.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies in
-Thrace.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The coasts of
-Thrace and Macedonia were also sprinkled with Greek
-cities, but they did not lie so thick together as those
-on the Asiatic coast, except only in the three-fingered
-peninsula of <i>Chalkidikê</i>, which became a thoroughly
-Greek land. Some of these colonies in Thrace, as
-<i>Olynthos</i> and <i>Potidaia</i>, play an important part in Greek
-history, and two among them fill a place in the history
-of the world. <i>Thermê</i>, under its later name of <i>Thessalonikê</i>,
-has kept on its importance under all changes
-down to our own time. And <i>Byzantion</i>, on the Thracian
-Bosporos, rose higher still, becoming, under the
-form of <i>Constantinople</i>, the transplanted seat of the
-Empire of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>The settlements which have been thus far spoken of
-may be all counted as coming within the immediate
-Greek world. They were planted in lands so near to
-the mother-country, and they lay so near to one another,
-that the whole country round the Ægæan may be
-looked on as more or less thoroughly Greek. Some
-parts were wholly Greek, and everywhere Greek influences
-were predominant.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>More distant
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, during this same period
-of distant enterprise, between the time of the Homeric
-catalogue and the time of the Persian War, many Greek
-settlements were made in countries much further off
-from continuous Greece. All of course came within
-the range of the Mediterranean world; no Greek ever
-passed through the Straits of Hêraklês to found settlements<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
-on the Ocean. But a large part of the coast
-both of the Mediterranean itself and of the Euxine
-was gradually dotted with Greek colonies. These outposts
-of Greece, unless they were actually conquered
-by barbarians, almost always remained Greek; they kept
-their Greek language and manners, and they often spread
-them to some extent among their barbarian neighbours.
-But it was not often that any large tract of country
-in these more distant lands became so thoroughly
-Greek as the Ægæan coast of Asia became. We may
-say however that such was the case with the coast of
-Sicily and Southern Italy, where many Greek colonies
-were planted, which will be spoken of more fully in
-another chapter. All Sicily indeed did in the end really
-become a Greek country, though not till after its conquest
-by the Romans. But in Northern and Central
-Italy, the Latins, Etruscans, and other Italian nations
-were too strong for any Greek colonies to be made in
-those parts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies in
-the Hadriatic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the other side of the Hadriatic, Greek
-colonies had spread before the Peloponnesian war as
-far north as <i>Epidamnos</i>. The more northern colonies
-on the coast and among the islands of Dalmatia, the
-Illyrian <i>Epidauros</i>, <i>Pharos</i>, <i>Black Korkyra</i>, and others,
-were among the latest efforts of Greek colonization in
-the strict sense.</p>
-
-<p>In other parts of the Mediterranean coasts the
-Greek settlements lay further apart from each other.
-But we may say that they were spread here and there
-over the whole coast, except where there was some
-special hindrance to keep the Greeks from settling.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Phœnician
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus, in a great part of the Mediterranean the
-Phœnicians had got the start of the Greeks, both in
-their own country on the coast of Syria, and in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></span>
-colonies sent forth by their great cities of Tyre and
-Sidon. The Phœnician colonists occupied a large part
-of the western half of the southern coast of the
-Mediterranean, where lay the great Phœnician cities of
-<i>Carthage</i>, <i>Utica</i>, and others. They had also settlements
-in Southern Spain, and one at least outside the straits
-on the Ocean. This is <i>Gades</i> or <i>Cadiz</i>, which has kept
-its name and its unbroken position as a great city from
-an earlier time than any other city in Europe. The
-Greeks therefore could not colonize in these parts.
-In the great islands of Sicily and Cyprus there were
-both Phœnician and Greek colonies, and there was a
-long struggle between the settlers of the two nations.
-In Egypt again, though there were some Greek settlers,
-yet there were no Greek colonies in the strict sense.
-That is, there were no independent Greek commonwealths.
-Thus the only part of the southern coast of
-the Mediterranean which was open to Greek colonization
-was the land between Egypt and the dominions of
-Carthage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek colonies
-in
-Africa,
-Gaul, and
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In that land accordingly several Greek
-cities were planted, of which the chief was the famous
-<i>Kyrênê</i>. On the southern coast of Gaul arose the
-great Ionian city of <i>Massalia</i> or <i>Marseilles</i>, which also,
-like the Phœnician Gades, has kept its name and its
-prosperity down to our own time. Massalia became the
-centre of a group of Greek cities on the south coast of
-Gaul and the east coast of Spain, which were the means
-of spreading a certain amount of Greek civilization in
-those parts.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies on
-the Euxine.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Besides these settlements in the Mediterranean itself,
-there were also a good many Greek colonies on the
-western, northern, and southern coasts of the Euxine, of
-which those best worth remembering are the city of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></span>
-<i>Chersonêsos</i> in the peninsula called the <i>Tauric Chersonêsos</i>,
-now Crimea, and <i>Trapezous</i> on the southern
-coast. These two deserve notice as being two most
-abiding seats of Greek influence. Chersonêsos, under
-the name of <i>Cherson</i>, remained an independent Greek
-commonwealth longer than any other, and Trapezous or
-<i>Trebizond</i> became the seat of Greek-speaking Emperors,
-who outlived those of Constantinople. Speaking generally
-then, we may say that, in the most famous times of
-European Greece, in the time of the Persian and Peloponnesian
-wars, the whole coast of the Ægæan was part
-of the immediate Greek world, while in Sicily and
-Cyprus Greek colonies were contending with the Phœnicians,
-and in Italy with the native Italians. Massalia
-was the centre of a group of Greek states in the north-west,
-and Kyrênê in the south, while the greater part
-of the coast of the Euxine was also dotted with Greek
-cities here and there. In most of these colonies the
-Greeks mixed to some extent with the natives, and
-the natives to some extent learned the Greek language
-and manners.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of the artificial
-Greek
-nation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We thus get the beginning of what we
-call an artificial Greek nation, a nation Greek in
-speech and manners, but not purely Greek in blood,
-which has gone on ever since.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 7. <i>Growth of Macedonia and Epeiros.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Macedonia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But while the spread of the Greek language and
-civilization, and therewith the growth of the artificial
-Greek nation, was brought about in a great degree
-by the planting of independent Greek colonies, it was
-brought about still more fully by events which went
-far to destroy the political independence of Greece
-itself. This came of the growth of the kindred nations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
-to the north of Greece, in Macedonia and Epeiros. The
-Macedonians were for a long time hemmed in by the
-barbarians to the north and west of them and by the
-Greek cities on the coast, and they were also weakened
-by divisions among themselves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Philip, <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;
-360-336.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But when the whole
-nation was united under its great King Philip, Macedonia
-soon became the chief power in Greece and the
-neighbouring lands. Philip greatly increased his dominions
-at the expense of both Greeks and barbarians,
-especially by adding the peninsulas of Chalkidikê to his
-kingdom. But in Greece itself, though he took to himself
-the chief power, he did not actually annex any of
-the Greek states to Macedonia, so that his victories there
-do not affect the map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Alexander,
-336-323.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His yet more famous son Alexander,
-and the Macedonian kings after him, in like
-manner held garrisons in particular Greek cities, and
-brought some parts of Greece, as Thessaly and Euboia,
-under a degree of Macedonian influence which hardly
-differed from dominion; but they did not formally
-annex them. The conquests of Alexander in Asia
-brought most of the Greek cities and islands under
-Macedonian dominion, but some, as Crete, Rhodes,
-Byzantion, and <i>Hêrakleia</i> on the Euxine, kept their
-independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Epeiros
-under Pyrrhos,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;
-295-272.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile Epeiros became united
-under the Greek kings of <i>Molossis</i>, and under Pyrrhos,
-who made Ambrakia his capital, it became a powerful
-state. And a little kingdom called <i>Athamania</i>, thrust
-in between Epeiros, Macedonia, and Thessaly, now
-begins to be heard of.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Macedonian
-kingdoms
-in Asia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The conquests of Alexander in Asia concern us only
-so far as they called into being a class of states in Western
-Asia, all of which received a greater or less share of
-Hellenic culture, and some of which may claim a place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
-in the actual Greek world. By the division of the empire
-of Alexander after the battle of Ipsos, <i>Egypt</i> became
-the kingdom of Ptolemy, with whose descendants
-it remained down to the Roman conquest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;301.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The civilization
-of the Egyptian court was Greek, and Alexandria
-became one of the greatest of Greek cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Egypt
-under the
-Ptolemies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Moreover
-the earlier kings of the Ptolemaic dynasty held various
-islands in the Ægæan, and points on the coast of Asia
-and even of Thrace, which made them almost entitled
-to rank as a power in Greece itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Seleukid
-dynasty.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great Asiatic
-power of Alexander passed to <i>Seleukos</i> and his descendants.
-The early kings of his house ruled from the Ægæan
-to the Hyphasis, though this great dominion was at all
-times fringed and broken in upon by the dominions of
-native princes, by independent Greek cities, and by the
-dominions of other Macedonian kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Circa <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;
-256.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in the third
-century their dominion was altogether cut short in the
-East by the revolt of the Parthians in northern Persia,
-by whom the eastern provinces of the Seleukid kingdom
-were lopped away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;191-181.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And when Antiochos the Great
-provoked a war with Rome, his dominion was cut
-short to the West also. The Seleukid power now shrank
-up into a local kingdom of <i>Syria</i>, with Tauros for its
-north-western frontier.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cities of independent
-state in
-Asia Minor.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;283.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>By the cutting short of the Seleukid kingdom, room
-was given for the growth of the independent states
-which had already sprung up in Asia Minor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pergamos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom of <i>Pergamos</i> had already begun, and the
-dominions of its kings were largely increased by the
-Romans at the expense of Antiochos. Pergamos might
-count as a Hellenic state, alongside of Macedonia and
-Epeiros. But the other kingdoms of Asia Minor, <i>Bithynia</i>,
-<i>Kappadokia</i>, <i>Paphlagonia</i>, and <i>Pontos</i>, the kingdom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
-of the famous Mithridates, must be counted as
-Asiatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spread of
-Hellenic
-culture.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Hellenic influence indeed spread itself far
-to the East. Even the Parthian kings affected a certain
-amount of Greek culture, and in all the more western
-kingdoms there was a greater or less Greek element,
-and in several of them the kings fixed their capitals in
-Greek cities. Still in all of them the Asiatic element
-prevailed in a way in which it did not prevail at Pergamos.
-Meanwhile other states, either originally Greek
-or largely Hellenized, still remained East of the Ægæan.
-Thus, at the south-western corner of Asia Minor, <i>Lykia</i>,
-though seemingly less thoroughly Hellenized than some
-of its neighbours, became a federal state after the
-Greek model.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Seleukeia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Far to the East, <i>Seleukeia</i> on the Tigris,
-whether under Syrian or Parthian overlordship, kept
-its character as a Greek colony, and its position as what
-may be called a free imperial city. Further to the
-West other more purely Greek states survived.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hêrakleia.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;188.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Pontic <i>Hêrakleia</i> long remained an independent Greek
-city, sometimes a commonwealth, sometimes under
-tyrants; and <i>Sinôpê</i> remained a Greek city till it became
-the capital of the kings of Pontos. On the north of the
-Euxine, <i>Bosporos</i> still remained a Greek kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 8. <i>The later Geography of Independent Greece.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later political
-divisions
-of
-Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The political divisions of independent Greece, in the
-days when it gradually came under the power of Rome,
-differ almost as much from those to which we are used
-during the Persian and Peloponnesian wars, as these last
-differ from the earlier divisions in the Homeric catalogue.
-The chief feature of these times was the power
-which was held, as we have before seen, by the Macedonian
-kings, and the alliances made by the different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-Greek states in order to escape or to throw off their
-yoke. The result was that the greater part of Greece
-was gradually mapped out among large confederations,
-much larger at least than Greece had ever seen before.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Achaian
-League,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;280.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The most famous of these, the League of <i>Achaia</i>,
-began among the old Achaian cities on the south of
-the Corinthian Gulf.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;191.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It gradually spread, till it
-took in the whole of Peloponnêsos, together with
-Megara and one or two outlying cities. Thus Corinth,
-Argos, Elis, and even Sparta, instead of being distinct
-states as of old, with a greater or less dominion over
-other cities, were now simply members of one federal
-body.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Aitolian
-League.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Northern Greece the League of <i>Aitolia</i> now
-became very powerful, and extended itself far beyond
-its old borders. Akarnania, Phôkis, Lokris, and
-Boiôtia formed Federal states of less power, and so
-did <i>Epeiros</i>, where the kings had been got rid of, and
-which was now reckoned as a thoroughly Greek state.
-The Macedonian kings held different points at different
-times: Corinth itself for a good while, and Thessaly and
-Euboia for longer periods, might be almost counted as
-parts of their kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roman interference
-in Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This was the state of things in Greece at the
-time when the Romans began to meddle in Greek and
-Macedonian affairs, and gradually to bring all these
-countries, like the rest of the Mediterranean world,
-under their power. But it should be remarked that
-this was done, as the conquests of the Romans always
-were done, very gradually.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;229.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First the island of Korkyra
-and the cities of Epidamnos and Apollônia on
-the Illyrian coast became Roman allies, which was always
-a step to becoming Roman subjects.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;205.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Romans
-first appeared in Greece itself, as allies of the Aitolians,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span>
-but by the Peace of Epeiros Rome obtained no
-dominion in Greece, and merely some increase of her
-Illyrian territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;200-197.<br />
-Progress of
-Roman
-conquests.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;196.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The second Macedonian War made
-Macedonia dependent on Rome, and all those parts of
-Greece which had been under the Macedonian power
-were declared free at its close.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;189.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Aitolians had
-joined Antiochos of Syria against Rome,
-they were
-made a Roman dependency. From that time Rome
-was always meddling in the affairs of the Greek states,
-and they may be counted as really, though not formally,
-dependent on Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;169.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;149.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After the third Macedonian
-war, Macedonia was cut up into four separate commonwealths;
-and at last, after the fourth, it became a
-Roman province.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;146.<br />
-Remaining
-free states
-incorporated
-by
-Vespasian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-About the same time the Leagues
-of Epeiros and Boiôtia were dissolved; the Achaian
-League also became formally dependent on Rome, and
-was dissolved for a time also. It is not certain when
-Achaia became formally a Roman province; but, from
-this time, all Greece was practically subject to Rome.
-Athens remained nominally independent, as did Rhodes,
-Byzantion, and several other islands and outlying cities,
-some of which were not formally incorporated with
-the Roman dominion till the time of the Emperor
-Vespasian.</p>
-
-<p>As we go on with the geography of other countries
-which came under the Roman dominion, we shall
-learn more of the way in which Rome thus enlarged
-her territories bit by bit. But it seemed
-right to begin with the geography of Greece, and
-this could not be carried down to the time when
-Greece became a Roman dominion without saying something
-of the Roman conquest. From <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;146 we must
-look upon Greece and the neighbouring lands as being,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
-some of them formally and all of them practically,
-part of the Roman dominion. And we shall not have
-to speak of them again as separate states or countries
-till many ages later, when the Roman dominion began
-to fall in pieces. Having thus traced the geography of
-the most eastern of the three great European peninsulas
-down to the time when it became part of the dominion
-which took in all the lands around the Mediterranean,
-we will now go on to speak of the middle peninsula,
-which became the centre of that dominion, namely that
-of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Special
-character of
-Greek history.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Greece and the neighbouring lands are the
-only parts of Europe which can be said to have a
-history quite independent of Rome, and beginning
-earlier than the Roman history. Of the other countries
-therefore which became part of the Roman Empire it
-will be best to speak in their relation to Italy, and,
-as nearly as possible, in the order in which they came
-under the Roman power.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">FORMATION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> second of the three great peninsulas of southern
-Europe, that which lies between the other two, is that
-of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-meanings
-of the name
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The name of Italy has been used in several
-meanings at different times, but it has always meant
-either the whole or a part of the land which we now call
-Italy. The name gradually spread itself from the extreme
-south to the north.<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> At the time when our
-survey begins, the name did not go beyond the
-long narrow peninsula itself; and indeed it hardly
-took in the whole of that.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its meaning
-under the
-Roman
-commonwealth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the time of the
-Roman commonwealth Italy did not reach beyond the
-little rivers <i>Macra</i> on one side, near <i>Luna</i>, and <i>Rubico</i>
-on the other side, near <i>Ariminum</i>. The land to the
-north, as far as the Alps, was not counted for Italy till
-after the time of Cæsar. But the Alps are the natural
-boundary which fence off the peninsular land from the
-great mass of central Europe; so that, looking at the
-matter as a piece of geography, we may count the
-whole land within the Alps as Italy. It will be at
-once seen that the Italian peninsula, though so long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
-and narrow, is by no means cut up into promontories
-and smaller peninsulas as the Greek peninsula is.
-Nor is it surrounded by so many islands. It is only
-quite in the south, where the long narrow peninsula
-splits off into two smaller ones, that the coast has at all
-the character of the Greek coast, and there only in a
-much slighter degree.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Italian
-islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Close by this end of Italy lies
-the great island of <i>Sicily</i>, whose history has always
-been closely connected with that of Italy. Further off
-lie the two other great islands of <i>Corsica</i> and <i>Sardinia</i>,
-which in old times were not reckoned to belong to
-Italy at all. Besides these there are several smaller
-islands, <i>Elba</i> and others, along the Italian coast;
-but they lie a good way from each other, and do not
-form any marked feature in the geography. There
-is nothing at all like even the group of islands off
-western Greece, much less like the endless multitude,
-great and small, in the Ægæan. Through the whole
-length of the peninsula, like a backbone, runs the
-long chain of the <i>Apennines</i>. These branch off from
-the Alps in north-western Italy near the sea, and run
-through the whole length of the country to the very
-toe of the boot, as the Italian peninsula has been called
-from its shape. From all this it follows that, though
-Italy was the land which was destined in the end to
-have the rule over all the rest, yet the people of Italy
-were not likely to begin to make themselves a name so
-early as the Greeks did. Least of all were they likely
-to take in the same way to a sea-faring life, and to
-plant colonies in far off lands.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Inhabitants of Italy and Sicily.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Non-Aryans
-in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We seem to have somewhat clearer signs in Italy than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span>
-we have in Greece of the men who dwelled in the land
-before the Aryans who appear as its historical inhabitants
-came into it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ligurians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the coast of <i>Liguria</i>, the land on
-each side of the city of Genoa, a land which was not
-reckoned Italian in early times, we find people who
-seem not to have been Aryan. And these Ligurians
-seem to have been part of a race which was spread
-through Italy and Sicily before the Aryan settlements,
-and to have been akin to the non-Aryan inhabitants of
-Spain and southern Gaul, of whom the Basques on each
-side of the Pyrenees remain as a remnant.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Etruscans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And in historical
-times a large part of Italy was held, and in
-earlier times a still larger part seems to have been held,
-by the <i>Etruscans</i>. These are a people about whose
-origin and language there have been many theories, but
-nothing can as yet be said to be certainly known. These
-Etruscans, in historical times, formed a confederacy
-of twelve cities in the land west of the Apennines, between
-the Macra and the Tiber; and it is believed that
-in earlier times they had settlements both more to the
-north, on the Po, and more to the south, in Campania.
-If they were a non-Aryan race, the part of the non-Aryans
-in the geography and history of Italy becomes
-greater than it has been in any part of Western Europe
-except Spain.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Italians.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But whatever we make of the Etruscans, the rest of
-Italy in the older sense was held by various branches of
-an Aryan race nearly allied to the Greeks, whom we may
-call the <i>Italians</i>. Of this race there were two great
-branches. One of them, under various names, seems to
-have held all the southern part of the western coast of
-Italy, and to have spread into Sicily. Some of the tribes
-of this branch seem to have been almost as nearly akin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
-to the Greeks as the Epeirots and other kindred nations
-on the east side of the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Latins.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of this branch of the
-Italian race, the most famous people were the <i>Latins</i>;
-and it was the greatest Latin city, the border city of
-the Latins against the Etruscans, the city of <i>Rome</i> on
-the Tiber, which became, step by step, the mistress of
-Latium, of Italy, and of the Mediterranean world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Opicans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-other branch, which held a much larger part of the
-peninsula, taking in the <i>Sabines</i>, <i>Æquians</i>, <i>Volscians</i>,
-<i>Samnites</i>, <i>Lucanians</i>, and other people who play a
-great part in the Roman history, may perhaps be classed
-together as <i>Opicans</i> or <i>Oscans</i>, in distinction from the
-Latins, and the other tribes allied to them. These
-tribes seem to have pressed from the eastern, the Hadriatic,
-coast of Italy, down upon the nations to the
-south-west of them, and to have largely extended their
-borders at their expense.</p>
-
-<p>But part of ancient Italy, and a still larger part of
-Italy in the modern sense, was inhabited by nations
-other than the Italians.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Iapygians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the heel of the boot were
-the <i>Iapygians</i>, a people of uncertain origin, but who
-seem in any case to have had a great gift of receiving
-the Greek language and manners.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gauls.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And in the northern
-part, in the lands which were not then counted as
-part of Italy, were the <i>Gauls</i>, a Celtic people, akin
-to the Gauls beyond the Alps, and whose country
-was therefore called <i>Cisalpine Gaul</i> or Gaul on this
-side of the Alps. They were found on both sides of the
-Po, and on the Hadriatic coast they seem to have
-stretched in early times almost as far south as <i>Ancona</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Veneti.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the north-east corner of Italy were yet another
-people, the <i>Veneti</i>, perhaps of Illyrian origin, whose
-name long after was taken by the city of <i>Venice</i>. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></span>
-during the whole time with which we have to do, there
-was no city so called, and the name of <i>Venetia</i> is always
-the name of a country.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek colonies
-in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>All these nations we may look on as the original
-inhabitants of Italy; that is, all were there before anything
-like contemporary history begins.<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> But besides
-these original nations, there were in one part of Italy
-many Greek colonies, and also in the island of Sicily.
-Some cities of Italy claimed to be Greek colonies, without
-any clear proof that they were so. But there seems
-no reason to doubt that <i>Kymê</i> or <i>Cumæ</i> on the western
-coast of Italy, and <i>Ankôn</i> or <i>Ancona</i> on the Hadriatic,
-were solitary Greek colonies far away from any other
-Greek settlements. Cumæ, though so far off, is said to
-have been the earliest Greek colony in Italy. But
-where the Greeks mainly settled was in the two lesser
-peninsulas, the heel and the toe of the boot, into which
-the great peninsula of Italy divides at its southern end.
-Here, as was before said, there is a nearer approach to
-the kind of coast to which the Greeks were used at
-home. Here then arose a number of Greek cities,
-stretching from the extreme south almost up to Cumæ.
-As in the case of the Greek cities in Asia, the time of
-greatness of the Italian Greeks came earlier than that
-of the Greeks in Greece itself. In the sixth century <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>
-some of these Greek colonies in Italy, as <i>Taras</i> or
-<i>Tarentum</i>, <i>Krotôn</i> or <i>Crotona</i>, <i>Sybaris</i>, and others, were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span>
-among the greatest cities of the Greek name. But, as
-the Italian nations grew stronger, the Greek cities lost
-their power, and many of them, Cumæ among them,
-fell into the hands of Italian conquerors, and lost their
-Greek character more or less thoroughly. Others
-remained Greek till they became subject to Rome,
-and the Greek speech and manners did not quite die
-out of southern Italy till ages after the Christian æra.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Inhabitants
-of Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The geography and history of the great island of
-Sicily, which lies so near to the toe of the boot, cannot
-be kept apart from those of Italy. The mainland and
-the island were, to a great extent, inhabited by the same
-nations. The <i>Sikanians</i> in the western part of the
-island may not unlikely have been akin to the Ligurians
-and Basques; but the <i>Sikels</i>, who gave their name
-to the island, and who are the people with whom the
-Greeks had most to do, were clearly of the Italian
-stock, and were nearly allied to the Latins.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Phœnician
-and Greek
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Phœnicians
-of Carthage planted some colonies in the
-western and northern parts of the island, the chief
-of which was the city which the Greeks called
-<i>Panormos</i>, the modern capital <i>Palermo</i>. But the
-western and southern sides of the triangle were full
-of Greek cities, which are said to have been founded
-from the eighth century <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span> to the sixth. Several of
-these, especially <i>Syracuse</i> and <i>Akragas</i> or <i>Agrigentum</i>,
-were among the chief of Greek cities; and from them
-the Greek speech and manners gradually spread themselves
-over the natives, till in the end Sicily was reckoned
-as wholly a Greek land. But for some centuries
-Sicilian history is chiefly made up of struggles for
-the mastery between Carthage and the Greek cities.
-This was in truth a struggle between the Aryan and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
-the Semitic race, and we shall see that, many ages
-after, the same battle was again fought on the same
-ground.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>Growth of the Roman power in Italy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gradual
-conquest of
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The history of ancient Italy, as far as we know it,
-is the history of the gradual conquest of the whole land
-by one of its own cities; and the changes in its political
-geography are mainly the changes which followed the
-gradual bringing of the whole peninsula under the
-Roman dominion. But the form which the conquests
-of Rome took hindered those conquests from having
-so great an effect on the map as they otherwise might
-have had. The cities and districts of Italy, as they were
-one by one conquered by Rome, were commonly left
-as separate states, in the relation of dependent alliance,
-from which most of them were step by step promoted
-to the rights of Roman citizenship.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-positions of
-the Italian
-cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-An Italian city
-might be a dependent ally of Rome; it might be a
-Roman colony with the full franchise or a colony holding
-the inferior Latin franchise; or it might have been
-actually made part of a Roman tribe. All these were
-very important political differences; but they do not
-make much difference in the look of things on the
-map. The most important of the changes which can
-be called strictly geographical belong to the early days
-of Rome, when there were important national movements
-among the various races of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Rome arose
-at the point of union of the three races, Latin, Oscan,
-and Etruscan, and it arose from an union between the
-<i>Latin</i> and <i>Oscan</i> races.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rome a
-Latin city.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Two Latin and one <i>Sabine</i>
-settlements seem to have joined together to form the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
-city of Rome; but the Sabine element must have been
-thoroughly Latinized, and Rome must be counted as
-a Latin city, the greatest, though very likely the youngest,
-among the cities of Latium.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her early
-Latin dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Rome, planted on a march, rose, in the way in
-which marchlands often do rise, to supremacy among
-her fellows. Our first authentic record of the early
-commonwealth sets Rome before us as bearing rule
-over the whole of Latium. This dominion she seems
-to have lost soon after the driving out of the kings,
-and some of her territory right of the Tiber seems
-to have become Etruscan. Presently Rome appears,
-no longer as mistress of Latium, but as forming one
-member of a triple league concluded on equal terms
-with the Latins as a body, and with the Hernicans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars with
-her neighbours.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This league was engaged in constant wars with its
-neighbours of the Oscan race, the <i>Æquians</i> and <i>Volscians</i>,
-by whom many of the Latin cities were taken.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>More distant
-wars.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;396.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the first great advance of Rome’s actual dominion
-was made on the right bank of the Tiber,
-by the
-taking of the Etruscan city of <i>Veii</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;343.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Fifty years later
-Rome began to engage in more distant wars; and we
-may say generally that the conquest of Italy was going
-on bit by bit for eighty years more.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;296.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the end
-of that time, all Italy, in the older sense, was brought
-in one shape or another under the Roman dominion.
-The neighbouring districts, both Latin and of other
-races, had been admitted to citizenship. Roman and
-Latin colonies were planted in various parts of the
-country; elsewhere the old cities, Etruscan, Samnite,
-Greek, or any other, still remained as dependent allies
-of Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of
-the
-Italian
-states.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;89.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently Rome went on to win dominion
-out of Italy; but the Italian states still remained in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span>
-their old relation to Rome,
-till the Italian allies
-received the Roman franchise after the <i>Social</i> or <i>Marsian</i>
-war. The <i>Samnites</i> alone held out, and they
-may be said to have been altogether exterminated in
-the wars of Sulla. The rest of Italy was Roman.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Western Provinces.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The great change in Roman policy, and in European
-geography as affected by it, took place when Rome
-began to win territory out of Italy. The relation of
-these foreign possessions to the ruling city was quite
-different from that of the Italian states. The foreign
-conquests of Rome were made into <i>provinces</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nature of
-the Roman
-Provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A province was a district which was subject to Rome,
-and put under the rule of a Roman governor, which
-was not done with the dependent allies in Italy. But
-it must be borne in mind that, though we speak of
-a province as having a certain geographical extent,
-yet there might be cities within its limits whose formal
-relation to Rome was that of dependent, or even
-of equal, alliance. There might also be Roman and
-Latin colonies, either colonies really planted or cities
-which had been raised to the Roman or Latin franchise.
-All these were important distinctions as regarded
-the internal government of the different states;
-still practically all alike formed part of the Roman
-dominion. In a geographical survey it will therefore
-be enough to mark the extent of the different
-provinces, without attending to their political, or
-more truly municipal, distinctions, except in a few
-cases where they are of special importance.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-and Western
-Provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The provinces then are the foreign dominions of
-Rome, and they fall naturally into two, or rather three,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></span>
-divisions. There are the provinces of the West, in which
-the Romans had chiefly to contend with nations much
-less civilized than themselves, and in which therefore the
-provincials gradually adopted the language and manners
-of their conquerors. But in the provinces to the east
-of the Hadriatic, the Greek language and Greek manners
-had become the language and manners of civilized
-life, and their supremacy was not supplanted by those
-of Rome. And in the more distant parts, as in Syria
-and Egypt, the Greek civilization was a mere varnish;
-the mass of the people still kept to their old manners
-and languages as they were before the Macedonian
-conquests. In these countries therefore the Latin tongue
-and Roman civilization made but little progress. The
-Roman conquests went on on both sides of the Hadriatic
-at the same time, but it was to the west that they
-began. The first Roman province however forms a
-sort of intermediate class by itself, standing between
-the eastern and the western.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This first Roman province was formed in the great
-island of <i>Sicily</i>, which, by its geographical position,
-belongs to the western part of Europe, while the
-fact that Greek became the prevailing language in it
-rather connects it with the eastern part.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-Roman
-possessions
-in the
-island.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;241.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Roman
-dominion in Sicily began when the Carthaginian possessions
-in the island were given up to Rome, as the result
-of the first Punic war. But, as Hierôn of <i>Syracuse</i>
-had helped Rome against Carthage, his kingdom remained
-in alliance with Rome, and was not dealt with
-as a conquered land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Syracuse.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;212.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was only when Syracuse
-turned against Rome in the second Punic war that it
-was, on its conquest, formally made a Roman possession.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;132.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Eighty years later the condition of Sicily under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></span>
-Roman government was finally settled, and it may be
-taken as a type of the endless variety of relations in
-which the different districts and cities throughout the
-Roman dominions stood to the ruling commonwealth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>State of
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greater part of the island became simply subject;
-the land was held to be forfeited to the Roman People,
-and the former inhabitants held it simply as tenants on
-payment of a tithe. But some cities were called free,
-and kept their land; others remained in name independent
-allies of the Roman People. Other cities
-were afterwards raised to the Latin franchise; in
-others Latin or Roman colonies were planted, and
-one Sicilian city, that of <i>Messana</i>, received the full
-citizenship of Rome. It must be borne in mind that
-these different relations, these exceptionally favoured
-cities and districts, are found, not only in Sicily, but
-throughout all the provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek civilization
-of
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Sicily, by the time of
-the conquest, was looked on as a thoroughly Greek
-land. The Greek language and manners had now
-spread themselves everywhere among the Sikels and
-the other inhabitants of the island. And Sicily
-remained a thoroughly Greek land, till, ages afterwards,
-it again became, as it had been in the days of the Greek
-and Phœnician colonies, a battle-field of Aryan and
-Semitic races in the days of the Mahometan conquests.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sardinia
-and Corsica.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The two great islands of <i>Sardinia</i> and <i>Corsica</i>
-seem almost as natural appendages to Italy as Sicily
-itself; but their history is very different. They have
-played no important part in the history of the world.
-The original stock of their inhabitants seems to have
-been akin to the non-Aryan element in Spain and Sicily.
-The attempts at Greek colonization in them were but
-feeble, and they passed under the dominion, first of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></span>
-Carthage and then of Rome, without any important
-change in their condition.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;238.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These two islands became
-a Roman province, which was always reckoned one of
-the most worthless of provinces, in the interval between
-the first and second Punic wars.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cisalpine
-Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus far the Roman dominions did not reach
-beyond what we should look upon as the natural
-extent of the dominion of an Italian power. Indeed,
-as long as Italy did not reach to the Alps, we should
-say that it had not reached the natural extent of an
-Italian dominion. But the conquest of Cisalpine Gaul
-cannot be separated from the general conquest of
-Western Europe. The Roman conquest of Gaul and
-Spain, by gradually spreading the Latin language and
-Roman civilization over those countries, created two
-of the chief nations and languages of modern Europe.
-But the process was simply the continuation of a process
-which began within the borders of what we now
-call Italy. Gaul within the Alps was as strictly a
-foreign conquest as Spain or as Gaul beyond the Alps.
-Only the geographical position of Cisalpine Gaul allowed
-it to be easily and speedily incorporated with
-Italy in a way which the lands beyond the Alps could
-not be. The beginnings of conquest in this direction
-took place after the end of the Samnite wars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Foundation
-of Sena
-Gallica.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;282.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-the colony of <i>Sena Gallica</i>, now <i>Sinigaglia</i>, was
-founded on Gaulish soil, and it was presently followed
-by the foundation of <i>Ariminum</i> or <i>Rimini</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Cisalpine
-Gaul.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;201-191.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Roman arms were carried beyond the Po in the time
-between the first and the second Punic war;
-after the second Punic war, Cisalpine Gaul was thoroughly
-conquered, and was secured by the foundation of many
-Roman and Latin colonies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;43.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Roman and Latin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span>
-franchises were gradually extended to most parts of
-the country,
-and at last Cisalpine Gaul was formally
-incorporated with Italy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Liguria and
-Venetia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Closely connected with the conquest of Cisalpine
-Gaul was the conquest of the other non-Italian lands
-within the boundaries of modern Italy. These were
-<i>Liguria</i> to the south-east of Cisalpine Gaul and <i>Venetia</i>
-to the north-west. Both these lands held out longer
-than Cisalpine Gaul; but by the time of Augustus they
-were all, together with the peninsula of <i>Istria</i>, counted
-as part of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Foundation
-of Aquileia,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;183.
-<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominion of Rome in this region
-was secured at an early stage of the conquest by the
-foundation of the great colony of <i>Aquileia</i>. We thus
-see that, not only Venice, but Milan, Pavia, Verona,
-Ravenna, and Genoa, cities which played so great a
-part in the after history of Italy, arose in lands which
-were not originally Italian. But we also see that Italy,
-with the boundaries given to it by Augustus, took in a
-somewhat larger territory to the north-east than the
-kingdom of Italy does now.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The lands within the Alps may be fairly said
-to have been conquered by Rome in self-defence, and
-we cannot help looking on the three great islands
-as natural parts of an Italian dominion. The conquests
-of the Romans in lands altogether beyond their
-own borders may be said to have begun in Western
-Europe with the conquest of <i>Spain</i>, which began
-before that of Transalpine Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Connexion
-of Spain
-and Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Spain and Gaul,
-using the names in the geographical sense, have much
-which binds them together.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Iberians in
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the borders of the
-two countries traces are still left of the old non-Aryan
-inhabitants who still speak the Basque language.
-These represent the old <i>Iberian</i> inhabitants of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</a></span>
-Spain and Gaul, who, when our history begins, stretched
-as far into Gaul as the Garonne.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Celts.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the <i>Celts</i>, the
-first wave of the Aryan migration in Europe, had
-pressed into both Gaul and Spain; in Gaul they had,
-when trustworthy history begins, already occupied by
-far the greater part of the country.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek and<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Mediterranean
-coasts of Gaul and Spain were also connected together
-by the sprinkling of Greek colonies along those shores,
-of which <i>Massalia</i> was the head. And, beside the
-primitive non-Aryan element, there was an intrusive
-non-Aryan element also.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Phœnician
-settlements.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In southern Spain several
-Phœnician settlements had been made, the chief of
-which was <i>Gades</i> or <i>Cadiz</i>, beyond the straits, the one
-great Phœnician city on the Ocean. And between the
-first and second Punic wars Carthage obtained a large
-Spanish dominion, of which <i>New Carthage</i> or <i>Carthagena</i>
-was the capital.</p>
-
-<p>It was the presence of these last settlements which
-first brought Spain under the Roman dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First Roman
-province
-in
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Saguntum</i>
-was an ally of Rome, and its taking by Hannibal
-was the beginning of the second Punic war.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;218-206.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The campaigns of the Scipios during that war led to
-the gradual conquest of the whole country.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;49.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Carthaginian
-possessions first became a Roman province,
-while Gades became a favoured ally of Rome, and at
-last was admitted to the full Roman franchise.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;133.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile,
-the gradual conquest of the rest of the country
-went on, till, after the taking of <i>Numantia</i>, all Spain,
-except the remote tribes in the north-west, had become
-a Roman possession.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final conquest.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;19.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These tribes, the <i>Cantabrians</i>
-and their neighbours, were not fully subdued till the
-time of Augustus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Romanization
-of
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But long before that time the
-Latin language and Roman manners had been fast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
-spreading through the country, and in Augustus’ time
-southern Spain was altogether Romanized. It was
-only in a small district close to the Pyrenees that
-the ancient language held out, as it has done ever
-since.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Transalpine
-Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The conquest of Spain, owing to the connexion of
-the country with Carthage, thus began while a large
-part even of Cisalpine Gaul was still unsubdued. And
-the Roman arms were not carried into Gaul beyond the
-Alps till the conquest of Spain was pretty well assured.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;122.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The foundation of the first Roman colony at <i>Aquæ
-Sextiæ</i>, the modern <i>Aix</i>, was only eleven years later
-than the fall of Numantia. The Romans stepped in as
-allies of the Greek city of Massalia, and, as usual, from
-helping their allies they took to conquering on their
-own account.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Transalpine
-Province.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;125-105.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A Roman province, including the colonies
-of <i>Narbonne</i> and <i>Toulouse</i>, was thus formed in the
-south-eastern part of Transalpine Gaul. The advance
-of Rome in this direction seems to have been checked
-by the invasion of the Cimbri and Teutones, but through
-that long delay Roman influences were able to establish
-themselves more firmly. This part of Gaul was early
-and thoroughly Romanized, and part of it still keeps,
-in its name of <i>Provence</i>, the memory of its having been
-the first Roman province beyond the Alps. The rest
-of Gaul was left untouched till the great campaigns of
-Cæsar.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Cæsar.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;58-51.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It is from Cæsar, ethnologer as well as conqueror,
-that we get our chief knowledge of the country as it
-was in his day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundaries
-of Transalpine
-Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Transalpine Gaul, as a geographical
-division, has well-marked boundaries in the Mediterranean,
-the Alps, the Rhine, the Ocean, and the Pyrenees.
-But this geographical division has never answered to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">{58}</a></span>
-any divisions of blood and language.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its three
-divisions,
-and their
-inhabitants,
-Iberian,
-Celtic, and
-German.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Gaul in Cæsar’s
-day, that is Gaul beyond the Roman province, formed
-three divisions—<i>Aquitaine</i> to the south-west, <i>Celtic
-Gaul</i> in the middle, and <i>Belgic Gaul</i> to the north-east.
-Aquitaine, stretching to the Garonne—the name was
-under Augustus extended to the Loire—was Iberian,
-akin to the people on the other side of the Pyrenees:
-a trace of its old speech remains in the small Basque
-district north of the Pyrenees. Celtic Gaul, from the
-Loire to the Seine and Marne, was the most truly Celtic
-land, and it was in this part of Gaul that the modern
-French nation took its rise. In the third division,
-Belgic Gaul, the tribes to the east, nearer to the Rhine,
-were some of them purely German, and others had been
-to a great extent brought under German influences or
-mixed with German elements. There was, in fact, no
-unity in Gaul beyond that which the Romans brought
-with them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Romanization
-of
-Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In seven years Cæsar subdued the whole
-land, and the work of assimilation began. The Roman
-language gradually displaced all the native languages,
-except where Basque and Breton survive in two
-corners; but in a large part of Belgic Gaul the events
-of later times brought the German tongue back again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Permanence
-of the
-ancient
-geography.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There is no Roman province in which, among all
-changes, the ancient geography has had so much effect
-upon that of all later times. In southern Gaul most
-of the cities still keep their old names with very little
-change. But in northern Gaul the cities have mostly
-taken the names of the tribes of which they were the
-heads. Thus <i>Tolosa</i> is still <i>Toulouse</i>; but <i>Lutetia
-Parisiorum</i> has become <i>Paris</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roman
-Africa.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The lands which we have thus gone through, Cisalpine
-Gaul with Liguria and Venetia, Spain, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">{59}</a></span>
-Transalpine Gaul, form a marked division in historical
-geography. They are those parts of Western Europe
-which Rome conquered during the time of her Commonwealth,
-and they are those parts which have
-mainly kept their Roman speech to this day. But these
-did not make up the whole of the lands where Rome
-planted her Latin speech, at least for a while. The
-conquest of Britain belongs to the days of the Empire;
-but Rome, during the Commonwealth, made another
-conquest, which, though not in Europe, may be counted
-as belonging to the Western or Latin-speaking half of
-her dominion. This is the conquest of that part of
-<i>Africa</i> which Rome won as the result of her wars
-with Carthage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province of
-Africa,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;146;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The only African possession won by
-Rome during the days of the Commonwealth was <i>Africa</i>
-in the strictest sense, the immediate dominion of Carthage.
-This became a province when the Punic wars
-were ended by the destruction of Carthage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of New
-Africa,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;49.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The neighbouring state of <i>Numidia</i>, after passing, like Carthage
-itself, through the intermediate state of a dependency,
-was made a province by Cæsar, being
-called <i>New Africa</i>, the former African province becoming
-the <i>Old</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Restoration
-and greatness
-of
-Carthage.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cæsar also restored the city of Carthage
-as a Roman colony, and it became the chief
-of the Latin-speaking cities of the Empire, second only
-to Rome herself. But in Africa, just as in Britain,
-the land never became thoroughly Romanized like
-Gaul and Spain. The Roman tongue and laws therefore
-died out in both lands at the first touch of an
-invader, the English in one case and the Saracens in
-the other. The strip of fertile land between the sea
-on one side and the mountains and the Great Desert
-on the other received, first Phœnician and then Roman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></span>
-civilization. But neither of them could really take root
-there in the way that the Roman civilization took root
-in Gaul and Spain.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>The Eastern Provinces.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Contrast
-between the
-Eastern
-and Western
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Hadriatic Sea may be roughly taken as the
-boundary between the Eastern and Western parts of
-the Roman dominion. In the West, the Romans carried
-with them not only their arms, but their tongue,
-their laws, and their manners. They were not only
-conquerors but civilizers. The native Iberians and
-Celts adopted Roman fashions, and the isolated Greek
-and Phœnician cities, like Massalia and Gades, gradually
-became Roman also. East of the Hadriatic
-the state of things was quite different. Here the language
-and civilization of Greece had, through the
-conquests of the Macedonian kings, become everywhere
-predominant.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek civilization
-in
-the East.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Greek was everywhere the polite and
-literary language, and a certain varnish of Greek manners
-had been everywhere spread. In some parts
-indeed it was the merest varnish; still it was everywhere
-strong enough to withstand the influence of Latin.
-Sicily and Southern Italy are the only lands which have
-altogether thrown away the Greek tongue, and have
-taken to Latin or any of the languages formed out of
-Latin. No part of the eastern half of the Roman
-dominion ever became Roman in the same way as
-Gaul and Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the lands east of the Hadriatic may
-thus, as opposed to the Latin-speaking lands of the
-west, be called Greek-speaking lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Distinctions
-among the
-Eastern
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But there
-are some wide distinctions to be drawn among them.
-First, there was old Greece itself and the Greek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
-colonies, and lands like <i>Epeiros</i>, which had become
-thoroughly Greek. Secondly, there were the kingdoms,
-like <i>Macedonia</i> in Europe and <i>Pergamos</i> in Asia, which
-had adopted the Greek speech and manners, but which
-did not, like Epeiros, become Greek in any political
-sense. Thirdly, there were a number of native states,
-<i>Bithynia</i> and others, whose kings also tried to imitate
-Greek ways, but naturally could not do so as thoroughly
-as the kings of Macedonia and Pergamos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lands
-beyond
-Tauros.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Fourthly,
-beyond Mount Tauros lay the kingdoms of <i>Syria</i> and
-<i>Egypt</i>, which were ruled by Macedonian kings, which
-contained great Greek or Macedonian cities like <i>Antioch</i>
-and <i>Alexandria</i>, but where there were native languages,
-and an old native civilization, which neither Greek nor
-Roman influences could ever root out. We shall see
-as we go on that Tauros makes a great historical boundary.
-The lands on this side of it really came, though
-very gradually, under the dominion of the Greek speech
-and the Roman law. Beyond Mount Tauros both the
-Greek and the Roman element lay merely on the surface,
-and therefore those lands, like Africa, easily fell away
-when they were attacked by the Saracens.<a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> We must
-now go through such of the lands east of the Hadriatic
-as were formed into Roman provinces during the time
-of the Roman Commonwealth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Illyrian
-Provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But again, between the Latin and the Greek parts
-of the Roman dominion there was a border land,
-namely, the lands held by the great <i>Illyrian</i> race.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></span>
-The southern parts of Illyria came within the reach
-of Greek influences, and it was through the affairs of
-Illyria that Rome was first led to meddle in the affairs
-of Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The kingdom
-of
-Skodra.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The use of the name <i>Illyria</i> is at all
-times very vague; as a more definite meaning
-as the name of a kingdom whose capital was <i>Skodra</i>,
-and which, in the second half of the third century, was
-a dangerous neighbour to the Greek cities and islands
-on that coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;168.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This kingdom was involved in the third
-Macedonian war, and came to an end at the same time.
-As usual, it is not easy to distinguish how much, if
-any, of the country actually became a Roman province,
-and how much was left for a while in the intermediate
-state of dependent alliance. But, for all practical
-purposes, the Illyrian kingdom of Skodra formed
-from this time a part of the Roman dominion. With
-the fall of Skodra, the parts of Illyria which lay further
-to the north, beyond the bounds of the Greek world,
-first came into notice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dalmatian
-Wars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Greek colonies in Dalmatia
-had played their part in the first Illyrian war;
-but the land itself, which was to become an outlying
-fringe of Italy lying east of the Hadriatic, is now first
-heard of as a distinct country formed by a separation
-from the kingdom of Skodra.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;156.<br />
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;34.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first Dalmatian
-war soon followed; but it was not till after several wars
-that Dalmatia became a province, and even after that
-time there were several revolts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roman
-colonies in
-Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before long, Dalmatia
-was settled with several Roman colonies, as <i>Jadera</i>
-or <i>Zara</i>, and, above all, <i>Salona</i>, which became one of
-the chief cities of the Roman dominion. The neighbouring
-lands of <i>Liburnia</i>, <i>Istria</i>, and the land of the
-<i>Iapodes</i>, were gradually reduced during the same
-period.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Istria incorporated
-with Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Istria, like the neighbouring land of Venetia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">{63}</a></span>
-was actually incorporated with Italy, and <i>Pola</i>, under
-the name of <i>Pietas Julia</i>, became a Roman colony.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-outlying
-Greek
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have already traced the process by which old
-Greece and the neighbouring lands of Macedonia and
-Epeiros gradually sank, first practically, and then formally,
-into parts of the Roman dominion. It would be
-hard to say at what particular moment many of the
-Greek cities and islands sank from the relation of obedient
-allies into that of acknowledged subjects.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their late
-formal annexation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We have seen that some of them, as Rhodes and Byzantion,
-were not formally annexed till the reign of Vespasian.
-The Greek cities on the Euxine do not seem to have
-been formally annexed at all till a late period of the
-Eastern Empire. Other outlying Greek lands and cities
-became so mixed up with the history of some of the
-Asiatic kingdoms that they will come in for a mention
-along with them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Crete,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;67,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Crete</i> kept its independence to
-become a nest of pirates, and to be specially conquered.
-It then formed one province with the then
-recent conquest of <i>Kyrênê</i>, the one great Greek settlement
-in Africa, which had become an appanage of the
-Macedonian kings of Egypt. The same had been the
-fate of <i>Cyprus</i>, an island which had always been
-partly Greek, and which had been further Hellenized
-under its Macedonian kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Cyprus,
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;58.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cyprus too became a
-province. Thus, before Rome lost her own freedom,
-she had become the formal or practical mistress of
-all the earlier abodes of freedom. Men could not yet
-foresee that a time would come when <i>Greek</i> and
-<i>Roman</i> should be words having the same meaning,
-and when the place and name of Rome herself should
-be transferred to one of the Greek cities which Vespasian
-formally reduced from alliance to bondage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">{64}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Asiatic
-Provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In Roman history one war and one conquest
-always led to another, and, as the affairs of Illyria had
-led to Roman interference in Greece, so the affairs of
-Greece led to Roman interference in <i>Asia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;191-188.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first
-war which Rome waged with <i>Antiochos</i> of Syria led to
-no immediate increase of the Roman territory, but all
-the Seleukid possessions on this side Tauros were divided
-among the allies of Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province
-of Asia.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;133-129.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This, as usual, was the
-first step towards the conquest of Asia, and it is quite
-according to the usual course of things that the first
-Roman province beyond the Ægæan, the province of
-<i>Asia</i>, was formed of the dominions of Rome’s first and
-most useful allies, the kings of Pergamos. The mission
-of Alexander and his successors, as the representatives
-of Western civilization against the East, now passed
-into the hands of Rome. Step by step, the other lands
-west of Tauros came under the formal or practical dominion
-of Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bithynia.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;74.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Bithynia</i> was the first to be annexed,
-and this acquisition was one of the causes which led to
-the second war between Rome and the famous <i>Mithridates</i>
-of <i>Pontos</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Overthrow
-of Mithridates.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;64.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His final overthrow brought a number
-of other lands under Roman dominion or influence.
-The Greek cities of <i>Sinôpê</i> and <i>Hêrakleia</i> obtained a
-nominal freedom, and vassal kings went on reigning in
-part of Pontos itself, and in the distant Greek kingdom
-of <i>Bosporos</i>. Rome was now mistress of Asia Minor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lykia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The land was divided among her provinces and her
-vassal kings, save that the wise federal commonwealth
-of <i>Lykia</i> still kept the highest amount of independence
-which was consistent with the practical supremacy of
-Rome.</p>
-
-<p>The Mithridatic war, which made Rome mistress of
-Asia in the narrower sense, at once involved her in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>
-the affairs of the further East. Tigranes of <i>Armenia</i>
-had been the chief ally of Mithridates; but, though
-his power was utterly humbled, no Armenian province
-was added to the Roman dominion for a long
-time to come.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province
-of Syria.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;64.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the remnant of the Seleukid
-monarchy became the Roman province of <i>Syria</i>. As
-usual, several cities and principalities were allowed
-to remain in various relations of alliance and dependence
-on the ruling commonwealth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Palestine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among these
-we find <i>Judæa</i> and the rest of <i>Palestine</i>, sometimes
-under a Roman procurator, sometimes united under
-a single vassal king, sometimes parted out among various
-kings and tetrarchs, as suited the momentary
-caprice or policy of Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-with British
-India.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In all these various relations
-between the native states and the ruling city we
-have a lively foreshadowing of the relations between
-England and the subject and dependent princes of
-India.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rome the
-champion
-of the West.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquests of Rome in these regions made her
-more distinctly than ever the sole representative of the
-West against the East, and these conquests presently
-brought her into collision with the one power in the
-known world which could at all meet her on equal
-terms. She had stepped into the place of Alexander
-and Seleukos so far as that all those parts of Alexander’s
-Asiatic conquests which had received even
-a varnish of Hellenic culture had become parts of her
-dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her rivalry
-with Parthia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The further East beyond the Euphrates
-was again under the command of a great barbarian
-power, that of <i>Parthia</i>, which had stepped into the
-place of Persia, as Rome had stepped into the place of
-Greece and Macedonia. Rome had now again a rival,
-in a sense from which she had not had a rival since
-the overthrow of Carthage and Macedonia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">{66}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One only of the Macedonian kingdoms now remained
-to be gathered in.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Egypt.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;31.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The annexation of <i>Egypt</i>,
-an annexation made famous by the names of Kleopatra,
-Antonius, the elder and the younger Cæsar, completed
-the work. Rome was now fully mistress of her own
-civilized world. Her dominion took in all the lands
-round the great inland sea. If, here and there, her
-formal dominion was broken by a city or principality
-whose nominal relation was that of alliance, the distinction
-concerned only the local affairs of that city or
-principality.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><i>Pax Romana.</i><span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within the whole historic world of the
-three ancient continents, the Roman Peace had begun.
-Rome had still to wage wars, and even to annex provinces;
-but those wars and annexations were now done
-rather to round off and to strengthen the territory
-which had been already gained, than in the strictest
-sense to extend it.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>Conquests under the Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<p>At the same moment when the Roman commonwealth
-was practically changed into a monarchy, the
-Roman dominion was thus brought, not indeed to
-its greatest extent, but to an extent of which its further
-extension was only a natural completion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-under Augustus
-and
-Tiberius.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There
-seems a certain inconsistency when we find Augustus
-laying down a rule against the enlargement of
-the Empire, while the Empire was, during his reign
-and that of his successor, extended in every direction.
-But the conquests of this time were mainly
-conquests for the purpose of strengthening the frontier;
-the occasional changes of this and that city
-or district from the dependent to the provincial
-relation, or sometimes from the provincial to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
-dependent, are now hardly worth mentioning.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of the
-dependent
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Between
-Augustus and Nero, or, at all events, between
-Augustus and Vespasian, all the dependent states in
-Asia and Africa, such as <i>Mauritania</i>, <i>Kappadokia</i>,
-<i>Lykia</i>, and others, were finally incorporated with the
-Empire to which they had long been practically subject.
-These annexations can hardly be called conquests.
-And it was merely finishing a work which had
-been begun two hundred years before, when the small
-corner of Spain which still kept its independence was
-brought under the Roman power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Strengthening
-of the
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The real conquests
-of this time consisted in the strengthening of the European
-frontier. No frontier nearer than the Rhine and
-the Danube could be looked on as safe. This lesson
-was easily learned; but it had also to be accompanied
-by another lesson which taught that the Rhine and the
-Danube, and no more distant points, were to be the
-real frontiers of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>This brings us both to the lands which were then our
-own and to the lands which became our own in after
-times. During the reign of Augustus two conquests
-which most nearly concern our own history were
-planned, and one of them was attempted. The annexation
-of the land which was to become England
-was talked of; the annexation of the land which then
-was England, along with the rest of the German
-lands, was seriously attempted. But the conquest
-of Britain was put off from the days of Augustus to
-the days of Claudius.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Attempted
-conquest
-of Germany.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;11-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;
-9.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The attempt at the conquest
-of Germany, which was deemed to have been already
-carried out, was shivered when Arminius overthrew
-the legions of Varus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;19.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The expeditions of Drusus and
-Germanicus into Northern Germany must have brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">{68}</a></span>
-the Roman armies into contact with our own forefathers,
-for the first time, and, for several ages, for the
-last time. But from this time the relations between Rome
-and southern Germany begin, and constantly increase in
-importance. The two great rivers were fixed as a real
-frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-on the Danube.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The lands between the Alps and the Danube,
-<i>Rætia</i>, <i>Vindelicia</i>, <i>Noricum</i>, <i>Pannonia</i>, with <i>Mœsia</i> on
-the lower Danube, were all added to the Empire during
-the reign of Augustus. These were strictly defensive
-annexations, annexations made in order to remove the
-dangerous frontier further from Italy. Beyond the Rhine
-and the Danube the Roman possessions were mere outposts
-held for the defence of the land between the two
-great streams.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Attempt
-on Arabia.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;24.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, while the attempt of the conquest of
-Germany came to so little, an attempt at conquest
-at the other end of the world, in the <i>Arabian</i> peninsula,
-came to even less.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Thrace.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It marks the policy of Rome
-and the gradual nature of her advance that, while
-these more distant conquests were made or attempted,
-<i>Thrace</i> still retained her dependent princes, the only
-land of any extent within the European dominions
-of Rome which did so. But Thrace, surrounded by
-Roman provinces, was in no way dangerous; it might
-remain a dependency while more distant lands were
-incorporated. It was not till uniformity was more
-sought after, till, under Vespasian, the nominal freedom
-of so many cities and principalities came to an end,
-that Thrace became a province.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of Byzantion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was then that,
-among her latest formal acquisitions in Europe, Rome
-annexed the city which was, in the course of ages, to
-take her own place and name.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus, in the days between Augustus and Trajan,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
-the conquests which Rome actually made were mainly
-of a defensive and strengthening character. To this
-rule there is one and only one exception of any importance.
-This is the annexation to the Roman world of
-the land which was looked on as another world, the
-conquest of the greater part of the Isle of <i>Britain</i>.
-But Britain, though it did not come under the same
-law as the defensive annexations of Rætia and Pannonia,
-was naturally suggested by the annexation of
-Gaul and by the visits of the first Cæsar to the island.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Claudius.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;43.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-No actual conquest however took place till the reign
-of Claudius.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Agricola.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>&nbsp;84.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Forty years later the Roman conquests
-in Britain were pushed by <i>Agricola</i> as far as the isthmus
-between the friths of Forth and Clyde, the boundary
-marked by the later rampart of <i>Antoninus</i>. But the
-lasting boundary of the Roman dominion in Britain cannot
-be looked on as reaching beyond the line of the
-southern wall of <i>Hadrian</i>, <i>Severus</i>, and <i>Stilicho</i>, between
-the Solway and the mouth of the Tyne. The northern
-part of Britain thus remained unconquered, and the
-conquest of Ireland was not even attempted. For us
-the conquest of the land which afterwards became our
-own has an interest above all the other conquests of
-Rome. But it is a purely geographical interest. The
-British victories of Cæsar and Agricola were won,
-not over our own forefathers, but over those Celtic
-Britons whom our forefathers more thoroughly swept
-away. The history of our own nation is still for some
-ages to be looked for by the banks of the Elbe and
-the Weser, not by those of the Severn and the
-Thames.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-conquests
-of Trajan.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Britain was the last to be won of the Western provinces
-of Rome, and the first to be lost. Still it was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">{70}</a></span>
-for more than three hundred years, thoroughly incorporated
-with the Empire, and its loss did not happen
-till that general break-up of the Empire of which its
-loss was the first stage. But between the conquest of
-Britain and its loss there was a short time in which
-Rome again extended her dominion in the old fashion,
-both in Europe and Asia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Trajan.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;98-117.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was during the reign of
-Trajan, when the Roman borders were again widely extended
-in both Europe and Asia. Under him the Danube
-ceased to be a boundary stream in one continent and
-the Euphrates in the other.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>His Asiatic
-and European
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But a marked distinction
-must be drawn between his Asiatic and his European
-warfare. Trajan’s Asiatic conquests were strictly momentary;
-they were at once given up by his successor;
-and they will be better dealt with when we speak in
-another chapter of the long strife between Rome and
-her Eastern rival, first Parthian and then Persian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Arabia
-Petræa.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;106.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-only lasting Asiatic conquest of Trajan’s reign was not
-made by Trajan himself, namely the small Roman
-province in Northern <i>Arabia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The European conquests of Trajan stand on another
-ground. If not strictly defensive, like those of Augustus,
-they might easily seem to be so.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dacia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Dacians</i>, to
-the north of the lower Danube, were really threatening
-to the Roman power in those regions, and they
-had dealt Rome more than one severe blow in the days
-of Domitian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;106.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Trajan now formed the lands between
-the Thiess and the Danube, the Dniester and the
-Carpathian Mountains, into the Roman province of
-<i>Dacia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;270.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last province to be won was the first
-to be given up; for Aurelian withdrew from it, and
-transferred its name to the Mœsian land immediately
-south of the Danube. But if Dacia was in this way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">{71}</a></span>
-one of the most short lived of Roman conquests, it was
-in another way one of the most lasting.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later history
-of
-Dacia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cut off, as it
-has been for so many ages, from all Roman influences,
-forming, as it has done, one of the great highways of
-barbarian migration, a large part of Dacia, namely
-the modern Rouman principality, still keeps its Roman
-language no less than Spain and Gaul. In one way
-the land is to this day more Roman than Spain or
-Gaul, as its people still call themselves by the Roman
-name. Dacia, in fact, though geographically belonging
-to the Eastern half of the Empire, stood in the same
-position as the Western provinces. Greek influences
-had not reached so far north, nor was there in Dacia
-any old-standing native civilization, such as there was
-in Syria and Egypt. There was therefore nothing that
-was at all able to hold up against Roman influences.
-The land was speedily and thoroughly Romanized, and
-it remains Roman in speech and name sixteen hundred
-years after the withdrawal of the Roman power.</p>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Summary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span></p>
-
-<p>The Roman Empire was thus gradually formed
-by bringing, first Italy and then the whole of the Mediterranean
-lands, under the dominion of the one Roman
-city. In every part of that dominion the process
-of conquest was gradual. The lands which became
-Roman provinces passed through various stages of alliance
-and dependence before they were fully incorporated.
-But, in the end, all the civilized world of those times
-became Roman. Speaking roughly, three great rivers,
-the Rhine, Danube, and Euphrates, formed the European
-and Asiatic boundaries of the Empire. In Africa
-the Roman dominion consisted only of the strip of
-fertile land between the Mediterranean and the mountains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
-and deserts. Britain and Dacia, the only two
-great provinces lying beyond this range, were the
-last conquered and the first given up. In Western
-Europe and in Africa Rome carried her language and
-her civilization with her, and in those lands the Roman
-speech still remains, except where it has been swept
-away by Teutonic and Saracen conquests. In the
-lands from the Hadriatic to Mount Tauros, which had
-been brought more or less under Greek influences, the
-Greek speech and civilization stood its ground, and in
-those lands Greek still survives wherever it has not
-been swept away by Slavonic and Turkish conquests.
-In the further east, in Syria and Egypt, where there
-was an old native civilization, neither Greek nor Roman
-influences took real root. The differences between
-these three parts of the Roman Empire, the really
-Roman, the Greek, and the Oriental, will be clearly
-seen as we go on.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE DISMEMBERMENT OF THE EMPIRE.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Later Geography of the Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Roman dominion, as we have seen, grew up by the
-successive annexation of endless kingdoms, districts, and
-cities, each of which, after its annexation, still retained,
-whether as an allied province or a subject state, much of
-the separate being which it had while it was independent.
-The allies and subjects of Rome remained in a variety
-of different relations to the ruling city, and the old
-names and the old geographical boundaries were largely
-preserved.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wiping out
-of old
-divisions
-under the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as the old ideas of the commonwealth
-gradually died out, and as the power of the Emperors
-gradually grew into an avowed monarchy, the political
-change naturally led to a geographical change. The
-Roman dominion ceased to be a collection of allied and
-subject states under a single ruling city; it changed
-into a single Empire, all whose parts, all whose inhabitants,
-were equally subject to its Imperial head. The
-old distinctions of Latins, Italians, and provincials died
-out when all free inhabitants of the Empire became
-alike Romans. Italy had no longer any privilege; it
-was simply part of the Empire, like any other part.
-The geographical divisions which had been, first independent,
-then dependent states, sank into purely administrative
-divisions, which might be mapped out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></span>
-afresh at any time when it was found convenient to
-do so. Italy itself, in the extended sense which the
-word Italy had then come to bear, was mapped out
-afresh into <i>regions</i> as early as the time of Augustus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New division
-of Italy
-under Augustus.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These divisions, eleven in number, mark an epoch in
-the process by which the detached elements out of
-which the Roman Empire had grown were fused together
-into one whole. As long as Italy was a collection
-of separate commonwealths, standing in various
-relations to the ruling city, there could not be any
-systematic division of the country for administrative
-purposes. Now that the whole of Italy stood on one
-level of citizenship or of subjection, the land might
-be mapped out in whatever way was most convenient.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The eleven
-Regions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the eleven regions of Augustus did not work
-any violent change. Old names and old boundaries
-largely remained. The famous names of <i>Etruria</i>,
-<i>Latium</i>, <i>Samnium</i>, <i>Umbria</i>, <i>Picenum</i>, and <i>Lucania</i>
-still lived on, though not always with their ancient
-boundaries. And, though all the land as far as the
-Alps was now Italy, two of the divisions of Italy
-kept their ancient names of <i>Gaul on this side the
-Po</i> and <i>Gaul beyond the Po</i>. <i>Liguria</i> and <i>Venetia</i>,
-now Italian lands, make up the remainder of Northern
-Italy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Divisions
-under Constantine.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Italy had thus been mapped out afresh; what was
-done with Italy in the time of Augustus was done
-with the whole Empire in the time of Constantine.
-What Italy was in the earlier time the whole Empire
-was in the later; the old distinctions had been wiped
-out, and the whole of the Roman world stood ready to
-be parted out into fresh divisions. Under Diocletian, the
-Empire was divided into four parts, forming the realms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></span>
-of the four Imperial colleagues of his system, the two
-Augusti and their subordinate Cæsars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-the Empire
-under Diocletian.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;292.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Diocletian’s
-system of government involved a practical degradation
-of Rome from the headship of the Empire.
-Augusti and Cæsars now dwelled at points where
-their presence was more needed to ward off Persian
-and German attacks from the frontiers; Rome was forsaken
-for Nikomêdeia and Milan, for Antioch, York,
-and Trier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reunion
-under Constantine.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;323.<br />
-Division
-between
-the sons of
-Theodosius.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;395.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The division between the four Imperial
-colleagues lasted under another form after the Empire
-was re-united under Constantine,
-and it formed the
-groundwork of the more lasting division of the Empire
-into East and West, between the sons of Theodosius.
-The whole Empire was now mapped out according to a
-scheme in which ancient geographical names were largely
-preserved, but in which they were for the most part used
-in new or, at least, extended meanings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Four
-Prætorian
-Prefectures.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Empire was
-divided into four great divisions called Prætorian <i>Prefectures</i>.
-These were divided into <i>Dioceses</i>—a name
-used in this nomenclature without regard to the ecclesiastical
-sense which was borrowed from it—and the dioceses
-again into <i>Provinces</i>. The four great prefectures
-of the <i>East</i>, <i>Illyricum</i>, <i>Italy</i>, and <i>Gaul</i>, answer nearly
-to the fourfold division under Diocletian; while we may
-say that, in the final division, Illyricum and the East
-formed the Eastern Empire, and Italy and Gaul formed
-the Western. But it is only roughly that either the prefectures
-or their smaller divisions answer to any of
-the great national or geographical landmarks of earlier
-times.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prefecture
-of the East.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Prefecture of the <i>East</i> is that one among the four
-which least answers to anything in earlier geography,
-natural or historical. Its boundaries do not answer to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></span>
-those of any earlier dominion, nor yet to any great
-division of race or language. It stretched into all the
-three continents of the old world, and took in all those
-parts of the Empire which were never fully brought
-under either Greek or Roman influences. But it also
-took in large tracts which we have learned to look on
-as part of the Hellenic world—not only lands which
-had been, to a great extent, Hellenized in later times,
-but even some of the earliest Greek colonies. The four
-dioceses into which the Prefecture was divided formed
-far more natural divisions than the Prefecture itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dioceses of
-the East,<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Three of these were Asiatic. The first, specially called
-the <i>East</i>, took in all the possessions of Rome beyond
-Mount Tauros, together with Isauria, Kilikia, and the
-island of Cyprus. Its eastern boundaries naturally
-fluctuated according as Rome or Persia prevailed on
-the Euphrates and the Tigris, fluctuations of which we
-shall have again to speak more specially.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Egypt,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The diocese
-of <i>Egypt</i>, besides Egypt in the elder sense, took in,
-under the name of <i>Libya</i>, the old Greek land of the
-Kyrenaic Pentapolis.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Asia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The diocese of <i>Asia</i>, a reminder
-of the elder province of that name and of the kingdom
-of Pergamos out of which it grew, took in the Asiatic
-coasts of the Ægæan, together with Pamphylia, Lykia,
-and the Ægæan Islands. The diocese of <i>Pontos</i>, preserving
-the name of the kingdom of Mithridates, took
-in the lands on the Euxine, with the fluctuating Armenian
-possessions of Rome.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Diocese of
-Thrace.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Besides these Asiatic lands, the Eastern Prefecture
-contained one European diocese, that of <i>Thrace</i>,
-which took in the lands stretching from the Propontis to
-the Lower Danube. The names of two of its provinces
-are remarkable. Rome now boasts of a province of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></span>
-<i>Scythia</i>. But, among the varied uses of that name,
-it has now shrunk up to mean the land immediately
-south of the mouths of the Danube.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province of
-<i>Europa</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other name
-is <i>Europa</i>, a name which, as a Roman province, means
-the district immediately round the New Rome. Constantine
-had now fixed his capital on the site of the old
-Byzantion, the site from which the city on the Bosporos
-might seem to bear rule over two worlds. With
-whatever motive, the name of Europe was specially
-given to that corner of the Western continent where it
-comes nearest to the Eastern. Nor was the name ill-chosen
-for the district round the city which was so long
-to be the bulwark of Europe against invading Asia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great cities
-of the
-Eastern
-Prefecture.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, besides the New Rome, this Prefecture, as containing
-those parts of the Empire which had belonged
-to the great Macedonian kingdoms, contained an unusual
-proportion of the great cities of the world. Besides a
-crowd of less famous places, it took in the two great
-Eastern seats of Grecian culture, the most renowned
-Alexandria and the most renowned Antioch, themselves
-only the chief among many others cities bearing
-the same names. All these, it should be remarked,
-were comparatively recent creations, bearing the names
-of individual men. That cities thus artificially called into
-being should have kept the position which still belonged
-to the great Macedonian capitals is one of the most speaking
-signs of the effect which the dominion of Alexander
-and his successors had on the history of the world.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prefecture
-of Illyricum.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The nomenclature of the second Prefecture marks
-how utterly Greece, as a country and nation, had died
-out of all reckoning. The Prefecture of the Eastern
-<i>Illyricum</i> answered roughly to European Greece and its
-immediate neighbours. It took in the lands stretching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></span>
-from the Danube to the southern point of Peloponnêsos.
-Greece, as part of the Roman Empire, was included
-under the name of the barbarian land through which
-Rome was first brought into contact with Greek affairs.
-She was further included under the name of the half-barbarian
-neighbour who had become Greek through
-the process of conquering Greece. In the system of
-Prefectures, Greece formed part of Macedonia, and
-Macedonia formed part of Illyricum. So low had
-Greece, as a land, fallen at the very moment when her
-tongue was making the greatest of all its conquests,
-when a Greek city was raised to the rank of another
-Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dioceses of
-Macedonia
-and Dacia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Illyrian Prefecture contained the two dioceses
-of <i>Macedonia</i> and <i>Dacia</i>. This last name, it will be
-remembered, had, since the days of Aurelian, withdrawn
-to the south of the Danube. The Macedonian diocese
-contained six provinces, among which, besides the familiar
-and venerable names of Macedonia and Epeiros, we
-find the names, still more venerable and familiar, of
-<i>Thessaly</i> and <i>Crete</i>. And one yet greater name lives
-on with them. <i>Hellas</i> and <i>Græcia</i> have alike vanished
-from the map; but the most abiding name in Grecian
-history, the theme of Homer and the theme of Polybios,
-has not perished.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province of
-Achaia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among all changes, <i>Achaia</i> is there
-still.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prefecture
-of Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the new system Italy and Rome herself were in
-no way privileged over the rest of the Empire. The
-<i>Italian</i> Prefecture took in Italy itself and the lands
-which might be looked on as necessary for the defence
-and maintenance of Italy. It took in the defensive
-conquests of the early Empire on the Upper Danube,
-and it took in the granary of Italy, Africa. Its three dioceses
-were <i>Italy</i>, <i>Illyricum</i>, and <i>Africa</i>. Here Illyricum<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></span>
-strangely gave its name both to a distinct Prefecture
-and to one diocese of the Prefecture of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dioceses of
-Italy,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Italian diocese contained seventeen provinces. The
-Gaulish name has now wholly vanished from the lands
-south of the Alps. The lands between the older and
-the newer boundaries of Italy are now divided into
-<i>Liguria</i> and <i>Venetia</i>—the former name being used in a
-widely extended sense—and the new names of <i>Æmilia</i>
-and <i>Flaminia</i>, provinces named after the great Roman
-roads, as the roads themselves were named after Roman
-magistrates. But the new Italy has spread beyond the
-Alps, and reaches to the Danube. Two Rætian provinces
-form part of it. Three other provinces are
-formed by the three great islands, Sicily, Sardinia, and
-Corsica.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Illyricum,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The diocese of the <i>Western Illyricum</i> took in
-<i>Pannonia</i>, <i>Dalmatia</i>, and <i>Noricum</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Africa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The third diocese,
-that of <i>Africa</i>, took in the old <i>Africa</i>, <i>Numidia</i>, and
-western <i>Mauritania</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatness
-of Carthage.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of these lands with
-Italy may seem less strange when we remember that
-the colony of the first Cæsar, the restored Carthage,
-was the greatest of Latin-speaking cities after Rome
-herself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prefecture
-of Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The fourth Prefecture took in the Roman dominions
-in Western Europe, the great Latin-speaking provinces
-beyond the Alps.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Diocese of
-Spain; its
-African
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among the seven provinces of <i>Spain</i>
-are reckoned, not only the Balearic islands, a natural
-appendage to the Spanish peninsula, but a small part
-of the African continent, the province of <i>Tingitana</i>,
-stretching from the now Italian Africa to the Ocean.
-This was according to the general law by which, in
-almost all periods of history, either the masters of Spain
-have borne rule in Africa or the masters of Africa have
-borne rule in Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Diocese of
-Gaul;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The diocese of <i>Gaul</i>, with its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</a></span>
-seventeen provinces, keeps, at least in name, the
-boundaries of the old Transalpine land. It still numbers
-the two Germanies west of the Rhine among
-its provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The five provinces of the diocese of
-<i>Britain</i> took in, at the moment when the Empire was
-beginning to fall asunder, a greater territory than
-Rome had held in the island in the days of her
-greatest power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province of
-Valentia.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;367.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The exploits of the elder Theodosius,
-who drove back the Pict by land and the Saxon by
-sea, for a moment added to the Empire a province
-beyond the wall of Antoninus, which, in honour of the
-reigning Emperors Valentinian and Valens, received the
-name of <i>Valentia</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Division of the Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Change in
-the position
-of Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The mapping out of the Empire into Prefectures,
-and its division between two or more Imperial colleagues,
-led naturally to its more lasting division into
-what were practically two Empires. The old state
-of things had altogether passed away. Rome was
-no longer the city ruling over subject states. From
-the Ocean to the Euphrates all was alike, if not Rome,
-at least <i>Romania</i>; all its inhabitants were equally Romans.
-But to be a Roman now meant, no longer to be
-a citizen of a commonwealth, but to be the subject of an
-Emperor. The unity of the Empire was not broken
-by the division of its administration between several
-Imperial colleagues; but Rome ceased to be the only
-Imperial dwelling-place, and, from the latter years of
-the third century, it ceased to be an Imperial dwelling-place
-at all. As long as Rome held her old place, no
-lasting division, nothing more than an administrative
-partition among colleagues, could be thought of. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span>
-could be no division to mark on the map. But, when
-the new system had fully taken root at the end of the
-fourth century, we come to a division which was comparatively
-lasting, one which fills an important place in
-history, and which is capable of being marked on the
-map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-the Empire
-between the
-sons of
-Theodosius.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;395.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the death of Theodosius the Great, the
-Empire was divided between his two sons, Arcadius
-taking the Eastern provinces, answering nearly to the
-Prefectures of the East and of Illyricum, while Honorius
-took the Western provinces, the Prefectures of Italy and
-Gaul. Through the greater part of the fifth century,
-the successors of Arcadius and of Honorius formed
-two distinct lines of Emperors, of whom the Eastern
-reigned at Constantinople, the Western most commonly
-at Ravenna. But as the dominions of each prince were
-alike Roman, the Eastern and Western Emperors were
-still looked on in theory as Imperial colleagues charged
-with the administration of a common Roman dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Practically
-two Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Practically however the dominions of the two Emperors
-may be looked on as two distinct Empires, the
-Eastern having its seat at the New Rome or Constantinople,
-while the Western had its seat more commonly
-at Ravenna than at the Old Rome.</p>
-
-<p>This division of the Empire is the great political
-feature of the fifth century; but the fate of the two
-Empires was widely different.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Enemies of
-Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From the very beginning
-of the Empire, Rome had had to struggle with
-two chief enemies, in the East and in the West, in
-Europe and in Asia, the nature of whose warfare was
-widely different.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry
-with Parthia
-and
-Persia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the East she had, first the Parthian
-and then the regenerate Persian, as strictly a rival
-power on equal terms. This rivalry went on from the
-moment when Rome stepped into the place of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</a></span>
-Seleukids till the time when Rome was cut short, and
-Persia overthrown, by the Saracenic invasions. But,
-except during the momentary conquests of Trajan and
-during the equally momentary alternate conquests of
-Rome and Persia in the seventh century, the whole
-strife was a mere border warfare which did not threaten
-the serious dismemberment of either power. This and
-that fortress was taken and retaken; this and that
-province was ceded and ceded back again; but except
-under Trajan and again under Chosroes and Heraclius,
-the existence and dominion of neither power was ever
-seriously threatened.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry
-with Persia
-passes on to
-the Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eastern Empire naturally
-inherited this part of the calling of the undivided
-Empire, the long strife with Persia.</p>
-
-<p>At the other end of the Empire, the enemy was of
-quite another kind.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Teutonic
-incursions
-in the
-Western
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The danger there was through the
-incursions of the various Teutonic nations. There was
-no one Teutonic power which could be a rival to Rome
-in the same sense in which Persia was in the East;
-but a crowd of independent Teutonic tribes were
-pressing into the Empire from all quarters, and were
-striving to make settlements within its borders. The
-task of resisting these incursions fell of course to the
-Western Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No Teutonic
-settlements
-in
-the Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eastern Empire indeed was
-often traversed by wandering Teutonic nations; but no
-permanent settlements were made within its borders,
-no dismemberment of its provinces capable of being
-marked on the map was made till a much later time.
-But the Western Empire was altogether dismembered
-and broken in pieces by the settlement of the Teutonic
-nations within it. The geographical aspects of the two
-Empires during the fifth century are thus strikingly
-unlike one another; but each continues one side of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></span>
-history of the undivided Empire. It will therefore be
-well to trace those two characteristic aspects of the
-two Empires separately. We will first speak of the Teutonic
-incursions, through which in the end the Western
-Empire was split up and the states of modern Europe
-were founded. We will then trace the geographical
-aspect of the long rivalry between Rome and Persia in
-the East.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Teutonic Settlements within the Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Our subject is historical geography, and neither
-ethnology nor political history, except so far as either
-national migrations or political changes produce a directly
-geographical effect.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Wandering
-of
-the Nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great movement called
-the Wandering of the Nations, and its results in the
-settlement of various Teutonic nations within the
-bounds of the Roman Empire, concern us now only so
-far as they wrought a visible change on the map. The
-exact relations of the different tribes to one another,
-the exact course of the migrations which led to the
-final settlement of each, belong rather to another branch
-of inquiry. But there are certain marked stages in
-the relations of the Empire to the nations beyond
-its borders, certain marked stages in the growth and
-mutual relations of those nations, which must be borne
-in mind in order to explain their settlements within
-the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes in
-the nomenclature
-of
-the Teutonic
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It will be at once seen that the geography
-and nomenclature of the German nations in
-the third century is for the most part quite different
-from their geography and nomenclature as we find
-it in Cæsar and Tacitus. New names have come
-to the front, names all of which play a part in history,
-many of which remain to this day; and, with one or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
-two exceptions, the older names sink into the background.
-It is therefore hardly needful to go through
-the ethnology and geography of Tacitus, or to deal
-with any of the controverted points which are suggested
-thereby. We have to look at the German nations
-purely in their relations to Rome.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Warfare on
-the Rhine
-and the
-Danube.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have seen that the history of Rome in her
-western provinces was, from an early stage of the
-Empire, a struggle with the Teutonic nations on the
-Rhine and the Danube. We have seen that all attempts
-at serious conquest beyond those boundaries
-came to nothing.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roman
-possessions
-beyond
-those
-rivers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Roman possessions beyond the
-two great rivers were mere outposts for the better
-security of the land within the rivers. The district
-beyond them, fenced in by a wall and known as the
-<i>Agri Decumates</i>, was hardly more than such an outlying
-post on a great scale. The struggle along the
-border was, almost from the beginning, a defensive
-struggle on the part of Rome. We hear of Roman
-conquests from the second century to the fifth; but
-they are strictly defensive conquests, the mere recovery
-of lost possessions, or at most the establishment of
-fresh outposts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formation
-of confederacies
-among the
-Germans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From the moment of the first appearance
-of Rome on the two rivers, the Teutonic nations
-were really threatening to Rome, and the warfare of
-Rome was really defensive; and from the very beginning
-too a process seems to have been at work
-among the German nations themselves which greatly
-strengthened their power as enemies of Rome. New
-nations or confederacies, bearing, for the most part,
-names unknown to earlier times, begin to be far more
-dangerous than the smaller and more scattered tribes
-of the earlier times had been. These movements<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span>
-among the German nations themselves, hastened by
-pressure of other nations to the east of them, caused
-the Teutonic attacks on the Empire to become more
-and more formidable, and at last to grow into Teutonic
-settlements within the Empire. But, in the course of
-this process, several stages may be noticed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Marcomanni
-and
-Quadi.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the
-<i>Marcomanni</i> and the <i>Quadi</i> play a part in this history
-from the very beginning. The Marcomanni appear in
-Cæsar, and, from their name of <i>Markmen</i>, we may be
-sure that they were a confederacy of the same kind as
-the later confederacies of the Franks and Alemanni.
-In the first and second centuries the Marcomanni are
-dangerous neighbours, threatening the Empire and
-often penetrating beyond its borders, and their name
-appears in history as late as the fifth century. But they
-play no part in the Teutonic settlements within the
-Empire. They do not affect the later map; they had
-no share in bringing about the changes out of which
-modern Europe arose. Their importance ceases just at
-the time when a second stage begins, when, in the
-course of the third century, we begin to hear of those
-nations or confederacies whose movements really did
-affect later history and geography.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of modern
-European
-history.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the third and fourth centuries the history of
-modern Europe begins.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The new
-confederacies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We now begin to hear names
-which have been heard ever since, <i>Franks</i>, <i>Alemans</i>,
-<i>Saxons</i>, all of them great confederacies of German
-tribes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Defensive
-warfare of
-Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Defence against German inroads now becomes
-the chief business of the rulers of Rome. The invaders
-were constantly driven back; but new invaders were
-as constantly found to renew their incursions. Men of
-Teutonic race pressed into the Empire in every conceivable
-character.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germans
-within the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides open enemies, who came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</a></span>
-with the hope either of plunder or settlement, crowds
-of Germans served in the Roman armies and obtained
-lands held by military tenure as the reward of their
-services. Their chiefs were promoted to every rank
-and honour, military and civil, short of the Imperial
-dignity itself. These were changes of the utmost
-importance in other points of view; still they do not
-directly affect the map of the Empire. Lands and
-cities were won and lost over and over again; but such
-changes were merely momentary; the acknowledged
-boundaries of the Roman dominion were not yet
-altered; it is not till the next stage that geography
-begins to be directly concerned.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of national
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">This last stage begins with the early years of the
-fifth century, and thus nearly coincides with the division
-of the Empire into East and West. Gothic and
-other Teutonic kings could now march at pleasure at
-the head of their armies through every corner of the
-Empire, sometimes bearing the titles of Roman officers,
-sometimes dictating the choice of Roman Emperors,
-sometimes sacking the Old Rome or threatening the
-New. It was when these armies under their kings
-settled down and formed national kingdoms within the
-limits of the Empire, that the change comes to have an
-effect on the map. In the course of the fifth century
-the Western provinces of Rome were rent away from
-her. In most cases the loss was cloaked by some Imperial
-commission, some empty title bestowed on the
-victorious invader; but the Empire was none the less
-practically dismembered. Out of these dismemberments
-the modern states of Europe gradually grew. It
-will now be our business to give some account of
-those nations, Teutonic and otherwise, who had an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
-immediate share in this work, passing lightly by all
-questions, and indeed all nations, which cannot be said
-to have had such an immediate share in it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Teutonic
-Settlements
-in
-the West.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="p2">The nations which in the fourth and fifth centuries
-made settlements in the Western provinces of Rome
-fall under two chief heads; those who made their settlements
-by land, and those who made them by sea.
-This last class is pretty well coextensive with the
-settlement of our own forefathers in Britain, which
-must be spoken of separately.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlements
-within the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among the others, the
-nations who play an important part in the fourth and
-fifth centuries are the <i>Goths</i>, the <i>Vandals</i>, the <i>Burgundians</i>,
-the <i>Suevi</i>, and the <i>Franks</i>. And their settlements
-again fall into two classes, those which passed
-away within a century or two, and those which have
-had a lasting effect on European history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Franks,
-Burgundians,
-Suevi,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus it
-is plain at the first glance that the Franks and the
-Burgundians have left their names on the modern
-map. The Suevi have left their name also: but it is
-now found only in their older German land; it has
-vanished for ages from their western settlement.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Goths,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-name of the Goths has passed away from the kingdoms
-which they founded, but their presence has affected the
-history of both the Spanish and the Italian peninsulas.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vandals.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Vandals alone, as a nation and kingdom, have
-left no traces whatever, though it may be that they
-have left their name to a part of one of the lands
-of their sojourn.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these nations founded kingdoms
-within the Western Empire, kingdoms which at first
-admitted a nominal superiority in the Empire, but
-which were practically independent from the beginning.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Various
-circumstances
-of
-their history.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the history of the several kingdoms is very different.
-Some of them soon passed away altogether, while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span>
-others became the beginnings of the great nations
-of modern Europe. Gaul and Spain fell off very
-gradually from the Empire. But, in the course of the
-fifth century, all the nations of which we have been
-speaking formed more or less lasting settlements within
-those provinces. Pre-eminent among them are the great
-settlements of the Goths and the Franks. Out of the
-settlement of the Franks arose the modern kingdoms
-of Germany and France, and out of the settlement of
-the Goths arose the various kingdoms of Spain. Those
-of the Burgundians, Vandals, and Suevi were either
-smaller or less lasting. All of them however must be
-mentioned in their order.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Migrations
-of the
-West-Goths.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>First and greatest come the <i>Goths</i>. It is not needful
-for our purpose to examine all that history or legend
-has to tell us as to the origin of the Goths, or all
-the theories which ingenious men have formed on
-the subject.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Defeat of
-the Goths
-by Claudius.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;269.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is enough for our purpose that the
-Goths began to show themselves as dangerous enemies
-of the Empire in the second half of the third century;
-but their continuous history does not begin till
-the second half of the fourth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gothic
-kingdom
-on the
-Danube.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We then find them
-forming a great kingdom in the lands north of the
-Danube.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Goths driven
-onwards
-by
-the Huns.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently a large body of them were driven
-to seek shelter within the bounds of the Eastern Empire
-from the pressure of the invading <i>Huns</i>. These last
-were a Turanian people who had been driven from
-their own older settlements by movements in the
-further East which do not concern us, but who become
-an important element in the history of the fifth century.
-They affected the Empire, partly by actual invasions,
-partly by driving other nations before them
-but they made no lasting settlements within it. Nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
-did the Goths themselves make any lasting settlement
-in the Eastern Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>They cross
-the Danube.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;377.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While one part of the Gothic
-nation became subject to the Huns, another part
-crossed the Danube; but they crossed it by Imperial
-licence, and if they took to arms, it was only to
-punish the treachery of the Roman officers. Presently
-we find Gothic chiefs marching at pleasure through the
-dominions of the Eastern Cæsar; but they simply march
-and ravage; it is not till they have got within the
-boundary of the West that they found any lasting kingdoms.
-In fact, the Goths, and the Teutonic tribes
-generally, had no real mission in the East; to them the
-East was a mere highway to the West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Career of
-Alaric.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;394-410.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The movements
-of Alaric in Greece, Illyricum, and Italy, his sieges and
-his capture of Rome, are of the highest historical importance,
-but they do not touch geography. The Goths
-first win for themselves a local habitation and a place
-on the map when they left Italy to establish themselves
-in the further West.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of the West-Gothic
-kingdom
-under
-Athaulf.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;412.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Under Alaric’s successor, Athaulf, the first foundations
-were laid of that great West-Gothic kingdom
-which we are apt to look on as specially Spanish, but
-which in truth had its first beginning in Gaul, and
-which kept some Gaulish territory as long as it lasted.
-But the Goths passed into those lands, not in the character
-of avowed conquerors, not as founders of an
-avowed Gothic state, but as soldiers of the Empire,
-sent to win back its lost provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Condition
-of Gaul and
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Those provinces
-were now occupied or torn in pieces by a crowd of
-invaders, <i>Suevi</i>, <i>Vandals</i>, and <i>Alans</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Alans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These last are
-a puzzling race, our accounts of whom are somewhat
-contradictory, but who may perhaps be most safely set
-down as a non-Aryan, or, at any rate, a non-Teutonic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
-people, who had been largely brought under Gothic
-influences. But early in the fifth century they possessed
-a dominion in central Spain which stretched
-from sea to sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Suevi
-in Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Their dominion passed for a few
-years into the hands of the Suevi, who had already
-formed a settlement in north-western Spain, and who
-still kept a dominion in that corner long after the
-greater part of the peninsula had become Gothic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Vandals
-in
-Africa.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;425.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Vandals occupied Bætica; but they presently passed into
-Africa, and there founded the one Teutonic kingdom
-in that continent, with Carthage to its capital, a kingdom
-which took in also the great islands of the western
-Mediterranean, including Sicily itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of the
-Basques.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Through all these
-changes the unconquerable people of the Basque and
-Cantabrian mountains seem never to have fully submitted
-to any conquerors; but the rest of Spain and
-south-western Gaul was, before half of the fifth century
-had passed, formed into the great West-Gothic
-kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gothic
-kingdom
-of Toulouse.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That kingdom stretched from the pillars of
-Hêraklês to the Loire and the Rhone, and its capital
-was placed, not on Spanish but on Gaulish ground, at
-the Gaulish Tolosa or <i>Toulouse</i>. The Gothic dominion
-in Gaul was doomed not to be lasting; the Gothic
-dominion in Spain lasted down to the Saracen conquest,
-and all the later Christian kingdoms of Spain may be
-looked on as fragments or revivals of it. Spain however
-never changed her name for that of her conquerors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gothia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The only parts of the Gothic kingdom which ever bore
-the Gothic name were those small parts both of Spain
-and Gaul which kept the name of <i>Gothia</i> through later
-causes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Andalusia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Vandals, on the other hand, though they
-passed altogether out of Spain, have left their name to
-this day in its southern part under the form of <i>Andalusia</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
-a name which, under the Saracen conquerors,
-spread itself over the whole peninsula.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Franks.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The other great Teutonic nations or confederacies of
-which we have to speak have had a far more lasting
-effect on the nomenclature of Europe. We have now
-to trace the steps by which the <i>Franks</i> gradually became
-the ruling people both of Germany and of Gaul.
-They have stamped their name on both countries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Uses of the
-word
-<i>Francia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-dominions of the Franks got the name of <i>Francia</i>,
-a name whose meaning has constantly varied according
-to the extent of the Frankish dominion at different
-times. In modern use it still cleaves to two parts of
-their dominions, to that part of Germany which is still
-called <i>Franken</i> or <i>Franconia</i>, and to that part of
-Gaul which is still called <i>France</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Alemanni.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And their history
-is closely mixed up with that of another nation or confederacy,
-that of the <i>Alemanni</i>, who again have, in the
-French tongue, given their name to the whole of Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;275.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Franks and Alemanni alike begin to be heard of
-in the third century, and the Alemanni even attempted
-an actual invasion of Italy; but the geographical importance
-of both confederacies does not begin till the
-fifth. All through the fourth century it is the chief
-business of the Emperors who ruled in Gaul to defend
-the frontier of the Rhine against their incursions, against
-the Alemanni along the upper part of its course, and
-against the Franks along its lower part.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Thuringians.<br />
-The Low-Dutch
-tribes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the east of
-the Franks and Alemanni lay the <i>Thuringians</i>; to the
-north, along the coasts of the German Ocean, the Low-Dutch
-tribes, <i>Saxons</i> and <i>Frisians</i>. In the course of
-the fifth century their movements also began to affect
-the geography of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>During the whole of that century the Franks were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</a></span>
-pressing into Gaul. The Imperial city of Trier was
-more than once taken, and the seat of the provincial
-government was removed to Arles.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Chlodwig.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;481-511.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of
-the two chief divisions of the Frankish confederacy,
-and the overthrow of the Alemanni, made the Franks,
-under their first Christian king, Chlodwig or Clovis,
-the ruling people of northern Gaul and central Germany.
-Their territory thus took in both lands which
-had been part of the Empire, and lands which had
-never been such.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-and divisions
-of the
-Frankish
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is a special characteristic of
-the Frankish settlement, and one which influences
-the whole of their later history. There was, from the
-very beginning, long before any such distinction was
-consciously drawn, a <i>Teutonic</i> and a <i>Latin Francia</i>.
-There were Frankish lands to the East which never had
-been Roman. There were lands in northern Gaul which
-remained practically Roman under the Frankish dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roman
-Germany
-Teutonized
-afresh.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And between them lay, on the left bank of
-the Rhine, the Teutonic lands which had formed part
-of the Roman province of Gaul, but which now became
-Teutonic again. <i>Moguntiacum</i>, <i>Augusta Treverorum</i>,
-and <i>Colonia Agrippina</i>, cities founded on Teutonic soil,
-now again became German, ready to be in due time,
-by the names of <i>Mainz</i>, <i>Trier</i>, and <i>Köln</i>, the metropolitan
-and electoral cities of Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-and Western
-<i>Francia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These lands,
-with the original German lands, formed the <i>Eastern</i>
-or <i>Teutonic Francia</i>, where the Franks, or their German
-allies and subjects, formed the real population
-of the country. In the <i>Western Francia</i>, between
-the Loire and the Channel, though the Franks largely
-settled and influenced the country in many ways, the
-mass of the population remained Roman.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Armorica
-or Britanny.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Over the
-western peninsula of <i>Armorica</i> the dominion of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></span>
-Franks was always precarious and, at most, external.
-Here the ante-Roman population still kept its Celtic
-language, and it was further strengthened by colonies
-from Britain, from which the land took its later name
-of the <i>Lesser Britain</i> or <i>Britanny</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Frankish
-dominion.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;500.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus, at the end
-of the fifth century, the Frankish dominion was firmly
-established over the whole of central Germany and
-Northern Gaul. Their dominion was fated to be the
-most lasting of the Teutonic kingdoms formed on the
-Roman mainland. The reason is obvious; while the
-Goths in Spain and the Vandals in Africa were isolated
-Teutonic settlers in a Roman land, the Franks in Gaul
-were strengthened by the unbroken Teutonic mainland
-at their back.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Burgundians.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The greater part of Gaul was thus, at the end of the
-fifth century, divided between the Franks in the north
-and the West-Goths in the south. But, early in the
-fifth century, a third Teutonic power grew up in south-eastern
-Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Burgundians</i>, a people who, in the
-course of the Wandering of the Nations, seem to have
-made their way from the shores of the Baltic, established
-themselves in the lands between the Rhone and the
-Alps, where they formed a kingdom which bore their
-name. Their dominion in Gaul may be said to have
-been more lasting than that of the Goths, less lasting
-than that of the Franks.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Meaning of
-the word
-<i>Burgundy</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Burgundy</i> is still a recognized
-name; but no name in geography has so often shifted its
-place and meaning, and it has for some centuries settled
-itself on a very small part of the ancient kingdom of
-the Burgundians.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Provence
-Burgundian.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;500-510.<br />
-510-536.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the fifth century the
-Rhone was a Burgundian river; <i>Autun</i>, <i>Besançon</i>,
-<i>Lyons</i>, and <i>Vienne</i> were Burgundian cities;
-but the
-sea coast, the original Roman <i>Province</i>, the land which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
-has so steadily kept that name, though it fell for a
-moment under the Burgundian power, followed at this
-time, as became the first Roman land beyond the Alps,
-the fortunes of Italy rather than those of Gaul.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Invasion
-of the
-Huns.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among these various conquests and shiftings of dominion,
-all of which affected the map at the time, some
-of which have affected history and geography ever since,
-it may be well to mention, if only by way of contrast,
-an inroad which fills a great place in the history of the
-fifth century, but which had no direct effect on geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Châlons.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;451.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was the invasion of Italy and Gaul by
-the <i>Huns</i> under Attila, and their defeat at Châlons
-by the combined forces of Romans, West-Goths, and
-Franks. This battle is one of the events which is remarkable,
-not for working change, but for hindering
-it. Had Attila succeeded, the greatest of all changes
-would have taken place throughout all Western Europe.
-As it was, the map of Gaul was not affected by his
-inroad.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Destruction
-of Aquileia,
-and origin
-of Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the map of Italy it did have an indirect
-effect; he destroyed the city of Aquileia, and its inhabitants,
-fleeing to the Venetian islands, laid the foundation
-of one of the later powers of Europe in the
-form of the commonwealth of <i>Venice</i>.</p>
-
-<p>While Spain and Gaul were thus rent away from the
-Empire, Italy and Rome itself were practically rent away
-also, though the form which the event took was different.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reunion of
-the Empire.<br />
-Rule of
-Odoacer.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;476-493.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A vote of the Senate reunited the Western Empire to the
-Eastern; the Eastern Emperor Zeno became sole Emperor,
-and the government of the diocese of Italy—that is, it will
-be remembered, of a large territory besides the Italian
-peninsula—was entrusted by his commission to Odoacer,
-a general of barbarian mercenaries, with the rank
-of Patrician. No doubt Odoacer was practically independent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span>
-of the Empire; but the union of the Empire
-was preserved in form, and no separate kingdom of
-Italy was set up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The East-Goths
-in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently Odoacer was overthrown
-by Theodoric king of the East-Goths, who, though
-king of his own people, reigned in Italy by an Imperial
-commission as Patrician.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rule of
-Theodoric.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;493-526.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Practically, he founded
-an East-Gothic kingdom, taking in Italy and the other
-lands which formed the dioceses of Italy and Western
-Illyricum.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-his dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His dominion also took in the coast of
-what we may now call <i>Provence</i>, and his influence
-was extended in various ways over most of the kingdoms
-of the West. The seat of the Gothic dominion,
-like that of the later Western Empire, was at Ravenna.
-Practically Theodoric and his successors were independent
-kings, and, as chiefs of their own people, they
-bore the kingly title.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Theory of
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hence, as Rome formed part
-of their dominions, it is true to say that under them
-Rome ceased to be part of the Roman Empire. Still
-in theory the Imperial supremacy went on, and in
-this way it became much easier for Italy to be won
-back to the Empire at a somewhat later time.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>Settlement of the English in Britain.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, in another part of Europe, a Teutonic
-settlement of quite another character from those on
-the mainland was going on.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Romans
-withdrawn
-from
-Britain.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;411.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Spain and Gaul fell
-away from the Empire by slow degrees; but the
-Roman dominion in Britain came to an end by a definite
-act at a definite moment. The Roman armies
-were withdrawn from the province, and its inhabitants
-were left to themselves. Presently, a new settlement
-took place in the island which was thus left undefended.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Difference
-between the
-conquest
-of Britain
-and other
-Teutonic
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is specially important to mark the difference between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
-the Teutonic settlements in Britain and the Teutonic
-conquests on the mainland. The Teutonic conquests in
-Gaul and Spain were made by Teutonic neighbours
-who had already learned to know and respect the Roman
-civilization, who were either Christians already or became
-Christians soon after they entered the Empire.
-They pressed in gradually by land; they left the Roman
-inhabitants to live after the Roman law, and they themselves
-gradually adopted the speech and much of the
-manners of Rome. The only exception to this rule on
-the continent is to be found in the lands immediately
-on the Rhine and the Danube, where the Teutonic
-settlement was complete, and where the Roman tongue
-and civilization were pretty well wiped out. This same
-process happened yet more completely in the Teutonic
-conquest of Britain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the
-English
-settlement;
-long
-struggle
-with the
-Britons.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great island possession of
-Rome had been virtually abandoned by Rome before
-the Teutonic settlements in it began. The invaders
-had therefore to struggle rather with native Britons
-than with Romans. Moreover, they were invaders who
-came by sea, and who came from lands where little or
-nothing was known of the Roman law or religion. They
-therefore made a settlement of quite another kind from
-the settlement of the Goths or even from that of the
-Franks. They met with a degree of strictly national
-resistance such as no other Teutonic conquerors met
-with; therefore in the end they swept away all
-traces of the earlier state of things in a way which took
-place nowhere else.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The English
-remain
-Teutonic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As far as such a process is possible,
-they slew or drove out the older inhabitants;
-they kept their heathen religion and Teutonic language,
-and were thus able to grow up as a new Teutonic
-nation in their new home without any important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
-intermixture with the earlier inhabitants, Roman or
-British.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Low-Dutch
-settlements
-in Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The conquerors who wrought this change were our
-own forefathers, the Low-Dutch inhabitants of the
-border lands of Germany and Denmark, quite away
-from the Roman frontier; and among them three
-tribes, the <i>Angles</i>, the <i>Saxons</i>, and the <i>Jutes</i>, had the
-chief share in the conquest of Britain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saxons.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Saxons
-had, as has already been said, attempted a settlement
-in the fourth century. They were therefore the tribe
-who were first known to the Roman and Celtic inhabitants
-of the island; the Celts of Britain and Ireland
-have therefore called all the Teutonic settlers <i>Saxons</i>
-to this day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-the name
-<i>English</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as the Angles or <i>English</i> occupied
-in the end much the greater part of the land, it was
-they who, when the Teutonic tribes in Britain began to
-form one nation, gave their name to that nation and
-its land. That nation was the <i>English</i>, and their land
-was <i>England</i>. While <i>Britain</i> therefore remains the
-proper geographical name of the whole island, <i>England</i>
-is the name of that part of Britain which was step
-by step conquered by the English. Before the end
-of the fifth century several Teutonic kingdoms had
-begun in Britain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Jutes in
-Kent.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;449.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Jutes began the conquest by
-their settlement in <i>Kent</i>, and presently the <i>Saxons</i> began
-to settle on the South coast and on a small part of the
-East coast, in <i>Sussex</i>, <i>Wessex</i>, and <i>Essex</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saxon and
-Anglian
-settlements.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And along
-a great part of the eastern coast various <i>Anglian</i> settlements
-were made, which gradually grew into the kingdoms
-of <i>East-Anglia</i>, <i>Deira</i>, and <i>Bernicia</i>, which two
-last formed by their union the great kingdom of <i>Northumberland</i>.
-But, at the end of the sixth century, the
-English had not got very far from the southern and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>
-eastern coasts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Welsh
-and Scots.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Britons, whom the English called
-<i>Welsh</i> or strangers, held out in the West, and the
-Picts and Scots in the North. The <i>Scots</i> were properly
-the people of Ireland; but a colony of them had
-settled on the western coast of northern Britain, and,
-in the end, they gave the name of Scotland to the
-whole North of the island.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The Eastern Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Contrast
-between the
-Eastern and
-Western
-Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have already seen the differences between the
-position of the Eastern and Western Empires during
-this period. While in the West the provinces were
-gradually lopped away by the Teutonic settlements,
-the provinces of the East, though often traversed by
-Teutonic armies, or rather nations, did not become
-the seats of lasting Teutonic settlements.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Tetraxite
-Goths.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We can
-hardly count as an exception the settlement of the
-<i>Tetraxite Goths</i> in the Tauric Chersonêsos, a land
-which was rather in alliance with the Empire than
-actually part of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry
-with Persia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The distinctive history of the
-Eastern Empire consists, as has been already said, in
-the long struggle between East and West, in which
-Rome had succeeded to the mission of Alexander
-and the Seleukids as the representative of Western
-civilization. To this mission was afterwards added the
-championship of Christianity, first against the Fire-worshipper
-and then against the Moslem. In Eastern
-history no event is more important and more remarkable
-than the uprising of the regenerate <i>Persian</i> nation
-against its Parthian masters.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revival of
-the Persian
-kingdom.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;226.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as far as either the
-history or the geography of Rome is concerned, the
-Persian simply steps into the place of the Parthian as
-the representative of the East against the West. From<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span>
-our point of view, the long wars on the Eastern frontier
-of Rome, and the frequent shiftings of that frontier, form
-one unbroken story, whether the enemy that was striven
-against is the successor of Arsakes or the successor of
-Artaxerxes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Armenia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And besides the natural rivalry of two great
-powers in such a position, the border kingdom of
-<i>Armenia</i>, a name which has changed its meaning and its
-frontiers almost as often as Burgundy or Austria, supplied
-constant ground for dispute between Rome and
-her eastern rival, whether Parthian or Persian.</p>
-
-<p>In the geographical aspect of this long struggle
-three special periods need to be pointed out.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Trajan.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;114-117.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first
-is that of the momentary conquests of Trajan. Under
-him <i>Armenia</i>, hitherto a vassal kingdom of Rome, was
-incorporated as a Roman province. <i>Albania</i> and <i>Iberia</i>
-took its place as the frontier vassal states. Beyond the
-Euphrates, even beyond the Tigris, the Roman dominion
-took in <i>Mesopotamia</i>, <i>Atropatênê</i>, and <i>Babylonia</i>. The
-Parthian capital of Ktesiphôn and the outlying Greek
-free city of Seleukeia were included within the boundaries
-of an Empire which for a moment touched the
-Caspian and the Persian Gulf. Rome, as the champion
-of the West, seemed to have triumphed for ever over
-her Eastern rival, when the Parthian kingdom was
-thus shorn of the border lands of the two worlds, and
-when its king was forced to become a Roman vassal for
-the dominions that were left to him. But this vast
-extension of the Roman power was strictly only for a
-moment.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Trajan
-surrendered
-by Hadrian.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;117.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-What Trajan had conquered Hadrian at
-once gave back; the Empire was again bounded by
-the Euphrates, and Armenia was again left to form
-matter of dispute between its Eastern and its Western
-claimant.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Marcus.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;162-166.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The second stage begins when, under Marcus,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">{100}</a></span>
-the Roman frontier again began to advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Severus.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;197-202.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Between
-the Euphrates and the Tigris <i>Osrhoênê</i> became a Roman
-dependency: under the house of Severus it became a
-Roman province; and the fortress of <i>Nisibis</i>, so famous
-in later wars, was planted as the Eastern outpost of
-Rome against the Parthian. Ten years later the Parthian
-power was no more; but, as seen with Western eyes, the
-revived monarchy of Persia had simply stepped into its
-place. The wars of Alexander Severus, the captivity of
-Valerian, the wasting march of Sapor through the Roman
-provinces, left no trace on the map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-under Diocletian.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;297.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But under the
-mighty rule of Diocletian the glories of Trajan were
-renewed. Mesopotamia again became Roman; five
-provinces beyond the Tigris were added to the Empire;
-Armenia, again the vassal of Rome, was enlarged at
-the expense of Persia, and Iberia was once more a
-Roman dependency. In the third stage the Roman
-frontier again went back. The wars of the second
-Sapor did little but deprive Rome of two Mesopotamian
-fortresses.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Surrender
-of provinces
-by Jovian.
-<span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>&nbsp;363.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But after the fall of Julian the
-lands beyond the Tigris were given back to Persia;
-even Nisibis was yielded, and the Persian frontier again
-reached the Euphrates.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division
-of Armenia.
-387.<br />
-The Hundred
-Years’
-Peace.
-421.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Armenia was now tossed to
-and fro, conquered and reconquered, till the kingdom
-was divided between the vassals of the two Empires,
-a division which was again confirmed by the hundred
-years’ peace between Rome and Persia. This was the
-state of the Eastern frontier of Rome at the time when
-the West-Goths were laying the foundation of their
-dominion in Spain and Aquitaine, when Goth and
-Roman joined together to overthrow the mingled host
-of Attila at Châlons, and when the first English keels
-were on their way to the shores of Britain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">{101}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This then is the picture of the civilized world at
-the end of the fifth century. The whole of the Western
-dominions of Rome, including Italy and Rome
-herself, have practically, if not everywhere formally,
-fallen away from the Roman Empire. The whole
-West is under the rule of Teutonic kings. The
-Frank has become supreme in northern Gaul, without
-losing his ancient hold on western and central Germany.
-The West-Goth reigns in Spain and Aquitaine;
-the Burgundian reigns in the lands between the Rhone
-and the Alps. Italy and the lands to the north of the
-Alps and the Hadriatic have become, in substance
-though not in name, an East-Gothic kingdom. But
-the countries of the European mainland, though cut off
-from Roman political dominion, are far from being cut
-off from Roman influences. The Teutonic settlers, if
-conquerors, are also disciples. Their rulers are everywhere
-Christian; in Northern Gaul they are even
-Orthodox. Africa, under the Arian Vandal, is far
-more utterly cut off from the traditions of Rome than
-the lands ruled either by the Catholic Frank or by the
-Arian Goth. To the north of the Franks lie the
-independent tribes of Germany, still untouched by any
-Roman influence. They are beginning to find themselves
-new homes in Britain, and, as the natural
-consequence of a purely barbarian and heathen
-conquest, to sever from the Empire all that they
-conquered yet more thoroughly than Africa itself was
-severed. Such is the state of the West. In the East
-the Roman power lives on in the New Rome, with a
-dominion constantly threatened and insulted by various
-enemies, but with a frontier which has varied but little
-since the time of Aurelian. No lasting Teutonic settlement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></span>
-has been made within its borders. In its endless
-wars with Persia, its frontier sometimes advances and
-sometimes retreats. In our next chapter we shall see
-how much of life still clung to the majesty of the
-Roman name, and how large a part of the ancient
-dominion of Rome could still be won back again.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE FINAL DIVISION OF THE EMPIRE.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Reunion of the Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Continuity
-of Roman
-rule.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> main point to be always borne in mind in the
-history, and therefore in the historical geography, of
-the sixth, seventh, and eighth centuries, is the continued
-existence of the Roman Empire. It was still the Roman
-Empire, although the seat of its dominion was no longer
-at the Old Rome, although for a while the Old Rome was
-actually separated from the Roman dominion. Gaul,
-Spain, Africa, Italy itself, had been lopped away. Britain
-had fallen away by another process. But the Roman
-rule went on undisturbed in the Eastern part of the
-Empire, and even in the West the memory of that rule
-had by no means wholly died out.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-the Teutonic
-kings.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Teutonic kings
-ruled in all the countries of the West; but nowhere on
-the continent had they become national sovereigns.
-They were still simply the chiefs of their own people
-reigning in the midst of a Roman population. The
-Romans meanwhile everywhere looked to the Cæsar of
-the New Rome as their lawful sovereign, from whose
-rule they had been unwillingly torn away. Both in Spain
-and in Italy the Gothic kings had settled in the country
-as Imperial lieutenants with an Imperial commission.
-The formal aspect of the event of 476 had been the reunion
-of the Western Empire with the Eastern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of territory
-by the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></span>
-perfectly natural therefore that the sole Roman Emperor
-reigning in the New Rome should strive, whenever he
-had a chance, to win back territories which he had
-never formally surrendered, and that the Roman inhabitants
-of those territories should welcome him as a
-deliverer from barbarian masters. The geographical
-limits within which, at the beginning of the sixth century,
-the Roman power was practically confined, the
-phænomena of race and language within those limits,
-might have suggested another course. But considerations
-of that kind are seldom felt at the time; they
-are the reflexions of thoughtful men long after.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Roman
-dominion
-at the accession
-of
-Justinian,
-527.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Roman dominion, at the accession of Justinian, was
-shut up within the Greek and Oriental provinces of the
-Empire; its enemies were already beginning to speak
-of its subjects as Greeks. Its truest policy would have
-been to have anticipated several centuries of history, to
-have taken up the position of a Greek state, defending
-its borders against the Persian, withstanding or inviting
-the settlement of the Slave, but leaving the now
-Teutonic West to develope itself undisturbed. But
-in such cases the known past is always more powerful
-than the unknown future, and it seemed the first duty
-of the Roman Emperor to restore the Roman Empire
-to its ancient extent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Justinian.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It was during the reign of Justinian that this
-work was carried out through a large part of the
-Western Empire. Lost provinces were won back in
-two continents. The growth of independent Teutonic
-powers was for ever stopped in Africa, and it received
-no small check in Europe. The Emperor was enabled,
-through the weakness and internal dissensions of the
-Vandal and Gothic kingdoms, to win back Africa and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span>
-Italy to the Empire. The work was done by the
-swords of Belisarius and Narses—the Slave and the
-Persian being now used to win back the Old Rome to
-the dominion of the New.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vandal
-war.
-533-535.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The short <i>Vandal</i> war restored
-Africa in the Roman sense, and a large part of
-Mauritania, to the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gothic war.
-537-554.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The long <i>Gothic</i> war won
-back Illyricum, Italy, and the Old Rome. Italy and
-Africa were still ruled from Ravenna and from Carthage;
-but they were now ruled not by Teutonic kings,
-but by Byzantine exarchs.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-southern
-Spain.
-550.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, while the war
-with the East-Goths was going on in Italy, a large part
-of southern Spain was won back from the West-Goths.
-Two Teutonic kingdoms were thus wiped out;
-a third was weakened, and the acquisition of so great
-a line of sea-coast, together with the great islands,
-Sicily, Sardinia, Corsica, and the Balearic Islands, gave
-the Empire an undisputed supremacy by sea. In one
-corner only did the Imperial frontier even nominally
-go back, or any Teutonic power advance at its
-expense.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Provence
-ceded to the
-Franks,
-548.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The sea-board of Provence, which had long
-been practically lost to the Empire, was now formally
-ceded to the Franks. In this one corner the Roman
-Terminus withdrew.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-changes
-under
-Justinian.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In a geographical aspect the map of Europe has
-seldom been so completely changed within a single
-generation as it was during the reign of Justinian. At
-his accession his dominion was bounded to the west by
-the Hadriatic, and he was far from possessing the whole
-of the Hadriatic coast. Under his reign the power of the
-Roman arms and the Roman law were again extended
-to the Ocean. The Roman dominion was indeed no
-longer spread round the whole shore of the Mediterranean;
-the Imperial territories were no longer continuous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</a></span>
-as of old: but, if the Empire was not still, as it had
-once been, the only power in the Mediterranean lands,
-it had again become beyond all comparison the greatest
-power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-Justinian’s
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Moreover, by the recovery of so large an extent
-of Latin-speaking territory, the tendency of the Empire
-to change into a Greek or Oriental state was checked
-for several centuries. We are here concerned only
-with the geographical, not with the political or moral
-aspect of the conquests of Justinian. Some of those
-conquests, like those of Trajan, were hardly more than
-momentary. But the changes which they made for the
-time were some of the most remarkable on record, and
-the effect of those changes remained, both in history
-and geography, long after their immediate results were
-again undone.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>Settlement of the Lombards in Italy.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The conquests of Justinian hindered the growth of
-a national Teutonic kingdom in Italy, such as grew up
-in Gaul and Spain, and they practically made the cradle
-of the Empire, Rome herself, an outlying dependency
-of her great colony by the Bosporos. But the reunion
-of all Italy with the Empire lasted only for a moment.
-The conquest was only just over when a new set of
-Teutonic conquerors appeared in Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pannonian
-kingdom of
-the Lombards.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were
-the <i>Lombards</i>, who, in the great wandering, had made
-their way into the ancient Pannonia about the time
-that the East Goths passed into Italy. They were thus
-settled within the ancient boundaries of the Western
-Empire. But the Roman power had now quite passed
-away from those regions, and the Lombard kingdom in
-Pannonia was practically altogether beyond the Imperial
-borders; it had not even that Roman tinge which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span>
-affected the Frankish and Gothic kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gepidæ.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the
-east of the Lombards, in the ancient Dacia, another
-Teutonic kingdom had arisen; that of the <i>Gepidæ</i>, a
-people seemingly closely akin to the Goths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Avars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The process
-of wandering had brought the Turanian <i>Avars</i> into
-those parts, and their presence seriously affected all later
-history and geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Teutonic
-powers
-on the
-Lower
-Danube.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the Gepidæ in Dacia
-and the Lombards in Pannonia, there was a chance of
-two Teutonic states growing up on the borders of East
-and West. These might possibly have played the same
-part in the East which the Franks and Goths played in
-the West, and they might thus have altogether changed
-the later course of history. But the Lombards allied
-themselves with the Avars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Gepidæ
-overthrown
-by the
-Lombards
-and Avars.
-566.<br />
-The Lombards
-pass
-into Italy.
-567.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In partnership with their
-barbarian allies, they overthrew the kingdom of the
-Gepidæ, and they themselves passed into Italy. Thus
-the growth of Teutonic powers in those regions was
-stopped. A new and far more dangerous enemy was
-brought into the neighbourhood of the Empire, and
-the way was opened for the Slavonic races to play
-in some degree the same part in the East which the
-Teutons played in the West. But while the East lost
-this chance of renovation, for such it would have been,
-the Lombard settlement in Italy was the beginning of a
-new Teutonic power in that country.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the
-Lombard
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was not a
-power which could possibly grow up into a national
-Teutonic kingdom of all Italy, as the dominion of the
-East-Goths might well have done.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incomplete
-conquest of
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Lombard conquest
-of Italy was at no time a complete conquest; part
-of the land was won by the Lombards; part was kept
-by the Emperors; and the Imperial and Lombard possessions
-intersected one another in a way which hindered
-the growth of any kind of national unity under either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></span>
-power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lombard
-duchies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The new settlers founded the great Lombard
-kingdom in the North of Italy, which has kept the
-Lombard name to this day, and the smaller Lombard
-states of <i>Spoleto</i> and <i>Beneventum</i>. But a large part of
-Italy still remained to the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Imperial
-possessions
-in Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Ravenna, the
-dwelling-place of the Exarchs, Rome itself, Naples, and
-the island city of Venice were all centres of districts
-which still acknowledged the Imperial rule. The Emperors
-also kept the extreme southern points of both
-the peninsulas of Southern Italy, and, for the present,
-the three great islands. The Lombard Kings were constantly
-threatening Rome and Ravenna.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ravenna
-taken by
-the Lombards.
-c. 753.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Rome never
-fell into their hands, but in the middle of the eighth
-century Ravenna was taken, and with it the district
-specially known as the <i>Exarchate</i> was annexed to the
-Lombard dominion. But this greatest extent of the
-Lombard power caused its overthrow: for it led to a
-chain of events which, as we shall presently see, ended
-in transferring not only the Lombard kingdom, but the
-Imperial crown of the West to the hands of the Franks.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>Rise of the Saracens.</i></h3>
-
-<p>But, before we give any account of the revolutions
-which took place among the already existing powers of
-Western Europe, it will be well to describe the geographical
-changes which were caused by the appearance of
-absolutely new actors on two sides of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roman
-province
-in Spain recovered
-by
-the Goths.
-534-572.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-One
-point however may be noticed here, as standing apart
-from the general course of events, namely, that the
-Roman province in Spain was won gradually back by
-the West-Goths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>616-624.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The inland cities, as Cordova, were
-hardly kept forty years, and the whole of the Imperial
-possessions in Spain were lost during the reign of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></span>
-Heraclius. Thus the great dominion which Justinian
-had won back in the West, important as were its historical
-results, was itself of very short duration; a large
-part of Italy was lost almost as soon as it was won, and
-the recovered dominion in Spain did not abide more
-than ninety years.</p>
-
-<p>But meanwhile, in the course of the seventh century,
-nations which had hitherto been unknown or
-unimportant began to play a great part in history and
-greatly to change the face of the map. These new
-powers fall under two heads; those who appeared on
-the northern and those who appeared on the eastern
-frontier of the Empire. The nations who appeared
-on the North were, like the early Teutonic invaders
-of the Empire, ready to act, if partly as conquerors,
-partly also as disciples; those who appeared on
-the East were the champions of an utterly different
-system in religion and everything else. In short, the
-old rivalry of the East and West now takes a distinctly
-aggressive form on the part of the East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars between
-Rome and
-Persia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As long as
-the Sassanid dynasty lasted, Rome and Persia still continued
-their old rivalry on nearly equal terms. The
-long wars between the two Empires made little difference
-in their boundaries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars of
-Chosroes
-and Heraclius,
-603-628.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the last stage of their
-warfare Chosroes took Jerusalem and Antioch, and
-encamped at Chalkêdôn. Heraclius pressed his eastern
-victories beyond the boundaries of the Empire under
-Trajan. But even these great campaigns made no
-lasting difference in the map, except so far as, by
-weakening Rome and Persia alike, they paved the way
-for the greatest change of all.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extension
-of the
-Roman
-power on
-the Euxine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-More important to
-geography was a change which took place at somewhat
-earlier time when, during the reign of Justinian, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</a></span>
-Roman power was extended on the Eastern side of the
-Euxine in <i>Colchis</i> or <i>Lazica</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Arabian
-vassals
-of Rome
-and Persia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The southern borders of
-each Empire were to some extent protected by the
-dominion of dependent Arabian kings, the <i>Ghassanides</i>
-being vassals of Rome, and the <i>Lachmites</i> to the east of
-them being vassals of Persia. But a change came
-presently which altogether overthrew the Persian
-kingdom, which deprived the Roman Empire of its
-Eastern, Egyptian, and African provinces, and which
-gave both the Empire and the Teutonic kingdoms of
-the West an enemy of a kind altogether different from
-any against whom they hitherto had to strive.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rise of the
-Saracens.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The cause which wrought such abiding changes was
-the rise of the <i>Saracens</i> under Mahomet and his first
-followers. A new nation, that of the Arabs, now
-became dominant in a large part of the lands which
-had been part of the Roman Empire, as well as in
-lands far beyond its boundaries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Arabia
-united
-under
-Mahomet,
-622-632.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The scattered tribes
-of Arabia were first gathered together into a single
-power by Mahomet himself, and under his successors
-they undertook to spread the Mahometan religion
-wherever their swords could carry it. And, with the
-Mahometan religion, they carried also the Arabic
-language, and what we may call Eastern civilization as
-opposed to Western. A strife, in short, now begins
-between Aryan and Semitic man. Rome and Persia,
-with all their differences, were both of them Aryan
-powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of the
-Saracens.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The most amazing thing is the extraordinary
-speed with which the Saracens pressed their conquests
-at the expense of both Rome and Persia, forming a
-marked contrast to the slow advance both of Roman conquest
-and of Teutonic settlement. In the course of less
-than eighty years, the Mahometan conquerors formed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></span>
-a dominion greater than that of Rome, and, for a short
-time, the will of the Caliph of the Prophet was obeyed
-from the Ocean to lands beyond the Indus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-the Eastern
-provinces
-of Rome.
-632-639.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In a few
-campaigns the Empire lost all its possessions beyond
-Mount Tauros; that is, it lost one of the three great
-divisions of the Empire, that namely in which neither
-Greek nor Roman civilization had ever thoroughly
-taken root.</p>
-
-<p>While the Roman Empire was thus dismembered,
-the rival power of Persia was not merely dismembered,
-but utterly overwhelmed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saracen
-conquest of
-Persia.
-632-651.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Persian nationality was
-again, as in the days of the Parthians, held down under
-a foreign power, to revive yet again ages later. But the
-Saracen power was very far from merely taking the
-place of its Parthian and Persian predecessors. The
-mission of the followers of Mahomet was a mission of
-universal conquest, and that mission they so far carried
-out as altogether to overthrow the exclusive dominion
-of Rome in her own Mediterranean. Under Justinian,
-if the Imperial possession of the Mediterranean coast
-was not absolutely continuous, the small exceptions in
-Africa, Spain, and Gaul in no way interfered with the
-maritime supremacy of the Empire, and Gaul and
-Spain, even where they were not Roman, were at least
-Christian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saracen
-conquest of
-Africa.
-647-711.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But now a gradual advance of sixty-four
-years annexed the Roman dominions in Africa to
-the Mahometan dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Spain.
-711-714.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thence the Saracens passed
-into Spain, and found the West-Gothic kingdom an
-easier prey than the Roman provinces. Within three
-years after the final conquest of Africa, the whole
-peninsula was conquered, save where the Christian still
-held out in the inaccessible mountain fastnesses.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saracen
-provinces
-in Gaul,
-713-755.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Saracen power was even carried beyond the Pyrenees<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></span>
-into the province of Septimania, the remnant of the
-Gaulish dominion of the West-Gothic kings. Narbonne,
-Arles, Nîmes, all became for a while Saracen cities.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-Saracen
-conquest.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In this way, of the three continents round the
-Mediterranean, Rome lost all her possessions in Africa,
-while both in Europe and Asia she had now a neighbour
-and an enemy of quite another kind from any
-which she had had before. The Teutonic conquerors,
-if conquerors, had been also disciples; they became
-part of the Latin world. The Persian, though his
-rivalry was religious as well as political, was still
-merely a rival, fighting along a single line of frontier.
-But every province that was conquered by the Saracens
-was utterly lopped away; it became the possession of
-men altogether alien and hostile in race, language,
-manners, and religion. A large part of the Roman
-world passed from Aryan and Christian to Semitic and
-Mahometan dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-fates of the
-Eastern,
-Latin, and
-Greek
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the essential differences
-among the three main parts of the Empire now showed
-themselves very clearly. The Eastern provinces, where
-either Roman or Greek life was always an exotic, fell
-away at the first touch.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>647-709.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Africa, as being so greatly
-Romanized, held out for sixty years. The provinces
-of Asia Minor, now thoroughly Greek, were often
-ravaged, but never conquered. Spain and Septimania
-were far more easily conquered than Africa—a sign
-perhaps that the West-Gothic rule was still felt as
-foreign by the Roman inhabitants.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatest
-extent of
-Saracen
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>With the conquest of Spain the undivided Saracenic
-Empire, the dominion of the single Caliph, reached its
-greatest extent in the three continents. Detached conquests
-in Europe were made long after, but on the
-whole the Saracen power went back.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>750.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Forty years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></span>
-later they lost <i>Sind</i>, their furthest possession to the East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of Spain.
-755.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Five years later Spain became the seat of a rival dynasty,
-which after a while grew into a rival Caliphate. In the
-same year the Saracen dominion for the first time went
-back in Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Tours.
-732.<br />
-Frankish
-conquest of
-Septimania.
-755.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The battle of Tours answers to the
-repulse of Attila at Châlons; it did not make changes,
-but hindered them; but before long the one province
-which the Saracens held beyond the Pyrenees, that of
-<i>Septimania</i> or <i>Gothia</i>, was won from them by the
-Franks.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>Settlements of the Slavonic Nations.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The movements of the sixth century began to bring
-into notice a branch of the Aryan family of nations
-which was to play an important part in the affairs both
-of the East and of the West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Movements
-of the
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These nations were the
-<i>Slaves</i>. It is needless for our purpose to attempt to
-trace their earlier history; but the movements of the
-<i>Avars</i> in the sixth century seem to have had much the
-same effect upon the Slaves which the movements of the
-Huns in the fourth century had upon the Teutons. The
-inroads of the Avars had, as we have seen, checked the
-growth of Teutonic powers on the Lower Danube, and
-had led to the Lombard settlement in Italy. But the
-Avars only formed the vanguard of a number of Turanian
-nations, some at least of them Turkish, which were
-now pressing westward.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-the Avars.<br />
-Magyars,
-&amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Avars formed a great kingdom
-in the lands north of the Danube; to the east of
-these, along the northern coasts of the Euxine, bordering
-on the outlying possessions and allies of the Empire
-in those regions, lay <i>Magyars</i>, <i>Patzinaks</i>, and the
-greater dominion of the <i>Chazars</i>. All these play a part
-in Byzantine history; and the Avars were in the seventh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">{114}</a></span>
-century the most dangerous invaders and ravagers of
-the Roman territory. But south of the Danube they
-appeared mainly as ravagers; geography knows them
-only in their settled kingdom to the north of that river.
-Even that kingdom lasted no very great time; the real
-importance of all these migrations consists in the effect
-which they had on the great Aryan race which now
-begins to take its part in history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>North-western
-and South-western
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Slaves seem to
-have been driven by the Turanian incursions in two
-directions; to the North-west and to the South-west.
-The North-western division gave rise to more than one
-European state, and their relations with Germany form
-an important part of the history of the Western Empire.
-These North-western Slaves do not become of importance
-till a little later. But the South-western division
-plays a great part in the history of the sixth and seventh
-centuries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogy
-between
-Teutons
-and Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Their position with regard to the Eastern
-Empire is a kind of shadow of the position held by the
-Teutonic nations with regard to the Western Empire.
-The Slaves play in the East, though less thoroughly
-and less brilliantly, the same part, half conquerors,
-half disciples, which the Teutons played in the West.
-During the sixth century they appear only as ravagers;
-in the seventh they appear as settlers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-settlements
-under
-Heraclius.
-c. 620.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There seems no
-doubt that Heraclius encouraged Slavonic settlements
-south of the Danube, doubtless with a view to defence
-against the more dangerous Avars. Much like the Teutonic
-settlers in the West, the Slaves came in at first as
-colonists under Imperial authority, and presently became
-practically independent. A number of Slavonic states
-thus arose in the lands north and east of the Hadriatic,
-as <i>Servia</i>, <i>Chrobatia</i> or <i>Croatia</i>, <i>Carinthia</i>, of which the
-first two are historically connected with the Eastern,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span>
-and the third with the Western Empire. <i>Istria</i> and
-<i>Dalmatia</i> now became Slavonic, with the exception of
-the maritime cities, which, among many vicissitudes,
-clave to the Empire. And even among them considerable
-revolutions took place.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Destruction
-of
-Salona,
-639.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus <i>Salona</i> was destroyed,
-and out of Diocletian’s palace in its neighbourhood
-arose the new city of <i>Spalato</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-Spalato
-and Ragusa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Dalmatian
-<i>Epidauros</i> was also destroyed, and <i>Ragusa</i> took its
-place. In many of these inroads Slaves and Avars were
-mixed up together; but the lasting settlements were
-all Slavonic. And the state of things which thus began
-has been lasting; the north-eastern coast of the Hadriatic
-is still a Slavonic land with an Italian fringe.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Displacement
-of the
-Illyrians.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In these migrations the Slaves displaced whatever
-remnants were left of the old Illyrian race in the lands
-near the Danube. They have themselves to some extent
-taken the Illyrian name, a change which has sometimes
-led to confusion. But at the time the movement went
-much further south than this.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Slavonic
-settlement.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Slaves pressed on into
-a large part of Macedonia and Greece, and, during the
-seventh and eighth centuries, the whole of those countries,
-except the fortified cities and a fringe along the
-coast, were practically cut off from the Empire. The name
-of <i>Slavinia</i> reached from the Danube to Peloponnêsos,
-leaving to the Empire only islands and detached points
-of coast from Venice round to Thessalonica. Their
-settlements in these regions gave a new meaning to an
-ancient name, and the word <i>Macedonian</i> now began to
-mean <i>Slavonic</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Albanians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And it must have been at this time
-that the Illyrians, the <i>Skipetar</i> or <i>Albanians</i>, pressed
-southward and formed those colonies in Greece, some of
-which still keep the Albanian language, while the Slavonic
-language has vanished from those lands for ages.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nature of
-Slavonic
-settlement
-in Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Slavonic occupation of Greece is a fact which must
-neither be forgotten nor exaggerated. It certainly did
-not amount to an extirpation of the Greek nation; but
-it certainly did amount to an occupation of a large part
-of the country, which was Hellenized afresh from those
-cities and districts which remained Greek or Roman.
-While these changes were going on in the Hadriatic
-and Ægæan lands, another immigration later in the
-seventh century took place in the lands south of the
-lower Danube, and drove back the Imperial frontier
-to Haimos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-of the Bulgarians,
-c. 679.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was the incursion of the <i>Bulgarians</i>,
-another Turanian people, but one whose history has
-been different from that of most of the Turanian immigrants.
-By mixture with Slavonic subjects and neighbours
-they became practically Slavonic, and they still
-remain a people speaking a Slavonic language.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Empire
-cut short in
-its own
-peninsula.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus
-the Empire, though it still kept its possessions in
-Italy with the great Mediterranean islands, though its
-hold on Western Africa lasted on into the eighth
-century, though it still kept outlying possessions on
-the northern and eastern coasts of the Euxine, was
-cut short in that great peninsula which seems made
-to be the immediate possession of the New Rome.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Moral influence
-of
-Constantinople.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But, exactly as happened in the West, the loss of
-political dominion carried with it the growth of moral
-dominion. The nations which pressed into these provinces
-gradually accepted Christianity in its Eastern
-form, and they have always looked up to the New Rome
-with a feeling the same in kind, but less strong in degree,
-as that with which the West has looked up to the
-Old Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, at the beginning of the eighth century,
-though the Imperial power still held posts here and
-there from the pillars of Hêraklês to the Kimmerian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></span>
-Bosporos, Saracens on the one side and Slaves on the
-other had cut short the continuous Roman dominion to
-a comparatively narrow space. The unbroken possessions
-of Cæsar were now confined to Thrace and that
-solid peninsula of Asia Minor which the Saracens constantly
-ravaged, but never conquered. Mountains had
-taken place of rivers as the great boundaries of the Empire:
-instead of the Danube and the Euphrates, the
-Roman Terminus had fallen back to Haimos and Tauros.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The Transfer of the Western Empire to the Franks.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the Franks.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile we must go back to the West, and trace
-the growth of the great power which was there growing
-up, a power which, while the elder Empire was thus
-cut short in the East, was in the end to supplant it
-in the West by the creation of a rival Empire. For
-a while the <i>Franks</i> and the Empire had only occasional
-dealings with each other. Next to Britain, which
-had altogether ceased to be part of the Roman world,
-the part of the Western Empire which was least affected
-by the re-awakening of the Roman power in the East
-was the former province of Transalpine Gaul. The
-power of the Franks was fast spreading, both in their old
-home in Germany and in their new home in Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frankish
-conquest of
-the Alemanni,
-496;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-victory of Chlodwig over the <i>Alemanni</i> made the Franks
-the leading people of Germany. The two German
-powers which had so long been the chief enemies of
-the Roman power along the Rhine were now united.
-Throughout the sixth century the German dominion of
-the Franks was growing.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the Thuringians,
-c.
-530;<br />
-of Bavaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Frankish supremacy was
-extended over <i>Thuringia</i>, and later in the century over
-<i>Bavaria</i>. The Bavaria of this age, it must be remembered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</a></span>
-has a much wider extent than the name has in
-modern geography, reaching to the northern borders of
-Italy. The Bavarians seem to have been themselves
-but recent settlers in the land between the Alps and the
-Danube; but their immigration and their reduction
-under Frankish supremacy made the lands immediately
-south of the Danube thoroughly Teutonic, as the earlier
-Frankish conquests had done by the lands immediately
-west of the Rhine. Long before this time, the Franks
-had greatly extended their dominions in Gaul also.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Aquitaine
-[507-511]
-and
-Burgundy.
-532-534.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the later years of Chlodwig the greater part of
-<i>Aquitaine</i> was won from the West-Goths. Further
-conquests at their expense were afterwards made, and
-about the same time Burgundy came under Frankish
-supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>The Franks now held, either in possession or dependence,
-the whole oceanic coast of Gaul; but they
-were still shut out from the Mediterranean. The West-Goths
-still kept the land from the Pyrenees to the Rhone,
-the land of <i>Septimania</i> or <i>Gothia</i>, to which the last name
-clave as being now the only Gothic part of Gaul. The
-land which was specially <i>Provincia</i>, the first Roman possession
-in Transalpine Gaul, the coast from the Rhone to
-the Alps, formed part of the East-Gothic dominions of
-Theodoric. An invasion of Italy during the long wars
-between the Goths and Romans failed to establish a
-Frankish dominion on the Italian side of the Alps.
-But as the Franks, by their conquest of Burgundy, were
-now neighbours of Italy, it led to a further enlargement
-of their Gaulish dominions, and to their first acquisition
-of a Mediterranean sea-board.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession of
-Provence.
-536.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was now that Massalia,
-Arelate, and the rest of the Province were, by an
-Imperial grant, one of the last exercises of Imperial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span>
-power in those regions, added to the kingdom of the
-Franks.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Frankish
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the time that the Roman reconquest of
-Italy was completed, the Frankish dominion, united for
-a moment under a single head, took in the whole of
-Gaul, except the small remaining West-Gothic territory,
-together with central Germany and a supremacy over
-the Southern German lands. To the north lay the still
-independent tribes of the Low-Dutch stock, Frisian and
-Saxon.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-the Franks.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>As the Frankish dominion plays so great a part in
-European history and geography, a part in truth second
-only to that played by the Roman dominion, it will
-be needful to consider the historical position of the
-Franks. Their dominion was that of a German people
-who had made themselves dominant alike in Germany
-and in Gaul. But it was only in a small part of
-the Frankish territory that the Frankish people had
-actually settled.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The cession
-of Gaulish
-possessions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was only in northern Gaul and
-central Germany, in the countries to which they have
-permanently given their name, that the Franks can be
-looked on as really occupying the land. In their
-German territory they of course remained German; in
-northern Gaul their position answered to that of the
-other Teutonic nations which had formed settlements
-within the Empire. They were a dominant Teutonic
-race in a Roman land. Gradually they adopted the
-speech of the conquered, while the conquered in
-the end adopted the name of the conquerors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slow fusion
-of Franks
-and Romans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-the fusion of German and Roman was slower in the
-Frankish part of Gaul than elsewhere, doubtless because
-elsewhere the Teutonic settlements were cut off
-from their older Teutonic homes, while the Franks
-in Gaul had their older Teutonic home as a background.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-and Gaulish
-dependencies
-of the
-Franks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Beyond the bounds of these more strictly
-Frankish lands, German and Gaulish, the dominion of
-the Franks was at most a political supremacy, and in
-no sense a national settlement. In Germany Bavaria
-was ruled by its vassal princes; in Gaul south of the
-Loire the Frank was at most an external ruler.
-Aquitaine had to be practically conquered over and
-over again, and new dynasties of native princes were
-constantly rising up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ethnology
-of Southern
-Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Teutonic element in these
-lands, an element much slighter than the Teutonic
-element in Northern Gaul, is not Frankish, but Gothic
-and Burgundian. The native Romance speech of
-those lands is wholly different from the Romance
-speech of Northern Gaul. In short, there was really
-nothing in common between the two great parts of
-Gaul, the lands south and the lands north of the Loire,
-except their union, first under Roman and then under
-Frankish dominion. And in Armorica the old Celtic
-population, strengthened by the settlers from Britain,
-formed another and a yet more distinct element.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Divisions of
-the Frankish
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus there were within the Frankish dominions
-wide national diversities, containing the germs of future
-divisions. It needed a strong hand even to keep the
-Teutonic and the Latin <i>Francia</i> together, much less to
-keep together all the dependent lands, German and
-Gaulish. During the ages while the Empire was being
-cut short by Lombards, Goths, Slaves, and Saracens,
-the Frankish dominion was never in the like sort cut
-short by foreign settlements; but its whole history
-under the Merowingian dynasty is a history of divisions
-and reunions. The tendencies to division which were
-inherent in the condition of the country were strengthened
-by endless partitions among the members of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</a></span>
-reigning house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><i>Austria</i>
-and
-<i>Neustria</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Speaking roughly, it may be said
-that the more strictly Frankish territory showed a
-tendency to divide itself into two parts, the Eastern or
-Teutonic land, <i>Austria</i> or <i>Austrasia</i>, and <i>Neustria</i>, the
-Western or Romance land. These were severally the
-germs which grew into the kingdoms of Germany and
-France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name
-<i>Francia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As for the mere name of <i>Francia</i>, like other
-names of the kind, it shifted its geographical use
-according to the wanderings of the people from whom
-it was derived. After many such changes of meaning,
-it gradually settled down as the name for those parts of
-Germany and Gaul where it still abides. There are the
-Teutonic or Austrian <i>Francia</i>, part of which still keeps
-the name of <i>Franken</i> or <i>Franconia</i>, and the Romance
-or Neustrian <i>Francia</i>, which by various annexations
-has grown into modern <i>France</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Karlings.
-Dukes,
-687-752;
-Kings,
-752-987.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>At last, after endless divisions, reconquests, and reunions
-of the different parts of the Frankish territory, the
-whole Frankish dominion was again, in the second half
-of the eighth century, joined together under the Austrasian,
-the purely German, house of the <i>Karlings</i>. The
-Dukes and Kings of that house consolidated and extended
-the Frankish dominion in every direction. Under
-Pippin and Charles the Great, the power of the ruling
-race was more firmly established over the dependent
-states, such as Bavaria and Aquitaine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pippin
-conquers
-Septimania.
-752.<br />
-Conquests
-of Charles
-the Great.
-768-814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Pippin
-the conquest of the Saracen province of Septimania
-extended the Frankish power over the whole of Gaul;
-and under Charles the Great, the Frankish dominion
-was extended by a series of conquests in every direction.
-Of these, his Italian conquests were rather
-the winning of a new crown for the Frankish king
-than the extension of the Frankish kingdom. But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
-conquest of <i>Saxony</i> at the one end and of the <i>Spanish
-March</i> at the other, as well as the overthrow of the
-Pannonian kingdom of the Avars, were in the strictest
-sense extensions of the Frankish dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-character of
-the Frankish
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Frankish power which now plays so great a part in the
-world was a power essentially German. The Franks
-and their kings, the kings who reigned from the Elbe
-to the Ebro, were German in blood, speech, and
-feeling; but they bore rule over other lands, German,
-Latin, and Celtic, in many various degrees of incorporation
-and subjection.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The three
-great powers
-of the
-eighth century;
-Romans,
-Franks,
-Saracens.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus the effect of the Saracen conquests was to leave
-in Europe one purely European power, namely the
-kingdom of the Franks, one power both European and
-Asiatic, namely the Roman Empire with its seat at
-Constantinople, and one power at once Asiatic, African,
-and European, namely the Saracen Caliphate. Through
-the eighth century these three are the great powers of
-the world, to which the other nations of Europe and
-Asia form, as far as we are concerned, a mere background.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the
-Caliphate.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the Caliphate, as a Semitic and Mahometan
-power, could be European only in a geographical sense.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Saracen
-dominion
-in Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Even after the establishment of the independent Saracen
-dominion in Spain, the new power still remained an
-exotic. A great country of Western Europe was no
-longer ruled from Damascus or Bagdad; but the emirate,
-afterwards Caliphate, of Cordova, and the kingdoms
-into which it afterwards broke up, still remained
-only geographically European. They were portions of
-Asia—in after times rather of Africa—thrusting themselves
-into Europe, like the Spanish dominion of Carthage
-in earlier times. The two great Christian powers,
-the two great really European powers, are the Roman and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
-the Frankish. We now come to the process which for
-a while caused the Roman and Frankish names to have
-the same meaning within a large part of Europe, and
-by which the two seats of Roman dominion were again
-parted asunder, never to be reunited.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations of
-the Franks
-and the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The way by which the Roman and Frankish
-powers came to affect one another was through the
-affairs of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Imperial
-possessions
-in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The steps by which the Imperial power
-was, during the eighth century, weakened step by step
-in the territories which still remained to the Empire in
-central Italy are, either from an ecclesiastical or from
-a strictly historical point of view, of surpassing interest.
-But, as long as the authority of the Emperor was not
-openly thrown off, no change was made on the map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lombard
-conquest
-of the
-Exarchate.<br />
-Overthrow
-of the
-Lombards
-by Charles.
-774.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The events of those times which did make a change on
-the map were, first the conquest of the Exarchate by
-the Lombards, and secondly, the overthrow of the
-Lombard kingdom itself by the Frank king Charles
-the Great. The Frankish power was thus at last
-established on the Italian side of the Alps, but it must
-be remarked that the new conquest was not incorporated
-with the Frankish dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lombardy
-a separate
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Charles held
-his Italian dominion as a separate dominion, and called
-himself King of the Franks and Lombards. He also
-bore the title of Patrician of the Romans; but,
-though the assumption of that title was of great
-political significance, it did not affect geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Title of
-Patrician.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-title of Patrician of itself implied a commission from
-the Emperor, and, though it was bestowed by the
-Bishop and people of Rome without the Imperial
-consent, the very choice of the title showed that
-the Imperial authority was not formally thrown off.
-Charles, as Patrician, was virtually sovereign of Rome,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
-and his acquisition of the patriciate practically extended
-his dominion from the Ocean to the frontiers of
-Beneventum.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nominal
-authority
-of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, down to his Imperial coronation
-in the last week of the eighth century, the Emperor
-who reigned in the New Rome was still the nominal
-sovereign of the old. The event of the year 800,
-with all its weighty significance, did not practically
-either extend the territories of Charles or increase
-his powers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-the Imperial
-coronation
-of
-Charles.
-800.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Still the Imperial coronation of Charles is one of
-the great landmarks both of history and of historical
-geography. The whole political system of Europe was
-changed when the Old Rome cast off its formal allegiance
-to the New, and chose the King of the Franks
-and Lombards to be Emperor of the Romans. Though
-the powers of Charles were not increased nor his dominions
-extended, he held everything by a new title.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final division
-of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Roman Empire was divided, never to be joined together
-again. But its Western half now took in, not only
-the greatest of its lost provinces, but vast regions which
-had never formed part of the Empire in the days of
-Trajan himself. Again, the distinctive character of the
-older Roman Empire had been the absence of nationality.
-The whole civilized world had become Rome,
-and all its free inhabitants had become Romans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growing
-nationality
-of the two
-Empires,
-German
-and Greek.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-from this time each of the two divisions of the Empire
-begins to assume something like a national character.
-East and West alike remained Roman in name and in
-political traditions. The Old Rome was the nominal
-centre of one; the New Rome was both the nominal
-and the real centre of the other. But there was a
-sense in which both alike ceased from this time to be
-Roman. The Western Empire has passed to a German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span>
-king, and later changes tended to make his Empire
-more and more German. The Eastern Empire meanwhile,
-by the successive loss of the Eastern provinces, of
-Latin Africa, and of Latin Italy, became nearly conterminous
-with those parts of Europe and Asia where
-the Greek speech and Greek civilization prevailed.
-From one point of view, both Empires are still Roman;
-from another point of view, one is fast becoming
-German, the other is fast becoming Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry of
-the two
-Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And the
-two powers into which the old Roman Empire is thus
-split are in the strictest sense two Empires. They are
-no longer mere divisions of an Empire which has been
-found to be too great for the rule of one man. The
-Emperors of the East and West are no longer Imperial
-colleagues dividing the administration of a single Empire
-between them. They are now rival potentates, each
-claiming to be exclusively the one true Roman Emperor,
-the one true representative of the common predecessors
-of both in the days when the Empire was still undivided.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The two
-Caliphates.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It is further to be noted that the same kind of
-change which now happened to the Christian Empire,
-had happened earlier in the century to the Mahometan
-Empire. The establishment of a rival dynasty
-at Cordova, even though the assumption of the actual
-title of Caliph did not follow at once, was exactly
-analogous to the establishment of a rival Empire
-in the Old Rome. The Mediterranean world has now
-four great powers, the two rival Christian Empires,
-and the two rival Mahometan Caliphates. Among
-these, it naturally follows that each is hostile to its
-neighbour of the opposite religion, and friendly to
-its neighbour’s rival. The Western Emperor is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</a></span>
-enemy of the Western Caliph, the friend of the Eastern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry
-of the Empires
-and
-Caliphates.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eastern Emperor is the enemy of the Eastern
-Caliph, the friend of the Western. Thus the four
-great powers stood at the beginning of the ninth
-century. And it was out of the dismemberments of
-the two great Christian and the great Mahometan
-powers that the later states, Christian and Mahometan,
-of the Mediterranean world took their rise.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Carolingian
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It is a point of geographical as well as of historical
-importance that Charles the Great, after he was crowned
-Emperor, caused all those who had been hitherto bound
-by allegiance to him as King of the Franks to swear
-allegiance to him afresh as Roman Emperor. This marks
-that all his dominions, Frankish, Lombard, and strictly
-Roman, are to be looked on as forming part of the
-Western Empire. Thus the Western Empire now took in
-all those German lands which the old Roman Emperors
-never could conquer. Germany became part of the
-Roman Empire, not by Rome conquering Germany, but
-by Rome choosing the German king as her Emperor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Contrast of
-its boundaries
-with
-those of the
-elder Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The boundaries of the Empire thus became different
-from what they had ever been before. Of the old
-provinces of the Western Empire, Britain, Africa, and
-all Spain save one corner, remained foreign to the new
-Roman Empire of the Franks. But, on the other hand,
-the Empire now took in all the lands in Germany and
-beyond Germany over which the Frankish power now
-reached, but which had never formed part of the elder
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Saxony.
-772-804.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The long wars of Charles with the Saxons led to
-their final conquest, to the incorporation of <i>Saxony</i> with
-the Frankish kingdom, and, after the Imperial coronation
-of the Frankish king, to its incorporation with the
-Western Empire.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The conquests of Charles had thus, among their
-other results, welded Germany into a single whole. For
-though the Franks had long been the greatest power in
-Germany, yet Germany could not be said to form a
-single whole as long as the Saxons, the greatest people
-of Northern Germany, remained independent. The
-conquest of Saxony brought the Frankish power for
-the first time in contact with the <i>Danes</i> and the other
-people of <i>Scandinavia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundary
-of the
-Eider.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominions of Charles took
-in what was then called Saxony beyond the Elbe, that
-is the modern Holstein, and the <i>Eider</i> was fixed as the
-northern boundary of the Empire. More than one
-Danish king did homage to Charles and to some of
-the Emperors after him; but Denmark was never incorporated
-with the Empire or even made permanently
-dependent.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-allies and
-neighbours.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the east, the immediate dominions of
-Charles stretched but a little way beyond the Elbe; but
-here the Western Empire came in contact, as the Eastern
-had done at an earlier time and by a different process,
-with the widely spread nations of the Slavonic race.
-The same movements which had driven one branch of
-that race to the south-west had driven another branch
-to the north-west, and the wars of Charles in those
-regions gave his Empire a fringe of Slavonic allies and
-dependents along both sides of the Elbe, forming a
-barrier between the immediate dominions of the Empire
-and the independent Slaves to the east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Overthrow
-of the Avar
-kingdom.
-796.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the
-south Charles overthrew the kingdom of the <i>Avars</i>; he
-thus extended his dominions on the side of south-eastern
-Germany, and here he came in contact with the southern
-branch of the Slaves, a portion of whom, in <i>Carinthia</i>
-and the neighbouring lands, became subjects of his
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Spanish
-March.
-778.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Spain he acquired the north-eastern corner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
-as far as the Ebro, forming the Spanish March, afterwards
-the county of Barcelona.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Divisions
-of the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus the new Western Empire took in all Gaul, all
-that was then Germany, the greater part of Italy, and
-a small part of Spain.<a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> It thus took in both Teutonic
-and Romance lands, and contained in it the germs of
-the chief nations of modern Europe. It was a step
-towards their formation when Charles, following the
-example both of earlier Roman Emperors and of earlier
-Frankish kings, planned several divisions of his dominions
-among his sons. Owing to the deaths of all his
-sons but one, none of these divisions took effect. And
-it should be noticed that as yet none of these schemes of
-division agreed with any great natural or national
-boundary. They did not as yet foreshadow the division
-which afterwards took place, and out of which
-the chief states of Western Europe grew. In two
-cases only was anything like a national kingdom
-thought of.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Aquitaine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Charles’s son Lewis reigned under him
-as king in <i>Aquitaine</i>, a kingdom which took in all
-Southern Gaul and the Spanish March, answering
-pretty nearly to the lands of the Provençal tongue or
-tongue of <i>Oc</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Death of
-Charles.
-814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And when Charles died, and was succeeded
-in the Empire by Lewis, Charles’s grandson
-Bernard still went on reigning under his uncle as King
-of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Kingdom of Italy</i> must be understood
-as taking in the Italian mainland, except the lands in
-the south which were held by the dependent princes of
-Beneventum and by the rival Emperors of the East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name
-<i>Francia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During this period <i>Francia</i> commonly means the strictly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></span>
-Frankish kingdoms, Gaulish and German. The words
-<i>Gallia</i> and <i>Germania</i> are used in a strictly geographical
-sense.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>Northern Europe.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scandinavians
-and
-English.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile other nations were beginning to show
-themselves in those parts of Europe which lay beyond
-the Empire. In north-western Europe two branches
-of the Teutonic race were fast growing into importance;
-the one in lands which had never formed part of the
-Empire, the other in a land which had been part of it,
-but which had been so utterly severed from it as to be
-all one as if it had never belonged to it. These were
-the <i>Scandinavian</i> nations in the two great peninsulas of
-Northern Europe, and the <i>English</i> in the Isle of Britain.
-The history of these two races is closely connected, and
-it has an important bearing on the history of Europe in
-general.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Stages of
-the English
-conquest of
-Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In Britain itself the progress of the English arms
-had been gradual. Sometimes conquests from the
-Britons were made with great speed: sometimes the
-English advance was checked by successes on the British
-side, by mere inaction, or by wars between the
-different English kingdoms. The fluctuations of victory,
-and consequently of boundaries, between the English
-kingdoms were quite as marked as the warfare between
-the English and the Britons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-English
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among the many Teutonic
-settlements in Britain, small and great, seven kingdoms
-stand out as of special importance, and three
-of these, <i>Wessex</i>, <i>Mercia</i>, and <i>Northumberland</i>, again
-stand out as candidates for a general supremacy over
-the whole English name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Britain at
-the end of
-the eighth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the eighth
-century a large part of Britain remained, as it still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">{130}</a></span>
-remains, in the hands of the elder Celtic inhabitants;
-but the parts which they still kept were now cut off
-from each other.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Celtic
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cornwall</i> or <i>West-Wales</i>, <i>North-Wales</i>
-(answering nearly to the modern principality), and <i>Strathclyde</i>
-or <i>Cumberland</i> (a much larger district than the
-modern county so called) were all the seats of separate,
-though fluctuating, British states. Beyond the Forth
-lay the independent kingdoms of the <i>Picts</i> and <i>Scots</i>,
-which, in the course of the ninth century, became one.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>West-Saxon
-supremacy
-under
-Ecgberht.
-802-837.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It was the West-Saxon kingdom to which the supremacy
-over all the kingdoms of Britain, Teutonic
-and Celtic, came in the end. Ecgberht, its king, had
-been a friend and guest of Charles the Great, and he
-had most likely been stirred up by his example to do in
-his own island what Charles had done on the mainland.
-In the course of his reign, West-Wales was completely
-conquered; the other English kingdoms, together with
-North-Wales, were brought into a greater or less degree
-of dependence. But both in North-Wales and also in
-Mercia, Northumberland, and East-Anglia, the local
-kings went on reigning under the supremacy of the King
-of the West-Saxons, who now began sometimes to call
-himself <i>King of the English</i>. In the north both Scotland
-and Strathclyde remained quite independent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Scandinavian
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">That part also of the Teutonic race which lay altogether
-beyond the bounds of the Empire now begins
-to be of importance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Danes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Danes</i> are heard of as
-early as the days of Justinian; but neither they nor
-the other Scandinavian nations play any great part
-in history before the time of Charles the Great. A
-great number of small states gradually settled down
-into three great kingdoms, which remain still, though
-their boundaries have greatly changed. The boundary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
-between Denmark and the Empire was, as we
-have seen, fixed at the Eider.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Denmark
-and Norway.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides the peninsula
-of Jutland and the islands which still belong to it,
-Denmark took in <i>Scania</i> and other lands in the south
-of the great peninsula that now forms <i>Sweden</i> and
-<i>Norway</i>. Norway, on the other hand, ran much further
-inland, and came down much further south than it does
-now. These points are of importance, because they
-show the causes of the later history of the three
-Scandinavian states.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both Denmark and Norway had a
-great front to the Ocean, while <i>Swithiod</i> and <i>Gauthiod</i>,
-the districts which formed the beginning of the kingdom
-of Sweden, had no opening that way, but were altogether
-turned towards the Baltic. It thus came about that for
-some centuries both Denmark and Norway played a
-much greater part in the general affairs of Europe than
-Sweden did.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danish and
-Norwegian
-settlements.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark was an immediate neighbour
-of the Empire, and from both Denmark and Norway
-men went out to conquer and settle in various parts
-of Britain, Ireland and Gaul, besides colonizing the
-more distant and uninhabited lands of <i>Iceland</i> and
-<i>Greenland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pressure of
-Swedes to
-the East.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, the Swedes pressed eastward
-on the Finnish and Slavonic people beyond the Baltic.
-In this last way they had a great effect on the history
-of the Eastern Empire; but in Western history Sweden
-counts for very little till a much later time.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Summary.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>During the period which has been dealt with in
-this chapter, taking in the sixth, seventh, and eighth
-centuries, we thus see, first of all the reunion of the
-greater part of the Roman Empire under Justinian—then
-the lopping away of the Eastern and African
-provinces by the conquests of the Saracens—then the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">{132}</a></span>
-gradual separation of all Italy except the south, ending
-in the re-establishment of a separate Western Empire
-under Charles the Great. We thus get two great Christian
-powers, the Eastern and Western Empires, balanced
-by two great Mahometan powers, the Eastern and
-Western Caliphates. All the older Teutonic kingdoms
-have either vanished or have grown into something
-wholly different. The Vandal kingdom of Africa and
-the East-Gothic kingdom have wholly vanished. The
-West-Gothic kingdom, cut short by Franks on one
-side and Saracens on the other, survives only in the
-form of the small Christian principalities which still
-held their ground in Northern Spain. The Frankish
-kingdom, by swallowing up the Gothic and Burgundian
-dominions in Gaul, the independent nations of
-Germany, the Lombard kingdom, and the more part
-of the possessions of the Empire in Italy, has grown
-into a new Western Empire. The two Empires, both
-still politically Roman, are fast becoming, one German
-and the other Greek. Meanwhile, nations beyond
-the bounds of the Empire are growing into importance.
-The process has begun by which the many
-small Teutonic settlements in Britain grew in the end
-into the one kingdom of England. The three Scandinavian
-nations, Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians or
-Northmen, now begin to grow into importance. In
-a religious point of view, if Syria, Egypt, Africa,
-and the more part of Spain were lost to Christendom,
-the loss was in some degree made up by the
-conversion to Christianity of the Angles and Saxons
-in Britain, of the Old-Saxons in Germany, and of the
-other German tribes which at the beginning of the
-sixth century had still been heathen. At no time in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
-the world’s history did the map undergo greater changes.
-This period is the time of real transition from the
-older state of things represented by the undivided
-Roman Empire to the newer state of things in which
-Europe is made up of a great number of independent
-states. The modern kingdoms outside the Empire, in
-Britain and Scandinavia, were already forming. The
-great continental nations of Western Europe had as
-yet hardly begun to form. They were to grow out
-of the break-up of the Carolingian Empire, the Roman
-Empire of the Franks.<a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE BEGINNING OF THE MODERN EUROPEAN STATES.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Division of the Frankish Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dissolution
-of the
-Frankish
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> great dominion of the Franks, the German kingdom
-which had so strangely grown into a new Western
-Roman Empire, did not last long. In the course of
-the ninth century it altogether fell to pieces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The chief
-states of
-modern
-Europe
-spring out
-of it.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the
-process by which it fell to pieces must be carefully
-traced, because it was out of its dismemberment that
-the chief states of Western Europe arose. Speaking
-roughly, the Carolingian Empire took in Germany, so
-far as Germany had yet spread to the East, all Gaul,
-a great part of Italy, and a small part of Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>National
-kingdoms
-not yet
-formed.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of
-these, it was only Italy, and sometimes Aquitaine,
-which showed any approach to the character of a
-separate or national kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-<i>Francia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Northern Gaul and
-central Germany were still alike <i>Francia</i>; and, though
-the Romance speech prevailed in one, and the Teutonic
-speech in the other, no national distinction was
-drawn between them during the time of Charles the
-Great. Among the proposed divisions of his Empire,
-none proposed to separate <i>Neustria</i> and <i>Austria</i>, the
-Western and the Eastern <i>Francia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separate
-being of
-Italy and
-Aquitaine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Italy did form
-a separate kingdom under the superiority of the Emperor;
-and so for a while there was an under-kingdom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
-of Aquitaine, answering roughly to Gaul south of the
-Loire. This is the land of the <i>Provençal</i> tongue, the
-<i>tongue of Oc</i>, a tongue which, it must be remembered,
-reached to the Ebro.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division
-under
-Lewis the
-Pious.<br />
-First
-glimpses
-of Modern
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is in the various divisions,
-contemplated and actual, among the sons of Lewis the
-Pious, the successor of Charles the Great, that we see
-the first approaches to a national division between Germany
-and Gaul, and the first glimmerings of a state
-answering in any way to <i>France</i> in the modern sense.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-817.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The earliest among those endless divisions that we
-need mention is the division of 817, by which two new
-subordinate kingdoms were founded within the Empire.
-Lewis and his immediate colleague Lothar kept
-in their own hands <i>Francia</i>, German and Gaulish, and
-the more part of Burgundy. South-western Gaul,
-Aquitaine in the wide sense, with some small parts of
-Septimania and Burgundy, formed the portion of one
-under-king; South-eastern Germany, Bavaria and
-the march-lands beyond it, formed the portion of
-another. Italy still remained the portion of a third.
-Here we have nothing in the least answering to
-modern France. The tendency is rather to leave
-the immediate Frankish kingdom, both in Gaul and
-Germany, as an undivided whole, and to part off
-its dependent lands, German, Gaulish, and Italian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Neustria
-and Aquitaine
-the
-first step to
-the creation
-of <i>France</i>.
-838.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, in a much later division, Lewis granted Neustria
-to his son Charles, and in the next year, on the
-death of Pippin of Aquitaine, he added his kingdom
-to that of Charles. A state was thus formed which
-answers roughly to the later kingdom of France, as
-it stood before the long series of French encroachments
-on the German and Burgundian lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the
-<i>Western
-Kingdom</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-kingdom thus formed had no definite name, and it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
-answered to no national division. It was indeed mainly
-a kingdom of the Romance speech, but it did not
-answer to any one of the great divisions of that
-speech. It was a kingdom formed by accident, because
-Lewis wished to increase the portion of his youngest
-son. Still there can be no doubt that we have
-here the first beginning of the kingdom of <i>France</i>,
-though it was not till after several other stages
-that the kingdom thus formed took that name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-Verdun.
-843.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-final division of Verdun went a step further in the
-direction of the modern map. It left Charles in possession
-of a kingdom which still more nearly answered
-to France, as France stood before its Burgundian and
-German annexations. It also founded a kingdom
-which roughly answered to the later <i>Germany</i> before
-its great extension to the East at the expense of the
-Slavonic nations. And, as the Western kingdom was
-formed by the addition of Aquitaine to the Western
-<i>Francia</i>, so the Eastern kingdom was formed by the
-addition of the Eastern <i>Francia</i> to Bavaria. Lewis of
-Bavaria became king of a kingdom which we are
-tempted to call the kingdom of <i>Germany</i>. Still it
-would as yet be premature to speak of France at
-all, or even to speak of Germany, except in the geographical
-sense.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdoms
-of the Eastern
-and
-Western
-Franks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The two kingdoms are severally the
-kingdoms of the <i>Eastern</i> and of the <i>Western Franks</i>.
-But between these two states the policy of the ninth
-century instinctively put a barrier. The Emperor
-Lothar, besides Italy, kept a long narrow strip of territory
-between the dominions of his Eastern and
-Western brothers. After him, Italy remained to his
-son the Emperor Lewis, while the border lands of Germany
-and Gaul passed to the younger Lothar.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of <i>Lotharingia</i>,
-Lothringen,
-Lorraine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span>
-land, having thus been the dominion of two Lothars,
-took the name of <i>Lotharingia</i>, <i>Lothringen</i>, or <i>Lorraine</i>,
-a name which part of it has kept to this day. This land,
-sometimes attached to the Eastern kingdom, sometimes to
-the Western, sometimes divided between the two, sometimes
-separated from both, always kept its character of
-a border-land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Western
-Kingdom
-called
-<i>Karolingia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom to the west of it, in like
-manner took the name of <i>Karolingia</i>, which, according
-to the same analogy, should be <i>Charlaine</i>. It is only
-by a caprice of language that the name of Lotharingia
-has survived, while that of Karolingia has died out.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundy,
-or the
-Middle
-Kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, in South-eastern Gaul, between the
-Rhone and the Alps, another kingdom arose, namely
-the kingdom of <i>Burgundy</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union
-under
-Charles the
-Fat.
-884.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Charles the Third,
-commonly known as the Fat, all the Frankish dominions,
-except Burgundy, were again united for a moment.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division on
-his deposition.
-887.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On his deposition they split asunder again. We
-now have four distinct kingdoms, those of the <i>Eastern</i>
-and <i>Western Franks</i>, the forerunners of Germany and
-France, the kingdom of <i>Italy</i>, and <i>Burgundy</i>, sometimes
-forming one kingdom and sometimes two. <i>Lotharingia</i>
-remained a border-land between the Eastern and Western
-kingdoms, attached sometimes to one, sometimes to
-another. Out of these elements arose the great kingdoms
-and nations of Western Europe. The four can
-hardly be better described than they are by the Old-English
-Chronicler: ‘Arnulf then dwelled in the land
-to the East of Rhine; and Rudolf took to the middle
-kingdom; and Oda to the West deal; and Berengar
-and Guy to the Lombards’ land, and to the lands on
-that side of the mountain.’ But the geography of all
-the four kingdoms which now arose must be described
-at somewhat greater length.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">{138}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pb2">It must be borne in mind that all these divisions
-of the great Frankish dominion were, in theory, like
-the ancient divisions of the Empire, a mere parcelling
-out of a common possession among several royal colleagues.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No formal
-titles or
-names of
-the Frankish
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Kings had no special titles, and their
-dominions had no special names recognized in formal
-use. Every king who ruled over any part of the
-ancient <i>Francia</i> was a King of the Franks, just as
-much as all among the many rulers of the Roman
-Empire in the days of Diocletian and Constantine were
-equally Roman Augusti or Cæsars. As the kings and
-their kingdoms had no formal titles specially set apart
-for them, the writers of the time had to describe them
-as they might.<a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Various
-names of
-the Eastern
-Kingdom
-or <i>Germany</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eastern part of the Frankish dominions,
-the lot of Lewis the German and his successors,
-is thus called the <i>Eastern Kingdom</i>, the <i>Teutonic Kingdom</i>.
-Its king is the <i>King of the East-Franks</i>, sometimes
-simply the King of the <i>Eastern men</i>, sometimes
-the <i>King of Germany</i>. This last name, convenient in use,
-was inaccurate as a formal title, for the <i>Regnum Teutonicum</i>
-lay geographically partly in Germany, partly
-in Gaul.<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> To the men of the Western kingdom the
-Eastern king sometimes appeared as the <i>King beyond the
-Rhine</i>. The title of <i>King of Germany</i> is often found in
-the ninth century as a description, but it was not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></span>
-formal title. The Eastern king, like other kings, for the
-most part simply calls himself <i>Rex</i>, till the time came
-when his rank as King of Germany or of the East-Franks
-became simply a step towards the higher title of
-Emperor of the Romans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Connexion
-between
-the Eastern
-Kingdom
-and the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it must be remembered,
-that the special connexion between the Roman Empire
-and the German kingdom did not begin at once
-on the division of 887.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Imperial
-coronation
-of Arnulf.
-896.<br />
-Homage of
-Odo to
-Arnulf.
-888.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Arnulf indeed, the first
-German King after the division, made his way to Rome
-and was crowned Emperor; and it marks the position
-of the Eastern kingdom as the chief among the
-kingdoms of the Franks, that the West-Frankish King
-Odo did homage to Arnulf before his lord’s Imperial
-coronation, when he was still simple German king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final union
-of Germany
-with the
-Empire
-under Otto
-the Great.
-963.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The rule that whoever was chosen King of Germany
-had a right, without further election, to the
-kingdom of Italy and to the Roman Empire, began
-only with the coronation of Otto the Great. Up to
-that time, the German king is simply one of the kings
-of the Franks, though it is plain that he held the
-highest place among them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the German
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">This Eastern or German kingdom, as it came out
-of the division of 887, had, from north to south, nearly
-the same extent as the Germany of later times. It
-stretched from the Alps to the Eider. Its southern
-boundaries were somewhat fluctuating. <i>Verona</i> and
-<i>Aquileia</i> are sometimes counted as a German march,
-and the boundary between Germany and Burgundy,
-crossing the modern Switzerland, often changed. To
-the North-east the kingdom hardly stretched beyond
-the Elbe, except in the small Saxon land between the
-Elbe and the Eider. The great extension of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
-German power over the Slavonic lands beyond the
-Elbe had hardly yet begun.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Austrian
-and Carinthian
-marks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the South-east lay
-the two border-lands or <i>marks</i>; the <i>Eastern Mark</i>,
-which grew into the later duchy of <i>Oesterreich</i> or the
-modern <i>Austria</i>, and to the south of it the mark of
-<i>Kärnthen</i> or <i>Carinthia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The great
-duchies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the main part of the
-kingdom consisted of the great duchies of <i>Saxony</i>,
-<i>Eastern Francia</i>, <i>Alemannia</i>, and <i>Bavaria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saxony.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these
-the two names of Saxony and Bavaria must be carefully
-marked as having widely different meanings
-from those which they bear on the modern map.
-Ancient Saxony lies, speaking roughly, between the
-Eider, the Elbe, and the Rhine, though it never actually
-touches the last-named river.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern or
-Teutonic
-<i>Francia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south
-of Saxony lies the Eastern <i>Francia</i>, the centre and
-kernel of the German kingdom. The Main and the
-Neckar both join the Rhine within its borders. To
-the south of Francia lie <i>Alemannia</i> and <i>Bavaria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Alemannia
-and Bavaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last, it must be remembered, borders on Italy,
-with Bötzen for its frontier town. Alemannia is
-the land in which both the Rhine and the Danube
-take their source; it stretches on both sides of
-the <i>Bodensee</i> or Lake of Constanz, with the Rætian
-Alps as its southern boundary. For several ages to
-come, there is no distinction, national or even provincial,
-between the lands north and south of the
-Bodensee.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lotharingia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">These lands make up the undoubted Eastern or
-German territory. To the west of this lies the border
-land of <i>Lotharingia</i>, which has a history of its own.
-For the first century after the division of 887, the possession
-of Lotharingia fluctuated several times between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
-the Eastern and the Western kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>987.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After the
-change of dynasty in the Western kingdom, Lotharingia
-became definitely and undoubtedly German in allegiance,
-though it always kept up something of a distinct
-being, and its language was partly German and partly
-Romance. Lotharingia took in the two duchies of the
-<i>Ripuarian Lotharingia</i> and <i>Lotharingia on the Mosel</i>.
-The former contains a large part of the modern Belgium
-and the neighbouring lands on the Rhine, including
-the royal city of Aachen. Lotharingia on the Mosel
-answers roughly to the later duchy of that name,
-though its extent to the East is considerably larger.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Western
-Kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The part of the Frankish dominions to which the
-Frankish name has stuck most lastingly has been the
-Western kingdom or <i>Karolingia</i>, which gradually got
-the special name of <i>France</i>. This came about through
-the events of the ninth and tenth centuries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its extent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Western kingdom, as it was formed under Charles the
-Bald and as it remained after the division of 887,
-nominally took in a great part of modern France,
-namely all west of the Rhone and Saône. It took in
-nothing to the east of those rivers, and Lotharingia, as
-we have seen, was a border land which at last settled
-down as part of the Eastern kingdom. Thus the
-extent of the old <i>Karolingia</i> to the east was very
-much smaller than the extent of modern France. But,
-on the other hand, the Western kingdom took in
-lands at three points which are not part of modern
-France. These are the march or county of <i>Flanders</i>
-in the north, the greater part of which forms part of
-the modern kingdom of Belgium; the <i>Spanish March</i>, or
-county of <i>Barcelona</i>, which is now part of Spain; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">{142}</a></span>
-the <i>Norman Islands</i> which are now held by the sovereign
-of England. And it is hardly needful to say that,
-even within these boundaries, the whole land was not in
-the hands of the King of the West-Franks. He had only
-a supremacy, which was apt to become nearly nominal,
-over the vassal princes who held the great
-divisions of the kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The great
-fiefs.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-South of the Loire the
-chief of these vassal states were the duchy of <i>Aquitaine</i>,
-a name which now means the land between the Loire
-and the Garonne—the duchy of <i>Gascony</i> between the
-Garonne and the Pyrenees—the county of <i>Toulouse</i> to
-the east of it—the marches of <i>Septimania</i> and <i>Barcelona</i>.
-North of the Loire were <i>Britanny</i>, where native
-Celtic princes still reigned under a very doubtful
-supremacy on the part of the Frankish kings—the
-march of <i>Flanders</i> in the north—and the duchy of
-<i>Burgundy</i>, the duchy which had Dijon for its capital,
-and which must be carefully distinguished from other
-duchies and kingdoms of the same name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Duchy
-of France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And,
-greatest of all, there was the duchy of <i>France</i>, that is
-<i>Western</i> or <i>Latin France</i>, <i>Francia Occidentalis</i> or
-<i>Latina</i>. Its capital was Paris, and its princes were
-called <i>Duces Francorum</i>, a title in which the word
-<i>Francus</i> is just beginning to change from its older
-meaning of <i>Frank</i> to its later meaning of <i>French</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Normandy
-cut off from
-France.
-912.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From this great duchy of France several great fiefs, as
-<i>Anjou</i> and <i>Champagne</i>, were gradually cut off, and the
-part of France between the Seine and the Epte was
-granted to the Scandinavian chief Rolf, which, under
-him and his successors, grew into the great duchy of
-<i>Normandy</i>. Its capital was Rouen, and this settlement
-of the Normans had the effect of cutting off
-France and its capital Paris from the sea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pb2">The modern French kingdom gradually came into
-being during the century after the deposition of
-Charles the Fat.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-between
-the
-Duchy of
-the French
-at Paris
-and the
-Karlings
-at Laon.
-888-987.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During this time the crown of the
-Western kingdom passed to and fro more than once
-between the Dukes of the French at Paris and the
-princes of the house of Charles the Great, whose only
-immediate dominion was the city and district of <i>Laon</i>
-near the Lotharingian border. Thus, for a hundred
-years, the royal city of the Western kingdom was
-sometimes Laon and sometimes Paris, and the King
-of the West-Franks was sometimes the same person
-as the Duke of the French and sometimes not.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the French
-Duchy with
-the West-Frankish
-kingdom.
-987.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-after the election of Hugh Capet, the kingdom and
-the duchy were never again separated. The Kings
-of <i>Karolingia</i> or the Western kingdom, and the
-Dukes of the <i>Western Francia</i>, were now the same
-persons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New meaning
-of the
-word
-<i>France</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>France</i> then—the Western or Latin <i>Francia</i>,
-as distinguished from the German <i>Francia</i> or
-<i>Franken</i>—properly meant only the King’s immediate
-dominions. Though Normandy, Aquitaine, and the
-Duchy of Burgundy, all owed homage to the French
-king, no one would have spoken of them as parts
-of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of the
-French
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as the French kings, step by
-step, got possession of the dominions of their vassals
-and other neighbours, the name of <i>France</i> gradually
-spread, till it took in, as it now does, by far the
-greater part of Gaul. On the other hand, Flanders,
-Barcelona, and the Norman islands, though once
-under the homage of the French kings, have fallen
-altogether away, and have therefore never been
-reckoned as parts of France. Thus the name of
-<i>France</i> supplanted the name of <i>Karolingia</i> as the
-name of the Western kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Title of <i>Rex
-Francorum</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, as it so happened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
-that the Western kings kept on the title of
-<i>Rex Francorum</i> after it had been dropped in the
-Eastern kingdom, that title gradually came to mean,
-not King of the <i>Franks</i>, but King of the <i>French</i>, King
-of the new Romance-speaking nation which grew up
-under them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-the French
-nation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus it was that the modern kingdom
-and nation of France arose through the crown of the
-Western kingdom passing to the Dukes of the Western
-<i>Francia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Paris the
-kernel of
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Paris is not only the capital of the kingdom;
-it is the kernel round which the kingdom and nation
-grew.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Middle
-Kingdom
-or Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of all geographical names, that which has changed
-its meaning the greatest number of times is the name
-of <i>Burgundy</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Various
-meanings
-of the name
-<i>Burgundy</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is specially needful to explain its
-different meanings at this stage, when there are always
-two, and sometimes more, distinct states bearing the
-Burgundian name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The French
-Duchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the older Burgundian kingdom,
-the north-western part, forming the land best
-known as the <i>Duchy of Burgundy</i>, was, in the divisions
-of the ninth century, a fief of Karolingia or the
-Western kingdom. This is the Burgundy which has
-Dijon for its capital, and which was held by more than
-one dynasty of dukes as vassals of the Western kings,
-first at Laon and then at Paris. This Burgundy, which,
-as the name of France came to bear its modern sense, may
-be distinguished as the <i>French Duchy</i>, must be carefully
-distinguished from the <i>Royal</i> Burgundy, the <i>Middle
-Kingdom</i> of our own chronicler.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of
-Burgundy
-or Arles.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is a state which
-arose out of the divisions of the ninth century, and
-which, sometimes as a single kingdom, sometimes as
-two, took in all the rest of the old Burgundian kingdom
-which did not form part of the French duchy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></span>
-It may be roughly defined as the land between the
-Rhone and Saône and the Alps, though its somewhat
-fluctuating boundaries sometimes stretched west of the
-Rhone, and its eastern frontier towards Germany changed
-more than once. It thus took in the original Roman
-province in Gaul, which may be now spoken of as
-<i>Provence</i>, with its great cities, foremost among them
-<i>Arelate</i> or <i>Arles</i>, which was the capital of the kingdom,
-and from which the land was sometimes called the <i>Kingdom
-of Arles</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cities of the
-Burgundian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It also took in Lyons, the primatial city
-of Gaul, Geneva, Besançon, and other important Roman
-towns. In short, from its position, it contained a
-greater number of the former seats of Roman power
-than any of the new kingdoms except Italy itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cis-jurane.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When Burgundy formed two kingdoms, the Northern
-or <i>Trans-jurane</i> Burgundy took in, speaking roughly,
-the lands north of Lyons,
-and <i>Cis-jurane</i> Burgundy
-those between Lyons and the sea. These last are now
-wholly French. The ancient Transjurane Burgundy is
-in modern geography divided between France and
-Switzerland.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundy
-separated
-from the
-Frankish
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The history of this Burgundian kingdom differs
-in one respect from that of any other of the states
-which arose out of the break-up of the Frankish Empire.
-It parted off wholly from the Carolingian dominion
-before the division of 887. It formed no part of the
-reunited Empire of Charles the Fat. It may therefore
-be looked on as having parted off altogether from the
-immediately Frankish rule, though it often appears as
-more or less dependent on the kings of the Eastern
-Francia. But its time of separate being was short.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the kingdom
-with
-Germany.<br />
-Later history
-of
-Burgundy:
-mostly annexed
-by
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After
-about a century and a half from its foundation, the
-Burgundian kingdom was united under the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">{146}</a></span>
-kings as Germany, and its later history consists of
-the way in which the greater part of the old Middle
-Kingdom has been swallowed up bit by bit by the
-modern kingdom of France. The only part which
-has escaped is that which now forms the western
-cantons of Switzerland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Partly
-represented
-by Switzerland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In truth the Swiss Confederation
-may be looked on as having, in some slight
-degree, inherited the position of the Burgundian kingdom
-as a middle state. Otherwise, while the Eastern
-and Western kingdoms of the Franks have grown into
-two of the greatest powers and nations in modern
-Europe, the Burgundian kingdom has been altogether
-wiped out. Not only its independence, but its very
-name, has passed from it. The name Burgundy has for
-a long time past been commonly used to express the
-French duchy only.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Italy, unlike Burgundy, formed part of the reunited
-dominion of Charles the Fat; but it altogether passed
-away from Frankish rule at the division of 887. It
-must be remembered that, though Lombardy was conquered
-by Charles the Great, yet it was not merged
-in the Frankish dominions, but was held as a separate
-kingdom by the King of the Franks and Lombards.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Carolingian
-Kings
-of Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Till the reunion under Charles the Fat, Italy, as a
-separate kingdom, was ruled by kings of the Carolingian
-house, some of whom were crowned at Rome as
-Emperors. After the final division, it had separate
-kings of its own, being not uncommonly disputed between
-two rival kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italian
-Emperors.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Some of these kings even obtained
-Imperial rank.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Italian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Italian kingdom, it must
-be remembered, was far from taking in the whole
-Italian peninsula. Its southern boundary was much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
-the same as the old boundaries of Latium and Picenum,
-reaching somewhat further to the south on the Hadriatic
-coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separate
-principalities
-of
-Benevento
-and Salerno.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south were the separate principalities of
-<i>Benevento</i> and <i>Salerno</i>, and the lands which still clave
-to the Eastern Emperors. The kingdom thus took in
-Lombardy, Liguria, <i>Friuli</i> in the widest sense, taking
-in <i>Trent</i> and <i>Istria</i>, though these latter lands are sometimes
-counted as a German march, while the Venetian
-islands still kept up their connexion with the Eastern
-Empire. It took in also <i>Tuscany</i>, <i>Romagna</i> or the
-former Exarchate of Ravenna, <i>Spoleto</i>, and <i>Rome</i> itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of
-Italy represents
-the
-Lombard
-Kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Italian kingdom thus represented the old Lombard
-kingdom, together with the provinces which were
-formally transferred from the Eastern to the Western
-Empire by the election of Charles the Great. But it
-may be looked on as essentially a continuation of the
-Lombard kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Milan its
-capital.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The rank of capital of the Italian
-kingdom, as distinguished from the Roman Empire,
-passed away from the old Lombard capital of <i>Pavia</i>
-to the ecclesiastical metropolis of <i>Milan</i>, and Milan
-became the crowning-place of the Kings of Italy.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Abeyance
-of the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>For nearly eighty years after the division of 887,
-the Roman Empire of the West may be looked on as
-having fallen into a kind of abeyance. One German
-and several Italian kings were crowned Emperors;
-but they never obtained any general acknowledgement
-throughout the West. There could not be said to be
-any Western Empire with definite geographical boundaries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Restoration
-of the
-Western
-Empire by
-Otto.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A change in this respect took place in the
-second half of the tenth century under the German
-king Otto the Great.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>952.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While he was still only German
-king, Berengar King of Italy became his man, as Odo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
-of Paris had become the man of Arnulf.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>962, 963.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Afterwards
-Otto himself obtained the Italian kingdom, and was
-crowned Emperor at Rome. The rule was now fully
-established that the German king who was crowned
-at Aachen had a right to be crowned King of Italy at
-Milan and Emperor at Rome. A geographical Western
-Empire was thus again founded, consisting of the two
-kingdoms of Germany and Italy, to which Burgundy was
-afterwards added.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The three
-Imperial
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These three kingdoms now formed
-the Empire, which thus consisted of the whole dominions
-of Charles the Great—allowing for a different eastern
-frontier—except the part which formed the Western
-kingdom, <i>Karolingia</i>, afterwards <i>France</i>. This union of
-three of the four kingdoms gave a more distinct and antagonistic
-character to the fourth which remained separate.
-Karolingia looked like a part of the great
-Frankish dominion lopped off from the main body.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-between the
-Empire
-and France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the other hand, now that the German kings, the
-Kings of the East-Franks, were also Kings of Italy and
-Burgundy and Emperors of the Romans, they gradually
-dropped their Frankish style. But, as that
-style was kept by the Western kings, and still more as
-the name of their duchy of France gradually spread
-over so large a part of Gaul, the kingdom of France
-had a superficial look of representing the old Frankish
-kingdom. The newly-constituted Empire had thus a
-distinctly rival power on its western side. And we
-shall find that a great part of our story will consist of
-the way in which, on this side, the Imperial frontier
-went back, and the French frontier advanced. On the
-other side, the Eastern frontier of the Empire was
-capable of any amount of advance at the cost of its
-Slavonic neighbours.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Eastern Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The effect of the various changes of the seventh
-and eighth centuries, the rise of the Saracens, the
-settlement of the Slaves, the transfer of the Western
-Empire to the Franks, seem really to have had the
-effect of strengthening the Eastern Empire which they
-so terribly cut short. It began for the first time to
-put on something of a national character.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>It takes a
-Greek
-character.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the
-Western Empire was fast becoming German, so the
-Eastern Empire was fast becoming Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry of
-the Eastern
-and Western
-or Greek
-and Latin
-Churches.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And a
-religious distinction was soon added to the distinction
-of language. As the schism between the Churches
-came on, the Greek-speaking lands attached themselves
-to the Eastern, and not to the Western, form of
-Christianity. The Eastern Empire, keeping on all
-its Roman titles and traditions, had thus become
-nearly identical with what may be called the artificial
-Greek nation. It continues the work of hellenization
-which was begun by the old Greek colonies and which
-went on under the Macedonian kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-in the
-extent of
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-No power
-gives more work for the geographer; through the
-alternate periods of decay and revival which make up
-nearly the whole of Byzantine history, provinces were
-always being lost and always being won back again.
-And it supplies also a geographical study of another
-kind, in the new divisions into which the Empire was
-now mapped out, divisions which, for the most part,
-have very little reference to the divisions of earlier
-times.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The <i>Themes</i>
-as described
-by
-Constantine
-Porphyrogennêtos.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The <i>Themes</i> or provinces of the Eastern Empire,
-as they stood in the tenth century, have had the privilege
-of being elaborately described by an Imperial geographer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">{150}</a></span>
-in the person of Constantine Porphyrogennêtos.<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
-He speaks of the division as comparatively recent, and
-of some themes as having been formed almost in his
-own time. The themes would certainly seem to have
-been mapped out after the Empire had been cut short
-both to the north and to the east. The nomenclature
-of the new divisions is singular and diversified.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Asiatic
-Themes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Some ancient national names are kept, while the titles
-of others seem fantastic enough. Thus in Asia <i>Paphlagonia</i>
-and <i>Kappadokia</i> remain names of themes with
-some approach to their ancient boundaries; but the
-<i>Armenian</i> theme is thrust far to the west of any of the
-earlier uses of the name, so that the Halys flows through
-it. Between it and the still independent Armenia lay the
-theme of <i>Chaldia</i>, with Trapezous, the future seat of
-Emperors, for its capital. Along the Saracen frontier lie
-the themes of <i>Kolôneia</i>, <i>Mesopotamia</i>—a shadowy survival
-indeed of the Mesopotamia of Trajan, of which it
-was not even a part—<i>Sebasteia</i>, <i>Lykandos</i>, <i>Kappadokia</i>,
-and <i>Seleukeia</i>, called from the Isaurian or Kilikian city of
-that name. Along the south coast the city of <i>Kibyra</i>
-has given—in mockery, says Constantine—its name
-to the theme of the <i>Kibyrraiotians</i>, which reaches as
-far as Milêtos. The isle of <i>Samos</i> gives its name to
-a theme reaching from Milêtos to Adramyttion, while
-the theme of the <i>Ægæan Sea</i>, besides most of the
-islands, stretches on to the mainland of the ancient
-Aiolis. The rest of the Propontis is bordered by
-themes bearing the strange names of <i>Opsikion</i> and
-<i>Optimatôn</i>, names of Latin origin, in the former of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
-which the word <i>obsequium</i> is to be traced. To the
-east of them the no less strangely named <i>Thema
-Boukellariôn</i> takes in the Euxine Hêrakleia. Inland
-and away from the frontier are the themes <i>Thrakêsion</i>
-and <i>Anatolikon</i>, while another Asiatic theme is formed
-by the island of <i>Cyprus</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The European
-Themes.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The nomenclature of the European themes is more
-intelligible. Most of them bear ancient names, and
-the districts which bear them are at least survivals of
-the lands which bore them of old. After a good deal
-of shifting, owing to the loss and recovery of so many
-districts, the Empire under Constantine Porphyrogennêtos
-numbered twelve European themes. <i>Thrace</i> had
-shrunk up into the land just round Constantinople and
-Hadrianople, the latter now a frontier city against the
-Bulgarian. <i>Macedonia</i> had been pushed to the east,
-leaving the more strictly Macedonian coast-districts
-which the Empire still kept to form the themes of
-<i>Strymôn</i> and <i>Thessalonikê</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name
-Hellas.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Going further south, the
-name of <i>Hellas</i> has revived, and that with a singular
-accuracy of application. Hellas is now the eastern side
-of continental Greece, taking in the land of Achilleus.
-The abiding name of Achaia has vanished for a while,
-and the peninsula which had been won back from the
-Slave again bears its name of <i>Peloponnêsos</i>. But <i>Lakedaimonia</i>
-now appears on the list of its chief cities
-instead of Sparta. This and other instances in which
-one Greek name has been supplanted by another are
-witnesses of the Slavonic occupation of Hellas and its
-recovery by a Greek-speaking power. Off the west
-coast the realm of Odysseus seems to revive in the
-theme of <i>Kephallênia</i>, which takes in also the mythic
-isle of Alkinoos. Such parts of Epeiros and Western<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
-Greece as clave to the Empire form the theme of
-<i>Nikopolis</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Hadriatic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the north, on the Hadriatic shore, was
-the theme of <i>Dyrrhachion</i>, and beyond that again, the
-Dalmatian and Venetian cities still counted as outlying
-portions of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possessions
-of the Empire
-in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Beyond the Hadriatic, southern
-Italy forms the theme of <i>Lombardy</i>, interrupted by the
-principality of <i>Salerno</i>, while Naples, Gaeta, and Amalfi
-were outlying posts like Venice and Ragusa. <i>Sicily</i> was
-still reckoned as a theme; but it was now wholly lost
-to the Saracen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chersôn.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And far away in the Tauric peninsula,
-the last of the Hellenic commonwealths, the furthest
-outpost of Hellenic civilization, had sunk in the ninth
-century into the Byzantine theme of <i>Chersôn</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Seeming
-Asiatic
-character
-of the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The first impression conveyed by this geographical
-description is that the Eastern Empire had now become
-a power rather Asiatic than European. It is only in
-Asia that any solid mass of territory is kept.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nature of
-its European
-possessions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Elsewhere
-there are only islands and fringes of coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Maritime
-supremacy
-of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-they were almost continuous fringes of coast, fringes
-which contained some of the greatest cities of Christendom,
-and which gave their masters an undisputed
-supremacy by sea. If the Mediterranean was not a
-Byzantine lake, it was only the presence of the
-Saracen, the occasional visits of the Northman, which
-hindered it from being so. Then again, the whole history
-of the Empire, if a history of losses, is also a history
-of recoveries, and before long the Roman arms again
-became terrible by land. The picture of Constantine
-Porphyrogennêtos shows us the Empire at a moment
-when neither process was actually going on; but the
-times before and after his reign were times, first of loss
-and then of recovery.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss and
-recovery of
-Crete.
-823-960.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Early in the ninth century <i>Crete</i>
-was suddenly seized by Saracen adventurers from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span>
-Spain; about the same time began the long and slow
-Saracen conquest of <i>Sicily</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Sicily.
-827-878.<br />
-Advance in
-Italy, Dalmatia,
-and
-Greece.
-c. 802.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, almost at the moment
-when Sicily was lost, the Imperial province in Italy
-was largely increased, and the Imperial influence in
-Dalmatia was largely restored. About the same time
-Peloponnêsos was won back from the Slaves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of provinces
-in the East.
-964-976.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the
-latter half of the tenth century Crete was won back; so
-were Kilikia and part of Syria, with the famous cities of
-Tarsos, Edessa, and Antioch on the Orontes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Bulgaria.
-981-1018.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently
-Basil the Second overthrew the <i>Bulgarian</i> kingdom in
-Europe and the <i>Armenian</i> kingdom in Asia;
-the lands
-at the foot of Caucasus admitted the Imperial supremacy,
-and the Byzantine rule was carried round the
-greater part of the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Cherson.
-988.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cherson indeed was lost;
-the old Megarian city passed into the hands of the
-Russian. At the other end of the Empire, the recovery
-of Sicily was actually begun, and, if the Saracen
-was not driven out, his power was weakened in the
-interest of the next set of invaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Empire
-under
-Basil the
-Second.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Early in the
-eleventh century the Eastern Rome was again the
-head of a dominion which was undoubtedly the greatest
-among Christian powers, a dominion greater than
-it had been at any time since the Saracenic and Slavonic
-inroads began.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>Origin of the Spanish Kingdoms.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The historical geography of two of the three great
-Southern peninsulas is thus bound up with that of the
-Empires of which they were severally the centres.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The case is quite different with the third great peninsula,
-that of Spain. There the Roman dominion, even
-the province which had been recovered by Justinian,
-had quite passed away, and it was only a small part of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
-the land which was ever reincorporated, even in the
-most shadowy way, with either Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Saracen
-conquest.
-710-713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Spain was
-now conquered by the Saracens, as it had before been
-conquered by the Romans, with this difference, that it
-had been among the longest and hardest of the Roman
-conquests, while no part of the Saracen dominion was
-won in a shorter time. But, if the Roman conquest was
-slow, it was in the end complete. The swifter Saracen
-conquest was never quite complete; it left a remnant
-by which the land was in the end to be won back.
-But the part of the land which withstood the Saracen
-was, as could hardly fail to be the case, the same part
-as that which held out for the longest time against
-the Roman. The mountainous regions of the North
-were never wholly conquered.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Asturia
-732,<br />
-united with
-Cantabria,
-751.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cantabria</i> and <i>Asturia</i>,
-which had never fully submitted to the Goths, now
-became the seat of resistance under princes who
-claimed to represent the Gothic kings, and part of
-whose dominions bore the name of <i>Gothia</i>. Twenty
-years after the conquest, Asturia was again a Christian
-principality, which was presently united with Cantabria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Leon, 916.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This grew into the kingdom of <i>Leon</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Castile, 904.<br />
-Kingdom,
-1033.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-great fiefs of this kingdom on its eastern and western
-borders,
-the counties of <i>Gallicia</i> and <i>Castile</i>—the last
-originally a line of <i>castles</i> against the Saracen enemy—both
-showed from an early time strong tendencies
-to separation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Navarre.
-905.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile the kingdom of <i>Navarre</i>
-grew up to the east, stretching, it must be remembered,
-on both sides of the Pyrenees, though by
-far the larger portion of it lay on their southern
-side.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Aragon c.
-760.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the east of Navarre the small counties of
-<i>Aragon</i> and <i>Riparanensia</i> were the beginning of the
-kingdom of <i>Aragon</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Spanish
-March.
-778.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the east again of this was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span>
-the land which, after the final expulsion of the Saracens
-from Gaul, became part of the Carolingian Empire
-by the name of the <i>Spanish March</i>. The shiftings of
-territory, the unions and separations of these various
-kingdoms and principalities, belong to the special
-history of Spain. But early in the eleventh century
-the whole north-western part of Spain, and a considerable
-fringe of territory in the north-east, had
-been formed into Christian states.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginnings
-of Castile
-and
-Aragon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among these had
-been laid the foundations of two kingdoms, those of
-Castile and Aragon, which were to play a great part in
-the affairs of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">It will be at once seen that those among the Spanish
-powers which were destined to play the greatest part in
-later history were not among the first to take the form
-of separate kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slow
-growth of
-the greater
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At this stage even Castile has
-hardly taken the form of a distinct state. Aragon is
-only beginning; <i>Portugal</i> has not even begun.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-Castile and
-Aragon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of
-these three, Castile was fated to play the same part that
-was played by Wessex in England and by France in
-Gaul, to become the leading power of the peninsula.
-Aragon, when her growth had brought her to the
-Mediterranean, was to fill for a long time a greater
-place in general European politics than any other Spanish
-power. The union of Castile and Aragon was to form
-that great Spanish monarchy which became the terror
-of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Portugal.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile Portugal, lying on the Ocean,
-had first of all to extend her borders at the cost of the
-common enemy, and afterwards to become a beginner
-of European enterprise in distant lands, a path in which
-Castile and other powers did but follow in her steps.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up of
-the Spanish
-Caliphate.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the advance of the Christians was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
-helped by the division of the Saracenic power. The
-Caliphates of the East and of the West fell to pieces,
-exactly as the Christian Empires did. The undivided
-Mahometan dominion in Spain was at the height of its
-power in the tenth century. Yet even then, amid
-many fluctuations, the Christian frontier was on the
-whole advancing in the north-west. In the north-east
-Christian progress was slower.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1028.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, early in the
-eleventh century, the Caliphate of Cordova broke in
-pieces, and out of its fragments arose a crowd of small
-Mahometan kingdoms at Cordova, Seville, Lisbon,
-Zaragoza, Toledo, Valencia, and elsewhere. It was
-now only by renewed invasions from Africa that the
-Mahometan power in Spain was kept up. But, as the
-Christian states are now fully formed, such mention of
-these African dynasties as concerns geography will
-come more fittingly at a later stage.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>Origin of the Slavonic States.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-and Turanian
-invasions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We left the borders of both the Eastern and the
-Western Empire beset by neighbours of Slavonic race,
-who, in the case of the Eastern Empire, were largely
-mingled with other neighbours of Turanian race. Of
-these last, <i>Avars</i>, <i>Patzinaks</i>, <i>Khazars</i>, have passed
-away; they have left no trace on the modern map of
-Europe. With two of the Turanian settlements the
-case is different.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bulgarians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The settlement of the <i>Bulgarians</i>,
-the foundation of a kingdom of Slavonized Turanians
-south of the Danube, has been already mentioned.
-They still keep their place and nation, though in bondage.
-Another Turanian settlement to the north of the
-Bulgarians has been of yet greater importance in
-European history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement of the Magyars
-or
-Hungarians,
-895.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the last years of the ninth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
-century the Finnish <i>Magyars</i> or <i>Hungarians</i>, the
-<i>Turks</i> of the Byzantine writers, began to count as a
-power in Europe. From their seats between the
-mouths of the Dnieper and the Danube, they pressed
-eastward into the lands which had been Dacia and
-Pannonia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great
-Moravia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bulgarian power was thus confined to
-the lands south of the Danube, and <i>Great Moravia</i>, a
-name which then took in the western part of modern
-Hungary, fell wholly under Magyar dominion.</p>
-
-<p>This settlement is one which stands altogether by
-itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peculiar
-character of
-the Magyar
-settlement.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Magyars and the Ottoman Turks are the
-only Turanian settlers in Europe who have grown into
-permanent Turanian powers on European ground. The
-Bulgarians have been lost in the mass of their Slavonic
-neighbours and subjects, whose language they have
-adopted. Magyars and Ottomans still remain speaking
-a Turanian tongue on Aryan soil. But of these it is
-only the Magyars that have grown into a really European
-state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of
-Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After appearing as momentary ravagers
-in Germany, Italy, and even Gaul, the Magyars settled
-down into a Christian kingdom, which, among many
-fluctuations of supremacy and dependence, has remained
-a distinct kingdom to this day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of its
-religious
-connexion
-with Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Christianity
-of Hungary however came from the Western
-Church and not from the Eastern. And this fact has
-had a good deal of bearing upon the history of those
-regions. But for this almost incidental connexion with
-the Old Rome, Hungary, though settled by a Turanian
-people, would most naturally have taken its place
-among the Slavonic states which fringed the dominion
-of the New Rome. As it has turned out, difference of
-religion has stepped in to heighten difference of blood,
-and Hungary has formed a kingdom quite apart,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span>
-closely connected in its history with Servia and Bulgaria,
-but running a course which has been in many
-things unlike theirs.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Magyars
-separate
-the
-Northern
-and Southern
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The geographical results of the Magyar settlement
-were to place a barrier between the Northern and the
-Southern Slaves. This it did both directly and indirectly.
-The <i>Patzinaks</i> pressed into what had been the
-former Magyar territory; they appear in the pages of
-the Imperial geographer as a nation with whom the
-Empire always strove to maintain peace, as they formed
-a barrier against both Hungarians and <i>Russians</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Russians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-last name begins to be of importance in the ninth
-century. A part of the Eastern branch of the Slavonic
-race, they were cut off from the other members of that
-branch south of the Danube by these new Turanian
-settlements. The Magyars again parted the South-eastern
-Slaves from the North-western, while the
-Russians were still neighbours of the North-western
-Slaves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the geographical
-position
-of the
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The geographical position of these three divisions
-of the Slavonic race has had an important effect
-on European history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-the South-eastern
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The South-eastern Slaves in
-Servia, Croatia, Dalmatia, and the neighbouring lands,
-formed a debateable ground between the two Empires,
-the Magyar kingdom, and the Venetian republic, as
-soon as Venice grew into a distinct and conquering
-state. These lands have, down to our own time,
-played an important, but commonly a secondary, part
-in history. And in later times their history has chiefly
-consisted in successive changes of masters. The states
-which they formed will have to be spoken of in connexion
-with the greater and more lasting powers to
-which they have commonly been adjuncts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The North-western
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The North-western
-Slaves appear for the most part in different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
-degrees of vassalage or incorporation with the Western
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia,
-Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, besides several considerable duchies,
-there grew up among them the kingdoms of <i>Bohemia</i>
-and <i>Poland</i>, of which the latter established its complete
-independence of the Empire, and became for a while
-one of the chief powers of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Russia meanwhile,
-forming a third division, appears, in the ninth and
-tenth centuries, first as a formidable enemy, then as a
-spiritual conquest, of the Empire and Church of Constantinople.
-Russia had then already assumed the
-character which it has again put on in later times,
-that of the one great European power at once Slavonic
-in race and Eastern in faith. Russia is now fully
-established as an European power. The variations of
-its territorial extent must be traced in a distinct
-chapter.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>Northern Europe.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Scandinavian
-settlements.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The European importance of the Scandinavian nations
-at this time chiefly arises from their settlements in
-various parts of Europe, and specially in Britain and
-Ireland. The three great Scandinavian kingdoms were
-already formed. Sweden was doing its work towards
-the east; the Norwegians, specially known as Northmen,
-colonized the extreme north of Britain, the Scandinavian
-earldoms of Caithness and Sutherland, together
-with the islands to the north and west of
-Britain, Orkney, Shetland, Faroe, the so-called Hebrides,
-and Man. They also colonized the eastern
-coast of Ireland, where they were known as <i>Ostmen</i>.
-And it was from Norway also that the settlers came by
-which the coast of France in the strictest sense, the
-French duchy, was cut off from the dominion of Paris<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
-to form the Duchy of Normandy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>England
-and Denmark.
-789-1017.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the chief field
-for the energy of Denmark properly so called lay
-within the limits of that part of Britain which we may
-now begin to call <i>England</i>. It was during this period
-that the united English kingdom grew up, that the
-many English settlements in Britain coalesced into one
-English nation. And this work was in a singular way
-promoted by the very cause, namely, the Danish invasions,
-which seemed best suited to hinder it.</p>
-
-<p>Up to this time the great island had been in truth,
-as it was often called, another world, influencing but
-little, and but little influenced by, any of the lands
-which formed part of either of the continental Empires.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formation
-of the
-Kingdom of
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The English history of these times, a history which is
-specially connected with geography, consists of two
-great facts. The first is the union of all the English states
-in Britain into one English kingdom under the West-Saxon
-kings. The other is the establishment of a vague
-supremacy on the part of those kings over the whole
-island.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>West-Saxon
-supremacy
-under
-Ecgberht.
-825-830.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominion established by Ecgberht was in
-no sense a kingdom of England. It consisted simply
-in a supremacy on the part of the West-Saxon king
-over all the princes of Britain, Teutonic and Celtic,
-save only the Picts, Scots, and Welsh of Strathclyde or
-Cumberland. The smaller kingdoms of Kent, Sussex,
-and Essex formed appanages for West-Saxon <i>æthelings</i>;
-but the superiority over East-Anglia, Mercia,
-Northumberland, and the Welsh princes was purely
-external. The change of this power into an united
-English kingdom holding a supremacy over the whole
-island was largely helped by the Danish incursions
-and settlements.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Danish
-invasions.
-789.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These incursions began in the last
-years of the eighth century; they became more frequent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span>
-and more dangerous in the middle of the ninth;
-and in the latter part of that century they grew from
-mere incursions into actual settlements. This was the
-result of the great struggle in the days of the first
-Æthelred and his more famous brother Ælfred.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division
-between
-Ælfred and
-Guthrum.
-878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By
-Ælfred’s treaty with the Danish Guthrum, the West-Saxon
-king kept his own West-Saxon kingdom and all
-the other lands south of the Thames, together with
-western Mercia. The rest of Mercia, with East-Anglia
-and <i>Deira</i> or southern Northumberland, passed under
-Danish rule.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bernicia
-not Danish.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Bernicia</i>, or northern Northumberland
-from the Tees to the Forth, still kept its Anglian princes,
-seemingly under Danish supremacy. Over the lands
-which thus became Danish the West-Saxon king kept
-a mere nominal and precarious supremacy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scandinavian
-settlements
-in
-Cumberland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Scotland
-and Strathclyde the succession of the Celtic
-princes was not disturbed; but in part at least of
-Strathclyde, in the more modern Cumberland, a large
-Scandinavian population, though probably Norwegian
-rather than Danish, must have settled.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Increase of
-the immediate
-kingdom
-of
-Wessex.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>By these changes the power of the West-Saxon
-king as an over-lord was greatly cut short, while his
-immediate kingdom was enlarged. The dynasty which
-had come so near to the supremacy of the whole island
-seemed to be again shut up in its own kingdom and
-the lands immediately bordering on it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-West-Saxon
-advance.
-910-954.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, by overthrowing
-the other English kingdoms, the Danes had
-prepared the way for the second West-Saxon advance
-in the tenth century. Saxon king was now
-the only English king, and he further became the
-English and Christian champion against intruders who
-largely remained heathen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wessex
-grows into
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The work of the first half
-of the tenth century was to enlarge the Kingdom of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></span>
-Wessex into the Kingdom of England. Eadward the
-Elder, King, not merely of the West-Saxons but of the
-English, extended his immediate frontier, the frontier
-of the one English kingdom, to the Humber.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First submission
-of
-Scotland
-and Strathclyde.
-923.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Wales,
-Northumberland, English and Danish, and now, for the
-first time, Scotland and Strathclyde, all acknowledged
-the English supremacy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>926.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Æthelstan Northumberland
-was for the first time incorporated with the
-kingdom, and after several revolts and reconquests,
-it finally became an integral part of England, forming
-sometimes one, sometimes two, English earldoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cumberland
-granted as
-a fief to
-Scotland.
-945.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile Cumberland was subdued by Eadmund,
-and was given as a fief to the Kings of Scots, who
-commonly granted it as an appanage to their sons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lothian
-granted to
-Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, partly, it would seem, by conquest, partly
-by cession, the Scottish kings became possessed of the
-northern part of Northumberland, under the name of
-the earldom of Lothian. Thus, in the second half of
-the tenth century, a single kingdom of England had
-been formed, of which the Welsh principalities, as well
-as Scotland, Strathclyde, and Lothian, were vassal states.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The English
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Thus the English kingdom was formed, and with it
-the English Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-Imperial
-titles.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For the English kings in the
-tenth and eleventh centuries, acknowledging no superiority
-in the Cæsar either of East or West and
-holding within their own island a position analogous to
-that of the Emperors on the mainland, did not scruple
-to assume the Imperial title, and to speak of themselves
-as Emperors of the other world of Britain. The
-kingdom and Empire thus formed were transferred
-by the wars of Swegen and Cnut from a West-Saxon
-to a Danish king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Northern
-Empire of
-Cnut.
-1016-1035.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Cnut England was for a
-moment the chief seat, and Winchester the Imperial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
-city, of a Northern Empire which might fairly claim
-a place alongside of the Old and the New Rome.
-England, Denmark, Norway, had a single king, whose
-supremacy extended further over the rest of Britain,
-over Sweden and a large part of the Baltic coast.
-That Empire split in pieces on his death. The Scandinavian
-kingdoms were again separated; England itself
-was divided for a moment.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Norman
-Conquest.
-1066-70.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom, again reunited,
-first passed back to the West-Saxon house, and
-then, by a second conquest, to the Norman. After this
-last revolution a division of the kingdom was never
-more heard of.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>England
-finally
-united by
-William.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-William the Conqueror put the finishing
-stroke to the work of Ecgberht, and made England
-for ever one. And, by uniting England under the same
-ruler as Normandy, and by thus leading her into the
-general current of continental affairs, he gave her an
-European position such as she had never held under
-her native kings.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Summary.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>By the end of the eleventh century then the chief
-nations of Europe had been formed. The Western
-Empire, after many shiftings, had taken a definite
-shape.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Western
-Empire
-and the
-Imperial
-Kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Imperial dignity and the two royal crowns
-of Italy and Burgundy were now attached to the
-German kingdom. The Empire, in short, though
-keeping its Roman titles and associations, and with
-them its influence over the minds of men, had practically
-become a German power. Its history from this
-time mainly consists in the steps by which the German
-Emperors of Rome lost their hold on their Italian and
-Burgundian kingdoms, and of the steps by which the
-German dominion was extended over the Slaves to the
-East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the West the Western Kingdom has altogether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
-detached itself from the Empire; the union of its
-crown with the Duchy of France has created the
-French kingdom and nation, with its centre at Paris,
-and with a supremacy, as yet little more than nominal,
-over a large part of Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Western Empire
-has become German, the Eastern Empire has become
-Greek; in the early years of the eleventh century it again
-forms a powerful and compact state, ruling from Naples
-to Antioch.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Slavonic
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the states to the north of it, Bulgaria
-has been reincorporated with the Empire; Servia,
-Hungary, Russia, have taken their definite position
-among the Christian powers of Europe. So have Poland
-and Bohemia on the borders of the Western Empire.
-Prussia, Lithuania, and the Finnish lands to the immediate
-north of them remain heathen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Spain, the
-Christians have won back a large part of the peninsula.
-Castile and Navarre are already kingdoms; Aragon,
-though not yet a kingdom, has begun her history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Scandinavian
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-Northern Europe, the three Scandinavian nations are
-clearly distinguished and firmly established.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>England
-and Normandy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within the
-isle of Britain the kingdoms of England and Scotland
-have been formed, and the union of England and Normandy
-under a single prince has opened the way to
-altogether new relations between the continent and the
-great island. In short, the only European powers which
-play a part in strictly mediæval history which are not
-yet formed are Portugal and the Sicilian kingdoms.</p>
-
-<p>From this point then, when most of the European
-powers have come into being, and when the two
-Roman Empires are fast becoming a German and a
-Greek power alongside of other powers, it will be well
-to change the form of our present inquiry. Thus far
-we have treated the historical geography of Europe as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></span>
-whole, gathering round two centres at the Old and the
-New Rome. It will henceforth be more convenient
-to take the history of the great divisions of Europe
-separately, and to trace out in distinct chapters the
-changes which the boundaries of each have gone
-through from the eleventh century to our own time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ecclesiastical
-geography.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But before we enter on these several national divisions,
-it will be well to take a view of the ecclesiastical
-divisions of Western Christendom, which are of great
-importance and which are constantly referred to in the
-times with which we are now concerned.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE ECCLESIASTICAL GEOGRAPHY OF WESTERN EUROPE.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of ecclesiastical
-geography.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> ecclesiastical geography of Western Europe was
-by this time formed. The great ecclesiastical divisions
-were now almost everywhere mapped out, and from
-hence they are more permanent than the political divisions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Permanence
-of
-the ecclesiastical
-divisions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ecclesiastical geography in truth constantly
-preserves an earlier political geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>They represent
-older
-civil divisions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ecclesiastical
-divisions were always mapped out according
-to the political divisions of the time when they were
-established, and they often remained unaltered while
-the political divisions went through many revolutions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Illustrations
-from
-England
-and France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus in France the dioceses represented the jurisdictions
-of the Roman cities; in England they represented
-the ancient English kingdoms and principalities.
-In both cases they outlived by many ages the
-political divisions which they represented. While the
-political map was altered over and over again, the
-ecclesiastical map remained down to quite modern
-times, with hardly any change beyond the occasional
-division of a large diocese or the occasional union
-of two smaller dioceses. Thus the greater permanence
-of the ecclesiastical map often makes it useful as a
-standard for reference in describing political changes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lyons and
-Rheims.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To take an instance, the city of Lyons has been at
-different times under Burgundian and under Frankish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span>
-kings; it has been a free city of the Empire and a city
-of the modern kingdom of France. But, among all
-these changes, the Archbishop of Lyons has always
-remained Primate of all the Gauls, while the Archbishop
-of Rheims has held a wholly different position
-alongside of him as first prelate and first peer of the
-modern kingdom of France. Paris meanwhile, the
-political capital of the modern kingdom, remained till
-the seventeenth century the seat of a simple bishoprick.</p>
-
-<p>In this way the ecclesiastical division will be found
-almost everywhere to keep up the remembrance of an
-earlier political state of things.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Patriarchates,
-Provinces,
-Dioceses.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Empire became
-Christian, it was mapped out into <i>Patriarchates</i> as well
-as into Prefectures. Under these were the metropolitan
-and episcopal districts, which in after-times
-borrowed, though in a reverse order of dignity, the
-civil titles of <i>provinces</i> and <i>dioceses</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Divisions
-within and
-without the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Church
-carried her spiritual conquests beyond the bounds of
-the Empire, new ecclesiastical districts were of course
-formed in the newly converted countries. As a rule,
-every kingdom had at least one archbishopric; the
-smaller principalities, provinces, or other divisions became
-the dioceses of bishops. But the different social
-conditions of southern and northern Europe caused a
-marked difference in the ecclesiastical arrangements of
-the two regions. In the South the bishop was bishop of
-a city; in the North he was bishop of a tribe or a district.
-Within the Empire each city had its bishop. Thus in
-Italy and Southern Gaul, where the cities were thickest
-on the ground, the bishops were most numerous and
-their dioceses were smallest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bishops of
-cities and
-of tribes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Northern Gaul the cities
-are fewer and the dioceses larger, while outside the
-Empire, the dioceses which represented a tribe or principality<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">{168}</a></span>
-were larger again. Also again, within the
-Empire the bishop, as bishop of a city, always took
-his title from the city; outside the Empire, especially
-in the British islands both Celtic and Teutonic, the
-bishop of a tribe or principality bore a tribal or territorial
-title.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Great Patriarchates.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Patriarchates
-suggested
-by the Prefectures.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The highest ecclesiastical divisions, the Patriarchates,
-though they did not exactly answer to the Prefectures,
-were clearly suggested by them. And whenever the
-boundaries of the Patriarchates departed from the
-boundaries of the Prefectures, they came nearer to the
-great divisions of race and language. For our purpose,
-it is enough to take the Patriarchates, as they grew up,
-after the establishment of Christianity, in the course of
-the fourth and fifth centuries. The four older ones
-were seated at the <i>Old</i> and the <i>New Rome</i>, and at the
-two great Eastern cities of <i>Antioch</i> and <i>Alexandria</i>. Out
-of the patriarchate of Antioch the small patriarchate of
-<i>Jerusalem</i> was afterwards taken. This last seems a piece
-of sentimental geography; the other divisions were
-eminently practical.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Whether we look on the original
-jurisdiction of the Bishop of the Old <i>Rome</i> as taking in
-the whole <i>prefecture</i> of Italy or only the <i>diocese</i> of
-Italy, it is certain that it was gradually extended over
-the two prefectures of Italy and Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extended
-beyond the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That is, it took
-in the Latin part of the Empire, and it spread thence
-over the Teutonic converts in the West, as well as
-over Hungary and the Western Slaves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Constantinople.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Patriarchate
-of <i>Constantinople</i> or New Rome took in the
-Prefecture of Illyricum, and three dioceses in the
-Prefecture of the East, those of Thrace, Asia, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
-Pontus. This territory pretty well answers to the
-extent of the Greek language and influence. The two
-Illyrian dioceses, possibly through some confusion arising
-out of the two meanings of the word <i>Illyricum</i>,
-were claimed by the Popes of Old Rome; but, when
-the Empires and Churches parted asunder, Macedonia
-and Greece were not likely to cleave to the Western
-division.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its relation
-to the Eastern
-Empire
-and to the
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In course of time the Byzantine patriarchate
-became nearly coextensive with the Byzantine Empire,
-and it became the centre of conversion to the Slaves
-of the East, just as the patriarchate of Old Rome was to
-the Teutons of the West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Antioch.<br />Jerusalem.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The patriarchate of <i>Antioch</i>,
-before its dismemberment in favour of the tiny patriarchate
-of <i>Jerusalem</i>, took in the whole diocese of the
-East, and the churches beyond the limits of the Empire
-in that direction.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Alexandria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The patriarchate of <i>Alexandria</i>
-answered to the diocese of Egypt, with the churches
-beyond the Empire on that side, specially the <i>Abyssinian</i>
-church, which has kept its nationality to our own time.
-That these Eastern patriarchates have been for ages
-disputed by claimants belonging to different sects of
-Christianity is a fact which concerns both theology and
-history, but does not concern geography. Whether
-the see was in Orthodox or heretical—that is commonly
-in national—hands, the see and its diocese, the geographical
-extent on the map, remained the same.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later nominal
-patriarchates.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>These then are the five great patriarchates which
-formed the most ancient geographical divisions of the
-Church. In later times the name patriarchate has
-been more loosely applied. As the Roman bishop
-grew into something more than the Patriarch of the
-West, the title of Patriarch was given to several metropolitans,
-sometimes, as far as one can see, without any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">{170}</a></span>
-particular reason.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lisbon,
-Venice,
-Aquileia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The title has been borne by the
-Bishops of <i>Lisbon</i> and <i>Venice</i>, and specially by the
-Metropolitans of <i>Aquileia</i>. These last assumed the
-title during a time of separation from the Roman see.
-But nominal patriarchates of this kind must be carefully
-distinguished from the five great churches to
-which the name was anciently attached.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Patriarchate
-of
-Moscow.
-1587.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the East
-the name was never extended beyond its four original
-holders, till a new patriarchate of <i>Moscow</i> arose in
-Russia, to mark the greatest spiritual conquest of the
-Orthodox Church. Of the four original Eastern patriarchates
-it is only that of Constantinople which plays
-much part in later history. The seats of the other
-three fell into the hands of the Saracens in the very
-beginning of their conquests.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Italy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great
-numbers of
-the Italian
-bishoprics.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In no part of Christendom do the bishoprics lie so
-thick upon the ground as in Italy, and especially in the
-southern part. But from that very fact it follows that
-the ecclesiastical divisions of Italy are of less historical
-importance than those of most other Western countries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Small size
-of the
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In southern Italy above all, the bishoprics were so
-numerous, and the dioceses therefore so small, that the
-archiepiscopal provinces were hardly so large as the
-episcopal dioceses in more northern lands. So it is
-in the islands; Sicily contained four provinces and
-Sardinia three.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-the commonwealths
-on the position
-of the
-prelates.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The peculiar characteristics of Italian
-history also hindered ecclesiastical geography from
-being of the same importance as elsewhere. Where
-every city became an independent commonwealth, the
-Bishop, and even the Metropolitan, sank to a lower
-rank than they held in the lands where each prelate
-was a great feudal lord.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It follows then that there are only a few of the archbishoprics
-and bishoprics of Italy which at all stand
-out in general history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relation to
-the Roman
-See.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The growth of the Roman see
-also more distinctly overshadowed the Italian bishops
-than it did those of other lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivals of
-Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The bishoprics which
-have most historical importance are those which at one
-time or another stood out in rivalry or opposition to
-Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Milan.<br />
-Aquileia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such was the great see of <i>Milan</i>, whose province
-took in a crowd of Lombard bishoprics;
-such was the
-patriarchal see of <i>Aquileia</i>, whose metropolitan jurisdiction
-took in Como at one end and the Istrian Pola
-at the other. The patriarchs of Aquileia, standing as
-they did on the march of the Italian, Teutonic, and
-Slavonic lands, grew, unlike most of the Italian prelates,
-into powerful temporal princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ravenna.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Ravenna</i> was the
-head of a smaller province than either Milan or Aquileia;
-but <i>Ravenna</i> too stands out as one of the churches
-which kept up for a while an independent position in
-the face of the growing power of Rome. Milan and
-Ravenna, in short, never lost the memory of their
-Imperial days; and Aquileia took advantage, first of a
-theological difference, and secondly of its temporal
-position as the great border see.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The immediate
-Roman
-Province.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the rest of Italy the case is different. Rome
-herself was the immediate head of a large province
-stretching from sea to sea. Within this the <i>suburbicarian</i>
-sees, those close around Rome, stood in a special
-and closer relation to the patriarchal see itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Metropolitan
-sees of
-central
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-famous cities of <i>Genoa</i>, <i>Bologna</i>, <i>Pisa</i>, <i>Florence</i>, and
-<i>Sienna</i>, were also metropolitan sees, though their ecclesiastical
-dignity is quite overshadowed by their civic
-greatness. <i>Lucca</i> has been added to the same list in
-modern times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pisa and
-Genoa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The provinces of Pisa and Genoa are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span>
-notable as having been extended into the island of
-Corsica after its recovery from the Saracens. The history
-and extent of the Italian dioceses is, with these few
-exceptions, a matter almost wholly of local ecclesiastical
-concern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-southern
-province.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the south and in Sicily the endless archiepiscopal
-sees preserve the names of some famous cities,
-as <i>Capua</i>—the later Capua on the site of Casilinum—<i>Tarentum</i>,
-<i>Bari</i>, and others. But some even of the metropolitan
-churches are fixed in places of quite secondary
-importance, and the simple bishoprics are endless.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Gaul and Germany.</i></h3>
-
-<p>By taking a single view of the ecclesiastical arrangements
-of the whole of the Western Empire on this side
-of the Alps and the Pyrenees, some instructive lessons
-may be learned. Such a way of looking at the map
-will bring out more strongly the differences between
-bishoprics of earlier and later foundation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gaulish and
-German
-dioceses.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, if we
-take the name of Gaul in the old geographical sense,
-taking in the German lands west of the Rhine which
-formed part of the older Empire, we shall find that
-several ecclesiastical provinces may be called either
-Gaulish or German. With the boundaries of the French
-kingdom we have no concern, except so far as the
-boundary between the Eastern and Western kingdoms
-of the Franks did to some extent follow ecclesiastical
-lines. Modern annexations of course have had no
-regard to them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province of
-South Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>On first crossing the Alps from Italy, we find the
-ecclesiastical phænomena of Italy continued in the lands
-nearest to it. The two provinces of <i>Tarantaise</i> (answering
-to the civil division of <i>Alpes Penninæ</i>) and <i>Embrun</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span>
-(<i>Alpes Maritimæ</i>) which take in the mountain region
-between Italy and Gaul, are of small size, though of
-course in the actual mountain lands the bishoprics are
-less thick on the ground.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tarantaise.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Tarantasian province contained
-only three suffragan sees, <i>Sitten</i>, <i>Aosta</i>, and <i>St.
-John of Maurienne</i>, three bishoprics which now belong
-to three distinct political powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Embrun.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in the southern
-part of the province of Embrun, which reaches to the
-sea, the bishops’ sees are thick on the ground, just as
-they are in Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aix and
-Arles.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So they are in the small provinces
-of <i>Aix</i> (<i>Narbonensis Secunda</i>) and <i>Arles</i>. But, as soon
-as we get out of Provence into the parts of Gaul which
-were less thoroughly Romanized, and where cities, and
-consequently bishoprics, lay less close together, the
-phænomena of the ecclesiastical map begin to change.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vienne.<br />
-Narbonne.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Provençal provinces of Aix and Aries are bounded
-to the north and west by those of <i>Vienne</i> (which with
-Arles answers nearly to the civil <i>Viennensis</i>)
-and
-<i>Narbonne</i> (answering nearly to <i>Narbonensis Secunda</i>).
-These provinces are of much greater size, and the
-suffragan sees are much further apart.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Auch.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the west lies
-<i>Auch</i>, answering to the oldest Aquitaine or <i>Novempopulana</i>,
-and to the north of these, in the remainder of
-Gaul, the original provinces are of still greater size.
-Most of them answer very nearly to the older civil
-divisions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bourges,
-Bourdeaux,
-Lyons,
-Rouen,
-Tours, and
-Sens.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Aquitania Prima</i> is the province of <i>Bourges</i>,
-<i>Aquitania Secunda</i> that of <i>Bourdeaux</i>. <i>Lugdunensis
-Prima</i>, <i>Secunda</i>, <i>Tertia</i>, and <i>Quarta</i>, answer to <i>Lyons</i>,
-<i>Rouen</i>, <i>Tours</i>, and <i>Sens</i>. Of these Lyons, as having
-been the temporal capital, became the seat of the Primate
-of all the Gauls. The province of Rouen too answers
-very nearly to the duchy of which that metropolis
-became the capital; its Archbishop still bears the title
-of Primate of Normandy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">{174}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pb2">These are the oldest ecclesiastical arrangements,
-closely following the civil divisions of the Empire. These
-divisions lived through the Teutonic conquests; and,
-though here and there a see was translated from one city
-to another, they were not seriously interfered with till the
-fourteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Foundation
-of the provinces
-of
-Toulouse
-and Alby,
-1322.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Pope John the Twenty-second raised
-the see of <i>Toulouse</i> in the province of Narbonne and
-that of <i>Alby</i> in the province of Bourges to metropolitan
-rank, thus forming two new provinces. He also
-founded new bishoprics in several towns in these two
-new provinces and in that of Narbonne.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Avignon,
-1475.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next
-century Sixtus the Fourth made the church of <i>Avignon</i>
-metropolitan. These changes help to give this whole
-district more of the character of Italy and Provence
-than originally belonged to it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Paris, 1622.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, in the seventeenth
-century the province of <i>Sens</i> was also divided,
-and the church of <i>Paris</i> became metropolitan. Some
-of these changes show how closely the ecclesiastical
-divisions followed the oldest civil divisions, and how
-slowly they were affected by changes in the civil divisions.
-When Gaul was first mapped out, Tolosa was
-of less account than Narbo; the Parisii and their city
-were of less account than the great nation of the
-<i>Senones</i>. Tolosa became the royal city of the Goth;
-but it did not rise to the highest ecclesiastical rank till
-ages after the Gothic kingdom had passed away. Paris,
-after having been several times a momentary seat of
-dominion, became the birthplace of the modern French
-kingdom. But it had been the continuous seat of kings
-for more than six hundred years before it became the
-seat of an archbishop.</p>
-
-
-<p>As we draw nearer to German ground, the ecclesiastical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></span>
-boundaries are found to have been somewhat
-more strongly affected by political changes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Besançon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-ecclesiastical province of <i>Besançon</i> answers to <i>Maxima
-Sequanorum</i>; but it is not quite of the same extent;
-the boundary of the German and Burgundian kingdoms
-passed through the Roman province: its eastern part
-is therefore found in a German diocese.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rheims.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The province
-of <i>Rheims</i> answers nearly, but not quite, to <i>Belgica Secunda</i>:
-for the ecclesiastical province took in some territory
-to the east of the Scheld. Here again the boundary
-of the Eastern and Western kingdoms passed through the
-province. The metropolitan city lay within the region
-which became the kingdom of France, and it became
-the ecclesiastical head of the kingdom. Yet one of
-its suffragan sees, that of <i>Cambray</i>, was a city of the
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Trier, 785.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The province of <i>Trier</i> took in no part of
-the Western kingdom; but, besides the old province
-of <i>Belgica Prima</i>, it stretched away over the German
-lands even beyond the Rhine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Köln, 785.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When the old Gaulish
-bishoprick of <i>Colonia Agrippina</i> became metropolitan
-under Charles the Great, its province took
-in nearly all the old Gaulish province of <i>Germania
-Secunda</i>; but it too came to stretch beyond the Rhine
-and beyond the Weser. These two metropolitan sees,
-Trier and Köln, were old Gaulish bishopricks of the
-frontier land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mainz, 747.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The see of <i>Mainz</i> has no certain historical
-being before Boniface in the eighth century. It
-too was founded on what was geographically Gaulish
-soil; but the greater part of its vast extent was strictly
-German. Three only of its suffragans, <i>Worms</i>, <i>Speyer</i>,
-and <i>Argentoratum</i> or <i>Strassburg</i>, were even geographically
-Gaulish. No province has had more fluctuating
-boundaries: the elevation of Köln to metropolitan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
-rank cut it short to the west, while it grew indefinitely
-to the north, south, and east, as its boundaries were
-enlarged by conversion and conquest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prag, 1344.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the east it
-was cut short in the fourteenth century when the kingdom
-of Bohemia and its dependencies were formed into
-the ecclesiastical province of <i>Prag</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bamberg,
-1007.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The famous bishoprick
-of <i>Bamberg</i>, locally in the province of Mainz, was
-from the beginning immediately dependent on the see
-of Rome.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The three
-ecclesiastical
-Electors
-and Arch-chancellors.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>These three great archbishopricks of the frontier
-land, all of whose sees were on the Gaulish side of the
-Rhine, remained distinguished by their temporal rank
-during the whole life of the German kingdom. All
-the German prelates became princes; but only these
-three were Electors. The prelates of these three were the
-Arch-chancellors of the three Imperial kingdoms, Mainz
-of Germany, Köln of Italy, Trier of Gaul. But, as the
-Frankish or German kingdom spread to the north-east,
-new ecclesiastical provinces were formed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Salzburg,
-798.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The bishoprick
-of <i>Salzburg</i> became metropolitan under Charles the
-Great, with a province stretching away to the East
-towards his conquests from the Avars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bremen or
-Hamburg,
-788.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The bishoprick
-of <i>Bremen</i>, another foundation of Charles the Great, was
-transferred under his son to <i>Hamburg</i>, as a metropolitan
-see which was designed to be a missionary centre for
-the Scandinavian nations.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1223.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After some fluctuations,
-the see was finally settled at Bremen, as the metropolis
-of a province, which had now become in no way
-Scandinavian, but partly Old-Saxon, partly Wendish.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Magdeburg,
-968.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, Otto the Great founded the metropolitan see
-of <i>Magdeburg</i> on the Slavonic march. Thus the
-German kingdom formed six ecclesiastical provinces,
-all of vast extent as compared with those of Southern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span>
-Europe, and with their suffragan sees few and far
-apart. The difference is here clearly marked between
-the earlier sees which arose from the very
-beginning in the Roman cities, and the sees of later
-foundation which were gradually founded as new lands
-were brought under the dominion of the Empire and
-the Church. Still the old tradition went on so far that
-each Bishop had his see in a city, and took his name
-from that city. Though the German dioceses were of
-large extent, yet none of the German bishoprics were
-in strictness territorial.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern ecclesiastical
-divisions of
-Germany
-and France.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In no part of Christendom have the ecclesiastical
-divisions been more completely upset in modern times
-than they have been in Germany. In France the
-number of dioceses was greatly lessened by the <i>Concordat</i>
-under the first Buonaparte; but the main ecclesiastical
-landmarks were to a great extent respected.
-In Germany, on the other hand, no trace of them is left.
-The country has been mapped out afresh to suit the
-boundaries of patched-up modern kingdoms. Mainz
-and Trier are no longer metropolitan sees, while the
-modern map shows such novelties as an Archbishop of
-München and an Archbishop of Freiburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes of
-Philip the
-Second in
-the Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Long before,
-under Philip the Second of Spain, those parts of the
-German kingdom which had become practically detached
-under the Dukes of Burgundy underwent a complete
-change in their ecclesiastical divisions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cambray,
-Mechlin,
-Utrecht.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cambray</i> and
-<i>Mechlin</i> in the province of Rheims, and <i>Utrecht</i> in the
-province of Köln, became metropolitan sees. Modern
-political changes have made these three cities members
-of three distinct political powers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">{178}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Spain.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peculiarities
-of
-Spanish ecclesiastical
-geography.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The ecclesiastical history of the Spanish peninsula
-presents phænomena of a different kind from those of
-Italy, Gaul, or Germany. In Italy and Gaul the
-ecclesiastical divisions go on uninterruptedly from the
-earliest days of Christianity. Western Germany must
-count for these purposes as part of Gaul. In eastern
-Germany the ecclesiastical divisions were formed in
-later times, as Christianity was spread over the country.
-In Spain the country must have been mapped out for
-ecclesiastical purposes at least as early as Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Old divisions
-lost,
-and mapped
-out afresh
-after the recovery
-from
-the Saracens.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the
-Mahometan conquest of the greater part of the country,
-followed by the Christian reconquest, caused the old ecclesiastical
-lines to be wiped out, and new divisions had to
-be traced out afresh as the land was gradually won back.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ecclesiastical
-divisions
-under
-the West-Goths.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ecclesiastical divisions of Spain in the time of the
-Gothic kingdom simply reproduce the civil divisions
-of the period, as those civil divisions are only a slight
-modification of the Roman provinces. <i>Lusitania</i> and
-<i>Bætica</i> survived, with a slight change of frontier, both
-as civil and as ecclesiastical divisions. <i>Tarraconensis</i>
-was for both purposes divided into three, <i>Tarraconensis</i>,
-<i>Carthagenensis</i>, and <i>Gallæcia</i>. As the land was won
-back, and as new ecclesiastical provinces were formed,
-the number was greatly increased, and some of them
-found their way to new sites.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tarragona,
-Zaragoza,
-Valencia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the Tarraconensian
-province was again divided into three, those of <i>Tarragona</i>,
-<i>Zaragoza</i>, and <i>Valencia</i>, answering nearly to the
-kingdom of Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Toledo.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-New Carthage lost its metropolitan
-rank in favour of the great metropolis of
-<i>Toledo</i>, which numbered <i>Cordova</i> and <i>Valladolid</i> among
-its suffragans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Compostella,
-Burgos,
-Seville,
-and
-Granada.<br />
-Braga,
-Evora,
-Lisbon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Leaving out some anomalous districts,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span>
-the rest of the peninsula formed the provinces of St.
-James of <i>Compostella</i>, <i>Burgos</i>, <i>Seville</i>, <i>Granada</i>, with
-<i>Braga</i>, <i>Evora</i>, and the patriarchal see of <i>Lisbon</i>, the
-last three answering to the kingdom of Portugal. And
-it must be remembered that the Pyrenees did not form
-an eternal boundary in ecclesiastical, any more than in
-civil geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dioceses of
-Pampeluna
-and Bayonne.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the kingdom of Navarre stretched
-on both sides of the mountains, so did the diocese of
-<i>Pampeluna</i>; and to the west of it the Gaulish diocese
-of <i>Bayonne</i> stretched on what is now Spanish ground.
-All these are survivals of a time when, to use the phrase
-of a later day, there were no Pyrenees, or when at least
-the same rulers, first Gothic and then Saracen, reigned
-on both sides of them.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of the British Islands.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The British
-islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The historical phænomena of the British islands have
-points in common with more than one of the continental
-countries. In a very rough and general view of things,
-Britain has some analogies with Spain. It is not altogether
-without reason that in some legendary stories the
-names of Saxons and Saracens get confounded. In both
-cases a land which had been Christian was overrun by
-conquerors of another creed; in both a Christian people
-held their ground in a part of the country; and in both
-the whole land was won back to Christianity, though
-by different and even opposite processes in the two
-cases.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Celtic
-episcopate.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But there is no reason to believe that the Celtic
-churches in Britain and Ireland had anything like the
-same complete ecclesiastical organization as the Spanish
-churches under the Goths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tribal
-episcopacy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Celtic episcopate was
-of an irregular and anomalous kind, and, in its most
-intelligible shape, it was, as was natural under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
-circumstances of the country, not a city episcopate,
-hardly a territorial episcopate, but one strictly tribal.
-This is nearly the only fact in the history of the early
-Celtic churches which is of any importance for our
-purpose. It might be too much to say that traces
-of this peculiarity were handed on from the Celtic to
-the English Church. The little likeness that there is
-between them is rather due to the fact that in
-Northern Europe generally, whether Celtic or Teutonic,
-a strictly city episcopate like that of Italy and Gaul
-was something which in the nature of things could
-not be.</p>
-
-<p>In truth the antiquities of the Celtic churches may
-fairly be left to be matter of local or of special ecclesiastical
-inquiry. Their effect on history is slight; their
-effect on historical geography is still slighter. For
-our purpose the ecclesiastical geography of Britain may
-be looked on as beginning with the mission of Augustine.
-The English Church was formed, and the Welsh,
-Scottish, and Irish Churches were reconstructed, partly
-under its authority, altogether after its model.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Schemes of
-Gregory the
-Great.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the
-original scheme of Gregory the Great, Britain was clearly
-meant to be divided into two ecclesiastical provinces
-nearly equal in extent.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two equal
-provinces in
-Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Celtic churches were to be
-brought under the same ecclesiastical obedience as the
-heathen English. As Wales was to form part of the
-lot of the southern metropolitan, so Scotland was to
-form part of the lot of the northern. This scheme was
-never fully carried out. Wales was indeed brought
-into full submission to Canterbury; but Scotland was
-never brought into the same full submission to York.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relation of
-the Scottish
-Bishops to
-York.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The allegiance of the Scottish sees to their Northumbrian
-metropolis was at all times very precarious, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">{181}</a></span>
-it was in the end formally thrown off altogether.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Suffragan
-sees of
-Canterbury
-and York.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of
-this came the singular disproportion in the territorial
-extent of the two English ecclesiastical provinces.
-Canterbury, since the English Church was thoroughly
-organized, has had a number of suffragans which would
-be unusual anywhere on the continent, while York has
-always had comparatively few, and for a considerable
-time had practically one only.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Foundation
-of the
-existing
-dioceses.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The systematic mapping out of Britain for ecclesiastical
-purposes, as designed by Gregory, was therefore
-never fully carried out. The actual provinces and
-dioceses were gradually formed, as the various English
-existing kingdoms embraced Christianity. As a rule,
-each kingdom or independent principality became a diocese.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territorial
-bishoprics<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, except in the case of a few sees fixed in cities
-which kept on something of old Roman memories, the
-bishops were more commonly called from the people
-who formed their flock, than from the cities which in
-some cases contained their chairs. For in many cases
-the <i>bishop-settle</i>, as our forefathers called it, was
-not placed in a city at all, but in some rural or even
-solitary spot. It was not till the time of the Norman
-Conquest that a movement began for systematically
-placing the ecclesiastical sees in the chief towns;
-from that time the civic title altogether displaces the
-territorial.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Canterbury.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>As Kent was the first part of Teutonic Britain to
-accept Christianity, the metropolitan see of the south
-was fixed at <i>Canterbury</i>, the capital of that kingdom.
-It was thus fixed in a city which has at no time held
-that temporal preeminence which has in different ages
-belonged to York, Winchester, and London.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rochester.<br />
-London.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After
-Canterbury the earliest formed sees were <i>Rochester</i> for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></span>
-the West-Kentish kingdom, and <i>London</i> for the East-Saxons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dorchester
-or Winchester.
-Sherborne,
-Wells,
-Ramsbury.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conversion of the West-Saxons led to the
-foundation of the great diocese whose see was first at
-<i>Dorchester</i> on the Thames and then at <i>Winchester</i>, and
-from which the sees of <i>Sherborne</i>, <i>Wells</i>, and <i>Ramsbury</i>
-were gradually parted off.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Elmham.<br />
-Dorchester
-or Lincoln.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The East-Angles formed a
-diocese with its see at <i>Elmham</i>;
-the Middle-Angles
-settled down, after some shiftings, into the vast diocese
-stretching from the Thames to the Humber, whose see,
-first at <i>Dorchester</i>, was afterwards translated to <i>Lincoln</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Worcester,
-Hereford,
-Lichfield.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The West-Mercian lands formed the dioceses of the
-Hwiccas at <i>Worcester</i>, of the Magesætas at <i>Hereford</i>,
-and the great diocese of <i>Lichfield</i>, stretching northward
-to the Ribble. The South-Saxons, whose see kept its
-tribal name down to the Norman Conquest, had their see
-first at <i>Selsey</i>, and then at <i>Chichester</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Exeter.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Devonshire and
-Cornwall, after forming two dioceses, were, just before
-the Norman Conquest, united under the single see of
-<i>Exeter</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Welsh
-Sees.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Conquest too brought about the more
-complete submission of the four Welsh sees, <i>Saint
-David’s</i>, <i>Llandaff</i>, <i>Bangor</i>, and <i>Saint Asaph</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Salisbury,
-1078.<br />
-Ely, 1109.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the
-times just before and just after the Conquest belong
-the union of Sherborne and Ramsbury to form the
-diocese of <i>Salisbury</i>, and the dismemberment of the
-huge diocese of Lincoln by the foundation of an episcopal
-see at <i>Ely</i>. Thus the province of Canterbury
-with its suffragan sees was gradually organized in the
-form which it kept from the reign of Henry the First
-to that of Henry the Eighth.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile in the northern province things never
-reached the same regular organization.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>York.<br />
-Lindisfarn<br />
-or Durham,<br />
-Carlisle,
-1133.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-York, after
-some changes, took the position of a metropolitan see,
-with one suffragan, first at <i>Lindisfarn</i>
-and afterwards at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span>
-<i>Durham</i>,
-and another at <i>Carlisle</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saint
-Andrews,
-1471.<br />
-Glasgow.
-1492.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Scottish
-dioceses broke off from York, they first acknowledged
-a kind of precedence in the Bishop of <i>St. Andrews</i>;
-but it was not till a far later time that Scotland was
-divided into two regular ecclesiastical provinces with
-their sees at <i>St. Andrews</i> and <i>Glasgow</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Edinburgh.
-1634.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Several of the
-Scottish dioceses always kept their territorial titles;
-their sees were mostly fixed in small places; and of the
-chief seats of Scottish royalty, Dunfermline and Stirling
-never attained episcopal rank at all,
-and <i>Edinburgh</i> only
-attained it in quite modern times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The four
-Irish provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The endless and fluctuating
-bishoprics of Ireland were in the twelfth century
-gathered into the four provinces of <i>Armagh</i>, <i>Dublin</i>,
-<i>Cashel</i>, and <i>Tuam</i>, answering to the temporal divisions
-of <i>Ulster</i>, <i>Leinster</i>, <i>Munster</i>, and <i>Connaught</i>. It is to
-be noticed that, in marked contradiction to continental
-practice, the chief see in all the three British kingdoms
-has been placed in a city which has never held the first
-temporal rank. Canterbury, St. Andrews, Armagh,
-were never the temporal heads of England, Scotland,
-and Ireland. York, Dublin, Glasgow, though metropolitan
-sees, were of secondary rank, and London and
-Winchester were ordinary bishoprics.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>The Ecclesiastical Divisions of Northern and Eastern Europe.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ecclesiastical
-division
-in the converted
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the other parts of Europe which formed part
-of the communion of the Latin Church, the ecclesiastical
-divisions mark the steps by which Christianity
-was spread either by conversion or conquest. They
-continued the process of which the ecclesiastical organization
-of Eastern Germany was the beginning. As
-a rule, they strictly follow the political divisions of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span>
-age in which they were founded.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Scandinavian
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Church in
-the Scandinavian kingdoms became more settled, its
-bishoprics parted off from their allegiance to Hamburg
-or Bremen, and each of the three kingdoms formed
-an ecclesiastical province, whose boundaries exactly
-answered to the earlier boundaries of the kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lund,
-1151.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark had its metropolitan see at <i>Lund</i>, in that part of
-the Danish kingdom which geographically forms part
-of the greater Scandinavian peninsula, and which is now
-Swedish territory. Its boundary to the south was the
-Eider, the old frontier of Denmark and the Empire.
-The suffragan sees of this province, among which the
-specially royal bishopric of <i>Roeskild</i> is the most famous,
-naturally lie thicker on the ground than they do in
-the wilder regions of the two more northern kingdoms.
-But the Baltic conquests of Denmark also placed part
-of the isle of Rügen in the province of Lund and
-the diocese of Roeskild, and also gave the Danish
-metropolitan a far more distant suffragan in the Bishop
-of <i>Revel</i> on the Finnish gulf.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Upsala.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The metropolitan see of
-Sweden was placed at <i>Upsala</i>, and the province was
-carried by Swedish conquest to the east of the Gulf of
-Bothnia, where the single bishopric of <i>Abo</i> took in the
-whole of the Swedish territory in that region.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Trondhjem.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-the like sort, the Norwegian province of <i>Nidaros</i> or
-<i>Trondhjem</i> stretched far over the Ocean to the distant
-Colonies and dependencies of Norway in Iceland, Greenland,
-and Man.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Poland, &amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The conversion of Poland and the conquest of
-Prussia and Livonia brought other lands within the pale
-of the Latin Church and her ecclesiastical organization.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gnezna.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The original kingdom of Poland formed the province of
-<i>Gnezna</i>, a province whose boundaries were for some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
-centuries very fluctuating, according as Poland or the
-Empire was stronger in the Slavonic lands on the
-Baltic. Each change of temporal dominion caused
-the ecclesiastical frontiers of Gnezna and Magdeburg
-to advance or fall back. The Silesian bishopric of
-<i>Breslau</i> always kept its old relation to the Polish metropolis,
-except so far as it was held to be placed under
-the immediate superiority of Rome. The later union of
-Lithuania to the Polish kingdom added a <i>Lithuanian</i>
-and a <i>Samogitian</i> bishopric to the original Polish
-province.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Riga.<br />
-Leopol.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The earlier Polish conquests from Russia
-formed a new province,
-the Latin province of <i>Leopol</i>
-or <i>Lemberg</i>, a province whose southern boundaries advanced
-and fell back along with the boundary of the
-kingdom of which it formed a part. The conquests of
-the Teutonic knights in Prussia and Livonia formed the
-ecclesiastical province of <i>Riga</i>, which was divided into
-two parts by the province of Gnezna in its greater
-extent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">It will be seen that some of the ecclesiastical divisions
-last mentioned belong to a later stage of European
-history than the point which we have reached in our
-general narrative. But it seemed better to continue
-the survey over the whole of the Latin Church in
-Europe, as the later foundations are a mere carrying
-out of the same process which began in the earlier. The
-ecclesiastical divisions represent the political divisions
-of the time, whether those political divisions are
-Roman provinces or independent Teutonic or Slavonic
-kingdoms. But the ecclesiastical divisions, when
-once fixed, were more lasting than the temporal
-divisions, and many disputes have arisen out of political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
-changes which transferred one part of a province or
-diocese from one political allegiance to another. Since
-the splitting-up of the Western Church, the old ecclesiastical
-organization has altogether vanished from some
-countries, and has been greatly modified in others, in
-Germany most of all.</p>
-
-<p>It seems hardly needful for the understanding of
-European history to carry our ecclesiastical survey beyond
-the limits of the Latin Church. One of the
-Polish provinces, that of Leopol, has carried us to the
-borderland of the Eastern and Western Churches, and,
-if we pass southwards into the Magyar and South-Slavonic
-lands, we find ourselves still more distinctly
-on an ecclesiastical march.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungary.<br />
-Strigonium.<br />
-Kolocza.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Kingdom of Hungary
-formed two Latin provinces, those of <i>Strigonium</i> or
-Gran, and of <i>Kolocza</i>; the latter has a very fluctuating
-boundary to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Dalmatian coast, the
-borderland of all powers and of all religions, formed
-three Latin provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Zara.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Jadera</i> or <i>Zara</i>, on her peninsula,
-was the head of a small province chiefly made
-up of islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spalato.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another metropolitan had his throne in
-the very mausoleum of Diocletian, and the province of
-<i>Spalato</i> stretched some way inland over the lands which
-have so often changed masters.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ragusa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south, the see
-of <i>Ragusa</i>, the furthest outpost of Latin Christendom
-properly so called, had, besides its own coasts and
-islands, an indefinite frontier inland. This marks the
-furthest extent to which it is needful to trace our
-ecclesiastical map. It is the furthest point at which
-Latin Christianity can be said to be in any sense at home.
-The ecclesiastical organization of the crusading and
-Venetian conquests further to the south and east have
-but little bearing on historical geography. But, within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>
-the bounds of Latin Christendom, the ecclesiastical
-divisions both of the provinces and dioceses within the
-older Empire and what we may call the missionary
-provinces beyond it, are of the highest importance, and
-they should always be kept in mind alongside of the
-political geography.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">{188}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE IMPERIAL KINGDOMS.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of the
-<i>East-Franks</i>
-or
-of <i>Germany</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> division of 887 parted off from the general mass
-of the Frankish dominions a distinct <i>Kingdom of the
-East-Franks</i>, the acknowledged head of the Frankish
-kingdoms, which, as being distinguished from its fellows
-as the <i>Regnum Teutonicum</i>, may be best spoken of as a
-<i>Kingdom of Germany</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Merging of
-the Kingdom
-in the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the lasting acquisition of
-the Italian and Imperial crowns by the German kings,
-and their later acquisition of the kingdom of Burgundy,
-gradually tended to obscure the notion of a distinct
-German kingdom. The idea of the Kingdom was
-merged in the idea of the Empire of which it formed
-a part. Later events too tended in the same direction.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Emperors
-lose
-Italy and
-Burgundy,
-but keep
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Italian kingdom gradually fell off from any practical
-allegiance to its nominal king the Emperor. So did
-the greater part of the Burgundian kingdom. Meanwhile,
-though the powers of the Emperors as German
-kings were constantly lessening, their authority was
-never wholly thrown off till the present century. The
-Emperors in short lost their kingdoms of Italy and
-Burgundy, and kept their kingdom of Germany. In
-the fifteenth century the coronation of the Emperor at
-Rome had become a mere ceremony, carrying with it
-no real authority in Italy. In the sixteenth century
-the ceremony itself went out of use.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Charles the
-Fourth
-crowned at
-Arles, 1365.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Burgundian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span>
-coronation at Arles became irregular at a very early
-time, and it is last heard of in the fourteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1792.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the election of the German kings at Frankfurt,
-their coronation, in earlier times at Aachen, afterwards
-at Frankfurt,
-went on regularly till the last years of the
-eighteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Endurance
-of the German
-Diet.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So, while the national assemblies
-of Italy and Burgundy can hardly be said to have been
-regularly held at all, while they went altogether out of
-use at an early time, the national assembly of Germany,
-in one shape or another, never ceased as long as there
-was any one calling himself Emperor or German King.
-The tendency in all three kingdoms was to split up
-into separate principalities and commonwealths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-of Germany,
-Italy, and
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-in Germany the principalities and commonwealths
-always kept up some show of connexion with one
-another, some show of allegiance to their Imperial
-head. In Italy and Burgundy they parted off altogether.
-Some became absolutely independent; were
-incorporated with other kingdoms or became their
-distant dependencies; some were even held by the
-Emperors themselves in some other character, and not
-by virtue either of their Empire or of their local kingship.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-identified
-with
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus, as the Empire became more and more
-nearly coextensive with the German Kingdom, the
-distinction between the two was gradually forgotten.
-The small parts of the other kingdoms which kept any
-trace of their Imperial allegiance came to be looked on
-as parts of Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-becomes a
-Confederation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In short, the Western Empire
-became a German kingdom; or rather it became a
-German Confederation with a royal head, a confederation
-which still kept up the forms and titles of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As no German king received an Imperial coronation
-after Charles the Fifth, it might in strictness be said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">{190}</a></span>
-that the Empire came to an end at his abdication.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1556.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And in truth from that date the Empire practically became
-a purely German power. But, as the Imperial
-forms and titles still went on, the Western Empire
-must be looked on as surviving, in the form of a
-German kingdom or confederation, down to its final
-fall.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The German
-Kingdom
-represents
-the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Kingdom of Germany then may be looked on
-as representing the Western Empire, as being what
-was left of the Western Empire after the other parts of
-it had fallen away. But the German kingdom itself
-underwent, though in a smaller degree, the same fate
-as the other two Imperial kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of parts of
-the Kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While all Italy
-and all Burgundy, with some very trifling exceptions,
-fell away from the Empire, the mass of Germany
-remained Imperial. Still large parts of Germany
-were lost to the Empire no less than Italy and Burgundy.
-A considerable territory on the western and
-south-western frontier of Germany gradually fell away.
-Part of this territory has grown into independent
-states; part has been incorporated with the French
-kingdom. The Swiss Confederation has grown up on
-lands partly German, partly Burgundian, partly Italian,
-but of which the oldest and greatest part belonged to
-the German kingdom. The Confederation of the
-United Provinces, represented by the modern kingdom
-of the Netherlands, lay wholly<a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> within the old German
-kingdom: so did by far the greater part of the modern
-kingdom of Belgium.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In our own day the same tendency
-has been shewn in south-eastern as well as
-south-western Germany; several members of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
-ancient kingdom have fallen away to form part of the
-Austro-Hungarian monarchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extension
-of Germany
-to the
-north-east.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But on the northern
-and north-eastern frontier the tendency to extension,
-with some fluctuations, has gone on from the beginning
-of the kingdom to our own day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-contrast
-of the
-earlier and
-later Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This tendency to lose
-territory to the west and south, and to gain territory to
-the east and north, had the effect of gradually cutting
-off the Western Empire, as represented by the German
-kingdom, from any close geographical connexion
-with the earlier Empire of which it was the historical
-continuation. The Holy Roman Empire, at
-the time of its final fall, contained but little territory
-which had formed part of the Empire of Trajan. It
-contained nothing which had formed part of the Empire
-of Justinian, save some small scraps of territory in the
-north-eastern corner of the old Italian kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Kingdom of Germany.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Change in
-the geography
-and
-nomenclature
-of Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">In tracing out, for our present purpose, the geographical
-revolutions of Germany, it will be enough to
-look at them, as far as may be, mainly in their European
-aspect. Owing to the gradual way in which the
-various members of the Empire grew into practical
-sovereignty—owing to the constant division of principalities
-among many members of the same family—no
-country has undergone so many internal geographical
-changes as Germany has. In few countries also has
-the nomenclature shifted in a more singular way.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ancient
-and modern
-Saxony and
-Bavaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To
-take two obvious examples, the modern kingdom of
-<i>Saxony</i> has nothing but its name in common with the
-Saxony which was brought under the Frankish dominion
-by Charles the Great. The modern kingdom
-of <i>Bavaria</i> has a considerable territory in common<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span>
-with the ancient Bavaria; but it has gained so much
-at one end and lost so much at the other that the two
-cannot be said to be in any practical sense the same
-country.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Uses of the
-name
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The name of <i>Austria</i> has shifted from the
-eastern part of the old <i>Francia</i> to the German mark
-against the Magyar, and it has lately wandered altogether
-beyond the modern German frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-name of <i>Burgundy</i> has borne endless meanings, both
-within the Empire and beyond it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, the ruling
-state of modern Germany, a state stretching across
-the whole land from east to west, strangely bears
-the name of the conquered and extinct <i>Prussian</i>
-race. Many of these changes affect the history of Europe
-as well as the history of Germany; but many
-of the endless changes among the smaller members
-of the Empire are matters of purely local interest,
-which belong to the historical geography of Germany
-only, and which claim no place in the historical geography
-of Europe. I shall endeavour therefore in the
-present section, first to trace carefully the shiftings of
-the German frontier as regards other powers, and
-then to bring out such, and such only, of the internal
-changes as have a bearing on the general history of
-Europe.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The extent of the German kingdom as it stood
-after the division of 887 has been roughly traced
-already.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundaries
-under the
-Ottos, 936-1002.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It will now be well to go over its frontiers
-somewhat more minutely, as they stood at the time of
-final separation between the Empire and the West-Frankish
-kingdom, the time of final union between the
-Empire and the East-Frankish kingdom. This marks the
-great age of the Saxon Ottos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundary
-towards the
-West.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The frontier towards the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
-Western kingdom was now fairly ascertained, and
-it was subject to dispute only at a few points.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lotharingia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It
-is hardly needful to insist again on the fact that all
-Lotharingia, in the sense of those days, taking in
-all the southern Netherlands except the French fief
-of Flanders, was now Imperial.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Encroachments
-of
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is along this
-line that the German border has in later times most
-largely fallen back. The advance of France has
-touched Burgundy more than Germany; but it has,
-first swallowed up, and afterwards partly restored,
-a considerable part of the German kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Netherlands had been practically so cut off from Germany
-before the annexations of France in that quarter
-began, that they will be better spoken of in another
-section.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lorraine
-and Elsass.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other points at which the frontier
-has fluctuated on a great scale have been the border
-land of <i>Lorraine</i>—as distinguished from the Lower
-<i>Lotharingia</i> which has more to do with the history
-of the Netherlands—and the Swabian land of
-<i>Elsass</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-of Bar.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Duchy of <i>Bar</i>, the borderland of the
-borderland, fluctuated more than once.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1473.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After its
-union with the Duchy of Lorraine, it followed the
-fortunes of that state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Three
-Bishoprics,
-1552.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century came
-the annexation of the three Lotharingian bishoprics
-of <i>Metz</i>, <i>Toul</i>, and <i>Verdun</i>, which gave France three
-outlying possessions within the geographical borders
-of the Lotharingian duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Austrian
-Elsass,
-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century,
-as the result of the Thirty Years’ War, France obtained
-by the Peace of Westfalia the formal cession of
-these conquests, and also the great advance of her
-frontier by the dismemberment of <i>Elsass</i>. The cession
-now made did not take in the whole of Elsass, but only
-the possessions and rights of the House of Austria in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">{194}</a></span>
-that country. This cession still left both Strassburg
-and various smaller towns and districts to the Empire;
-but it naturally opened the way to further French
-advances in a land where the frontier was so complicated
-and where difficulties were so easily raised as to
-treaty-rights.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gradual annexation
-of
-Elsass,
-1679-1789.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A series of annexations, <i>réunions</i> as they
-were called, gradually united nearly all Elsass to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Seizure of
-Strassburg,
-1681.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Strassburg</i>, as all the world knows, was seized by Lewis
-the Fourteenth in time of peace.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Seizure of
-Lorraine,
-1678-1697.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the wars with
-the same prince, the duchy of Lorraine was seized and
-restored.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its final
-annexation.
-1766.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century it was separated from
-the Empire to become the life-possession of the Polish
-king Stanislaus, and on his death it was finally added
-to France just before a far greater series of French
-annexations began.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-left bank of
-the Rhine,
-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The wars of the French Revolution,
-confirmed by the Peace of <i>Luneville</i>, tore away from
-Germany and the Empire all that lay on the left bank
-of the Rhine. In other words, the Western <i>Francia</i>,
-the duchy of the lords of Paris, advanced itself to the
-utmost limits of the Gaul of Cæsar. This was the last
-annexation of France at the expense of the old German
-kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dissolution
-of the
-Kingdom
-and Empire,
-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was indeed the main cause of the formal
-dissolution of the kingdom which happened a few years
-later. The utter transformation of Germany within and
-without which now followed must be spoken of at a
-later stage.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frontier of
-Germany
-and Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The frontier of Germany and Burgundy, while they
-still remained distinct kingdoms, fluctuated a good
-deal, especially in the lands which now form Switzerland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Burgundy
-with the
-Empire,
-1033.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this frontier ceased to be of any practical
-importance when the Burgundian kingdom was united
-with the Empire. The later history of Burgundy, consisting
-of the gradual incorporation by France of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
-greater part of the kingdom, and the growth of the
-remnant into the western cantons of the Swiss Confederation,
-will be told elsewhere.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frontier of
-Germany
-and Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Towards Italy again the frontier was sometimes
-doubtful. <i>Chiavenna</i>, for instance, sometimes appears
-in the tenth and eleventh centuries as German; so do
-the greater districts of <i>Trent</i>, <i>Aquileia</i>, <i>Istria</i>, and even
-<i>Verona</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Marchland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these formed a marchland, part of which
-in the end became definitely attached to Germany and
-part to Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the Crowns,
-961-1530.<br />
-961-1250.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But here again, as long as the German
-and Italian crowns were united, and as long as their
-common king kept any real authority in either kingdom,
-the frontier was of no great practical importance.
-So in later times, both before and after the dissolution
-of the German Kingdom, the question has practically
-been a question between Italy and the House of Austria
-rather than between Italy and Germany as such. These
-changes also will better come in another section.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern and
-Northern
-frontiers.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The case is quite different with regard to the
-eastern and northern frontiers, on which the really
-greatest changes took place, and where Germany, as
-Germany, made its greatest advances.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Along this line
-the Roman Empire and the German Kingdom meant the
-same thing. On this side the frontier had to be marked,
-so far as it could be marked, against nations which
-had had nothing to do with the elder Empire. Here
-then for many ages the Roman Terminus advanced and
-fell back according to the accidents of a long warfare.</p>
-
-<p>The whole frontier of the kingdom towards its
-northern and eastern neighbours was defended by a
-series of <i>marks</i> or border territories whose rulers were
-clothed with special powers for the defence and extension<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></span>
-of the frontier.<a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> They had to guard the realm
-against the Dane in the north, and against the Slave
-during the whole remaining length of the eastern frontier,
-except where, in the last years of the ninth century,
-the Magyar thrust himself in between the northern and
-southern Slaves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungarian
-frontier.<br />
-Mark of
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here the frontier, as against Hungary
-and Croatia, was defended by the marks of <i>Krain</i> or
-<i>Carniola</i>, <i>Kärnthen</i> or <i>Carinthia</i>,
-<i>Austrian</i> mark to the north of them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Little
-change on
-this
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This frontier
-has changed least of all. It may, without any great
-breach of accuracy, be said to have remained the
-same from the days of the Saxon Emperors till now.
-The part where it was at all fluctuating was along the
-Austrian mark, rather than along the two marks to
-the south of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occasional
-homage of
-Hungary to
-the Emperors.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Emperors claimed, and sometimes
-enforced, a feudal superiority over the Hungarian
-kings. But this kind of precarious submission does
-not affect geography. Hungary always remained a
-separate kingdom; the Imperial supremacy was something
-purely external, and it was always thrown off
-on the first opportunity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frontier
-towards
-Denmark.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The same may be said of <i>Denmark</i>. For a short
-time a German mark was formed north of the Eider.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Danish
-Mark, 934-1027.<br />
-Boundary
-of the
-Eider,
-1027-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, when the Danish kingdom had grown into the
-Northern Empire of Cnut, the German frontier fell back
-here also, and the <i>Eider</i> remained the boundary of the
-Empire till its fall.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occasional
-homage of
-the Danish
-Kings.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As with Hungary, so with Denmark;
-more than one Danish king became the man of
-Cæsar; but here again the precarious acknowledgement
-of Imperial supremacy had no effect on geography.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It is in the intermediate lands, along the vast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span>
-frontier where the Empire marched on the northern
-<i>Slavonic</i> lands, that the real historical geography of
-Germany lies for some ages.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuation
-of territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here the boundary was
-ever fluctuating.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the time of the division of 887,
-the Slaves held all east of the Elbe and a good deal
-to the west. How far they had during the Wandering
-of the Nations stepped into the place of earlier Teutonic
-inhabitants is a question which belongs to another
-field of inquiry. We must here start from the geographical
-fact that, at the time when the modern states
-of Europe began to form themselves, the Slaves were
-actually in possession of the great North-Eastern region
-of modern Germany. Their special mention will come in
-their special place; we must here mark that modern
-Germany has largely formed itself by the gradual conquest
-and colonization of lands which at the end of the
-ninth century were Slavonic. The German kingdom
-spread itself far to the North-East, and German settlements
-and German influences spread themselves far beyond
-the formal bounds of the German kingdom. Three
-special instruments worked together in bringing about
-this end. The Saxon Dukes came first. In after times
-came the great league of German cities, the famous
-<i>Hansa</i> which, like some other bodies originally commercial,
-became a political power, and which spread German
-influences over the whole of the shores of the Baltic.
-Along with them, from the thirteenth century onwards,
-worked the great military order of the Teutonic knights.
-Out of their conquests came the first beginnings of the
-Prussian state, and the extension of German rule and
-the German speech over much which in modern geography
-has become Russian. In a history of the German
-nation all these causes would have to be dealt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
-with together as joint instruments towards the same
-end. In a purely geographical view the case is different.
-Some of these influences concern the formation of the
-actual German kingdom; others have geographically
-more to do with the group of powers more to the north-east,
-the Slavonic states of Poland and Russia, and their
-Lithuanian and Finnish neighbours. The growth and
-fall of the military orders will therefore most naturally
-come in another section. We have here to trace
-out those changes only which helped to give the German
-kingdom the definite geographical extent which it
-held for some centuries before its final fall.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Saxon
-Mark.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Beginning at the north, in the lands where German,
-Slave, and Dane came into close contact, in <i>Saxony
-beyond the Elbe</i>, the modern <i>Holstein</i>, the Slaves held
-the western coast, and the narrow <i>Saxon mark</i> fenced
-off the German land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mark of
-the Billungs,
-960-1106.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Saxon dukes of the house
-of Billung formed a German mark, which took in the
-lands reaching from the Elbe to the strait which divides
-the isle of Rügen from the mainland. But this possession
-was altogether precarious.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its fluctuations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It again became a Slavonic
-kingdom; then it was a possession of Denmark;
-it cannot be looked on as definitely becoming part
-of the German realm till the thirteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-princes continue
-in
-Mecklenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-chief state in these lands which has lasted till later
-times is the duchy of <i>Mecklenburg</i>, the rulers of which,
-in its two modern divisions, are the only modern princes
-who directly represent an old Slavonic royal house.
-Meanwhile a way was opened for a vast extension of
-German influence through the whole North, by the
-growth of the city of <i>Lübeck</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Foundation
-of Lübeck,
-1140-1158.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Twice founded, the
-second time by Henry the Lion Duke of Saxony,
-it gradually became the leading member of the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span>
-merchant League.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Hanse
-Towns.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south of these lands come
-those Slavonic lands which have grown into the modern
-kingdom of Saxony and the central parts of the
-modern kingdom of Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Marchlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were specially
-marchlands, a name which some of them have kept
-down to our own day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Brandenburg.<br />
-Lausitz.<br />
-Meissen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The mark of <i>Brandenburg</i> in
-its various divisions,
-the mark of <i>Lausitz</i> or <i>Lusatia</i>,
-where a Slavonic remnant still lingers,
-and the mark of <i>Meissen</i>, long preserved the memory of the times
-when these lands, which afterwards came to play so
-great a part in the internal history of Germany, were
-still outlying and precarious possessions of the German
-realm.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">To the south-east lay the <i>Bohemian</i> lands, whose
-history has been somewhat different.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia a
-fief, 928.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy, afterwards
-kingdom, of <i>Bohemia</i>, became, early in the tenth
-century, a fief of the German kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Becomes a
-kingdom,
-1198.<br />
-1003.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From that time
-ever afterwards, save during one moment of passing
-Polish annexation, it remained one of its principal members,
-ruled, as long as the Empire lasted, by princes
-holding electoral rank. The boundaries of the kingdom
-itself have hardly varied at all.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Moravia.<br />
-1019.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dependent marchland
-of <i>Moravia</i> to the east, the remnant of the great
-Moravian kingdom whose history will come more fittingly
-in another chapter, fluctuated for a long while
-between Hungarian, Polish, and Bohemian supremacy.
-But from the early part of the eleventh century it
-remained under Bohemian rule, and therefore under
-Imperial superiority.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>More distant
-Slavonic
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the east of this nearer zone
-of Slavonic dependencies, lay another range of Slavonic
-states, some of which were gradually incorporated
-with the German kingdom, while others remained
-distinct down to modern times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pomerania.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Pomerania</i> on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
-Baltic coast is a name which has often changed both
-its geographical extent and its political allegiance.
-The eastern part of the land now so called lay
-open, as will be hereafter seen, to the occupation of
-the Pole, and its western part to that of the Dane.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Native
-princes
-go on.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in the end it took its place on the map in
-the form of two duchies, ruled, like Mecklenburg, by
-native princes under Imperial supremacy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Polish
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-South of
-Pomerania, the German march bordered on the growing
-power of <i>Poland</i>, and between Poland and Hungary
-lay the northern <i>Croatia</i> or <i>Chrobatia</i>. The
-German supremacy seems sometimes to have been
-extended as far as the Wartha, and, in the Chrobatian
-land, even beyond the Vistula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occasional
-homage of
-the Polish
-kings.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this occupation was
-quite momentary; Poland grew up, like Hungary, as
-a kingdom, some of whose dukes and kings admitted
-the Imperial supremacy, but which gradually became
-wholly independent.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Silesia
-Polish, 999.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The border province of <i>Silesia</i>,
-after some fluctuations between Bohemia and Poland,
-became definitely Polish at the end of the tenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemian,
-1289-1327.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Afterwards it was divided into several principalities,
-whose dukes passed under Bohemian vassalage,
-and so became members of the Empire. Thus in the
-course of some ages, a boundary was drawn between
-Germany and Poland which lasted down to modern
-times.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extension
-of the Empire
-to the
-east.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The result of this survey is to show how great, and
-at the same time how gradual, was the extension of
-the German power eastward. A Roman Empire with
-a long Baltic coast was something that had never been
-dreamed of in earlier days.
-If the extension of the
-German name was but the recovery of long lost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span>
-Teutonic lands, the extension to them of the Imperial
-name which had become identified with Germany
-was at least wholly new.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Slavonic
-lands
-Germanized.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In all the lands
-now annexed, save in a few exceptional districts,
-German annexation meant German colonization, and
-the assimilation of the surviving inhabitants to the
-speech and manners of Germany. Colonists were
-brought, specially from the Frisian lands, by whose
-means the Low-Dutch tongue was spread along the
-whole southern coast of the Baltic. German cities were
-founded. The marchlands grew into powerful German
-states. At last one of these marchlands, united with
-a German conquest still further cut off from the heart
-of the old German realm, has grown into a state which
-in our own days has become the Imperial power of
-Germany.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Internal
-geography
-of Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The internal geography of the German kingdom is
-the greatest difficulty of such a work as the present. To
-trace the boundaries of the kingdom as against other
-kingdoms is comparatively easy; but to trace out the
-endless shiftings, the unions and the divisions, of the
-countless small principalities and commonwealths which
-arose within the kingdom, would be a hopeless attempt.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the principalities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Still the growth of the dukes, counts, and other princes
-of Germany into independent sovereigns is the great
-feature of German history, as the consequent wiping
-out of old divisions, and shifting to and fro of old names,
-is the special feature of German historical geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes in
-nomenclature.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dying out of the old names has a historical
-interest, and the growth of the new powers which
-have supplanted them has both an historical and a
-political interest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-Prussia and
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is specially important to mark<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></span>
-how the two powers which have stood at the head of
-Germany in modern times in no way represent any of
-the old divisions of the German name. They have
-grown out of the outlying <i>marks</i> planted against the
-Slave and the Magyar. The mark of <i>Brandenburg</i>, the
-mark against the Slave, has grown into the kingdom of
-<i>Prussia</i>, the Imperial state of Germany in its latest
-form. The <i>Eastern</i> mark, the mark against the Magyar,
-has grown into the archduchy which gave Germany so
-many kings, into the so-called Austrian ‘empire,’ into
-the Austro-Hungarian monarchy of our own day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogies
-between
-Brandenburg
-and
-other
-marchlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-growth of Brandenburg or Prussia again affords an
-instructive comparison with the growth of Wessex in
-England, of France in Gaul, and of Castile in Spain.
-In all these cases alike, it has been a marchland
-which has come to the front and has become the head
-of the united nation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The great
-Duchies
-under the
-Saxon and
-Frankish
-Kings, 919-1125.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Starting from the division of 887, we shall find
-several important landmarks in the history of the
-German kingdom which may help us in this most
-difficult part of our work. Under the Saxon and
-Frankish kings we see the great duchies still forming
-the main divisions, while the kingdom is enlarged by
-Slavonic conquests to the east and by the definite adhesion
-of Lotharingia to the west.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline of
-the Duchies
-under the
-Swabian
-Kings,
-1137-1254.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under the Swabian
-kings we see the break-up of the great duchies. In
-the partition of Saxony the process which was everywhere
-silently and gradually at work was formally
-carried out in the greatest case of all by Imperial,
-and national authority.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>End of the
-<i>Gauverfassung</i>.<br />
-Growth of
-territorial
-Principalities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Gauverfassung</i>, the immemorial
-system of Teutonic communities, now finally
-changes into a system of territorial principalities, broken
-only by the many free cities and the few free districts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span>
-which owned no lord but the King.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the march
-powers.
-1254-1512.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During this period
-too we see the beginnings of some of the powers which
-became chief at a later day, the powers of the eastern
-marchland, <i>Brandenburg</i>, <i>Austria</i>, <i>Saxony</i> in the later
-sense. The time from the so-called <i>Interregnum</i> to the
-legislation under Maximilian is marked by the further
-growth of these powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the House
-of Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is further marked by the
-beginning of that connexion of the Austrian duchy, and
-of the Imperial crown itself, with lands beyond the
-bounds of the Kingdom and the Empire which led in
-the end to the special and anomalous position of the
-House of Austria as an European power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of Switzerland,
-1495-1648.<br />
-Of the Netherlands,
-1430-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the
-same period comes the practical separation of <i>Switzerland</i>
-and the <i>Netherlands</i> from the German kingdom.
-In short it was during this age that Germany in its later
-aspect was formed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Legislation
-under Maximilian,
-1495-1512.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The legislation of Maximilian’s reign,
-the attempts then made to bring the kingdom to a greater
-degree of unity, have left their mark on geography
-in the division of Germany into <i>circles</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division
-into circles,
-1500-1512.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This division,
-though it was not perfectly complete, though it did not
-extend to every corner of the kingdom, was strictly an
-administrative division of the kingdom itself as such;
-but the mapping out of the circles, the difference of which
-in point of size is remarkable, was itself affected by the
-geographical extent of the dominions of the princes who
-held lands within them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Thirty
-Years’ War,
-1618-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The seventeenth century is
-marked by the results of the Thirty Years’ War and of
-other changes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Powers
-holding
-lands within
-and without
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its most important geographical result
-was to carry on the process which had begun with the
-Austrian House, the formation of powers holding lands
-both within and without the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria.<br />
-Sweden.<br />
-Union of
-Brandenburg
-and
-Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus, beside
-the union of the Hungarian kingdom with the Austrian
-archduchy, the King of Sweden now held lands as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span>
-prince of the Empire, and the same result was brought
-about in another way by the union of the Electorate of
-Brandenburg with the Duchy of Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry of
-Prussia and
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This, and
-other accessions of territory, now made Brandenburg
-as distinctly the first power of northern Germany as
-Austria was of southern Germany, and in the eighteenth
-century the rivalry of these two powers becomes the
-chief centre, not only of German but of European politics.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hannover
-and Great
-Britain,
-1715.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of the Electorate of Hannover under the
-same sovereign with the kingdom of Great Britain
-further increased the number of princes ruling both
-within Germany and without it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dissolution
-of the Kingdom,
-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, the wars of
-the latter years of the eighteenth and the beginning of
-the nineteenth century led to the dissolution alike of
-the German kingdom and of the Roman Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The German
-Confederation,
-1815-1866.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then, after a time of confusion and foreign occupation,
-comes the formation of a Confederation with boundaries
-nearly the same as the later boundaries of the kingdom.
-But the Confederation now appears as something quite
-subordinate to its two leading members.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria and
-Prussia
-greater
-than the
-Confederation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Germany, as
-such, no longer counts as a great European power,
-but Prussia and Austria, the two chief holders at
-once of German and of non-German lands, stand forth
-among the chief bearers of European rank.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The new
-Confederation
-and
-Empire,
-1866-1870.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, the
-changes of our own day have given us an Imperial
-Germany with geographical boundaries altogether new,
-a Germany from which the south-eastern German lands
-are cut off, while the Polish and other non-German
-possessions of Prussia to the north-east have become
-an integral part of the new Empire. The task of the
-geographer is thereby greatly simplified. Down to the
-last changes, one of his greatest difficulties is to make
-his map show with any clearness what was the extent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
-of the German Kingdom or Confederation, and at the
-same time what was the extent of the dominions of
-those princes who held lands both in Germany and out
-of it. By the last arrangements this difficulty at least
-is altogether taken away.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germany
-under the
-Saxon and
-Frankish
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>If we look at the map of Germany under the Saxon
-and Frankish Kings, we see that the old names, marking
-the great divisions of the German people, still keep
-their predominance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The great
-Duchies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom is still made up of
-the four great duchies, the Eastern <i>Francia</i>, <i>Saxony</i>,
-<i>Alemannia</i>, and <i>Bavaria</i>, together with the great
-border-land of <i>Lotharingia</i>. These are still the great
-duchies, to which all smaller divisions are subordinate.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-Francia cut
-off from extension.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among these, the kernel of the kingdom, the Eastern
-<i>Francia</i>, is the only one whose boundaries had little
-or no chance of being extended or lessened at the cost
-of foreign powers. It had the smallest possible frontier
-towards the Slave.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frontier
-position of
-Saxony,
-Bavaria,
-and Alemannia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the other hand, <i>Saxony</i> has an
-ever fluctuating boundary against the Slave and the
-Dane; <i>Bavaria</i> marches upon the Slave, the Magyar,
-and the Kingdom of Italy, while <i>Alemannia</i> has a
-shifting frontier towards both Burgundy and Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Exposed
-position of
-Lotharingia
-and Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lotharingia, and Burgundy after its annexation, are the
-lands which lie exposed to aggression from the West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vanishing
-of Francia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is perhaps for this very reason that, of the four
-duchies which preserve the names of the four great
-divisions of the German nation, the Eastern Francia is
-the one which has most utterly vanished from the
-modern map and from modern memory. Another
-cause may have strengthened its tendency to vanish.
-The policy of the kings forbade that the Frankish duchy
-should become the abiding heritage of any princely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span>
-family.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its ecclesiastical
-Dukes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ducal title of the Eastern Francia was at
-two periods of its history borne by ecclesiastical princes
-in the persons of the Bishops of <i>Würzburg</i>; but it never
-gave its name, like Saxony and Bavaria, to any ruling
-house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogy
-with
-Wessex.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The English student will notice the analogy
-by which, among all the ancient English kingdoms,
-Wessex, the cradle of the English monarchy, is the one
-whose name has most utterly vanished from modern
-memory.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">The only way to grasp the endless shiftings and
-divisions of the German principalities, so as to give
-anything like a clear general view, will be to take the
-great duchies, and to point out in a general way the
-steps by which they split asunder, and the chief states
-of any historical importance which rose out of their
-divisions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-new powers
-in the
-twelfth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Most of these new powers begin to be of
-importance in the twelfth century, a time which is
-specially marked as the æra when those two states
-which have had most to do with the making or unmaking
-of modern Germany begin to find their place
-in history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Brandenburg
-and
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is then that the two great marchlands
-of Brandenburg and Austria begin to take their place
-among the leading powers of the German kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Circles.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, in making this survey, it will be well to bear in
-mind the much later division into circles. The circles,
-an attempt to create administrative divisions of the
-kingdom as such, were, in a faint way, a return to the
-ancient duchies, the names of which were to some
-extent retained. Thus we have the two <i>Saxon</i> circles,
-<i>Upper</i> and <i>Lower</i>, and the three of <i>Franconia</i>, <i>Swabia</i>,
-and <i>Bavaria</i>. All of these keep up the names of
-ancient duchies, and most of them keep up a stronger
-or fainter geographical connexion with the ancient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">{207}</a></span>
-lands whose names they bore. The other circles, the
-two <i>Rhenish</i> circles, <i>Upper</i> and <i>Lower</i>, and those of
-<i>Westfalia</i>, <i>Austria</i>, and <i>Burgundy</i>—the last name being
-used in a sense altogether new—arose out of changes
-which took place between the twelfth and fifteenth
-centuries, some of which we shall have to notice.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saxony; its
-three divisions,
-Westfalia,
-Angria,
-Eastfalia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>First then, the great duchy of <i>Saxony</i> consisted of
-three main divisions, <i>Westfalia</i>, <i>Engern</i> or <i>Angria</i>,
-and <i>Eastfalia</i>. <i>Thuringia</i> to the south-east, and the
-<i>Frisian</i> lands to the north-west, may be looked on as
-in some sort appendages to the Saxon duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Saxony at
-the expense
-of the
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-duchy was also capable of any amount of extension
-towards the east, and the lands gradually won from
-the Wends on this side were all looked on as additions
-made to the Saxon territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up of
-the Duchy,
-1182-1191.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the great Saxon
-duchy was broken up at the fall of Henry the Lion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Westfalia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The archiepiscopal Electors of <i>Köln</i> received the title of
-Dukes of <i>Westfalia</i> and <i>Engern</i>. But in the greater part
-of those districts the grant remained merely nominal,
-though the ducal title, with a small actual Westfalian
-duchy, remained to the electorate till the end. From
-these lands the Saxon name may be looked on as
-having altogether passed away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New use of
-the name
-<i>Saxony</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The name of <i>Saxony</i>,
-as a geographical expression, clave to the Eastfalian
-remnant of the old duchy, and to Thuringia and the
-Slavonic conquests to the east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Saxon
-Circles.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the later division
-of Germany these lands formed the two circles of <i>Upper</i>
-and <i>Lower Saxony</i>; and it was within their limits that
-the various states arose which have kept on the Saxon
-name to our own time.</p>
-
-<p>From the descendants of Henry the Lion himself,
-and from the allodial lands which they kept, the Saxon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
-name passed away, except so far as they became part
-of the Lower-Saxon circle.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Brunswick.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They held their place as
-princes of the Empire, no longer as Dukes of Saxony,
-but as Dukes of <i>Brunswick</i>, a house which gave Rome
-one Emperor and England a dynasty of kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its division,
-1203.<br />
-Lüneburg
-and Wolfenbüttel.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After
-some of the usual divisions, two Brunswick principalities
-finally took their place on the map, those of <i>Lüneburg</i>
-and <i>Wolfenbüttel</i>, the latter having the town of
-Brunswick for its capital. The Lüneburg duchy grew.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lüneburg
-acquires the
-bishoprics
-of Bremen
-and
-Verden,
-1715-1719.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Late in the seventeenth century it was raised to the
-electoral rank, and early in the next century it was
-finally enlarged by the acquisition of the bishoprics
-of <i>Bremen</i> and <i>Verden</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Electorate
-of Hannover
-or Brunswick
-Lüneburg,
-1692.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus was formed the Electorate,
-and afterwards Kingdom, of <i>Hannover</i>, while the
-simple ducal title remained with the Brunswick princes
-of the other line.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The new
-Saxony.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The Saxon name itself withdrew in the end from
-the old Saxony to the lands conquered from the Slave.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bernhard
-duke of
-Saxony,
-1180-1212.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the fall of Henry the Lion, the duchy of Saxony,
-cut short by the grant to the archbishops of Köln, was
-granted to Bernhard of Ballensted, the founder of the
-Ascanian House.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sachsen-Lauenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the older Saxon land his house
-kept only for a while the small district north of the
-Elbe which kept the name of <i>Sachsen-Lauenburg</i>, and
-which in the end became part of the Hannover electorate.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1423.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was in Thuringia and the conquered
-Slavonic lands to the east of Thuringia that a new
-Saxony arose, which kept on somewhat of the European
-position of the Saxon name down to modern times.
-This new Saxony, with Wittenberg for its capital,
-grew, through the addition of <i>Thuringia</i> and <i>Meissen</i>,
-into the Saxon Electorate which played so great a
-part during the three last centuries of the existence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span>
-of the German kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Divisions
-and unions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in Saxony too the
-usual divisions took place. Lauenburg parted off; so
-did the smaller duchies which still keep the Saxon name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1547.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ducal and electoral dignities were divided, till
-the two, united under the famous Maurice, formed the
-Saxon electorate as it stood at the dissolution of the
-kingdom. It was in short a new state, one which had
-succeeded to the name, but which could in no other
-way be thought to represent, the Saxony whose conquest
-cost so many campaigns to Charles the Great.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Mark
-of Brandenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Another power which arose in the marchland of
-Saxon and Slave, to the north of Saxony in the later
-sense, was the land known specially as the <i>Mark</i>, the
-groundwork of the power which has in our own day
-risen to the head of Germany. The <i>North Mark</i> of
-Saxony became the <i>Mark of Brandenburg</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Albert the
-Bear, 1134-1170.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the
-twelfth and thirteenth centuries, under Albert the Bear
-and his house, the Mark greatly extended itself at the
-expense of the Slaves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union with
-Bohemia,
-1373-1415.<br />
-House of
-Hohenzollern,
-1415.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-United for a time with the
-kingdom of Bohemia, it passed into the house of the
-Burgraves of <i>Nürnberg</i>, that House of Hohenzollern
-which has grown step by step till it has reached Imperial
-rank in our own day. The power thus formed
-presently acquired a special character by the acquisition
-of what may be called a German land out of
-Germany, a land which gave them in the end a
-higher title, and which by its geographical position led
-irresistibly to a further increase of territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Brandenburg
-and
-Prussia,
-1611-1618.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Early in
-the seventeenth century the Electors of Brandenburg
-acquired by inheritance the <i>Duchy of Prussia</i>, that is
-merely Eastern Prussia, a fief, not of the Empire but of
-the crown of Poland, and which lay geographically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-apart from their strictly German dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussia independent
-of Poland,
-1656; becomes
-kingdom,
-1701.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The common
-sovereign of Brandenburg and Prussia was thus
-the man of two lords; but the Great Elector Frederick
-William became a wholly independent sovereign in his
-duchy, and his son Frederick took on himself the kingly
-title for the land which was thus freed from all homage.
-Both before and after the union with Prussia, the Electors
-of Brandenburg continued largely to increase their German
-dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1523-1623.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A temporary possession of the principality
-of <i>Jägerndorf</i> in Silesia, unimportant in itself, led
-to great events in later times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Westfalian
-possessions
-of Brandenburg,
-1614-1666.<br />
-1702-1744.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The acquisition, at various
-times in the seventeenth century, of <i>Cleve</i> and other
-outlying Westfalian lands, which were further increased
-in the next century, led in the same way to the modern
-dominion of Prussia in western Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisitions
-in
-Pomerania,
-1638-1648.<br />
-1713-1719.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the most
-solid acquisition of Brandenburg in this age was that of
-<i>Eastern Pomerania</i>, to which the town of Stettin, with
-a further increase of territory, was added after the wars
-of Charles the Twelfth of Sweden. The events of the
-Thirty Years’ War also increased the dominions both of
-Brandenburg and Saxony at the expense of the neighbouring
-ecclesiastical princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later acquisitions
-of
-Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The later acquisitions of
-the House of Hohenzollern, after the Electors of Brandenburg
-had taken the kingly title from their Prussian
-duchy, concern Prussia as an European power at least as
-much as they concern Brandenburg as a German power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-character of
-the Prussian
-Monarchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Yet their proper place comes in the history of Germany.
-Unlike the other princes who held lands within and
-without the German kingdom, the Kings of Prussia
-and Electors of Brandenburg have remained essentially
-German princes. Their acquisitions of territory out of
-Germany have all been in fact enlargements, if not of
-the soil of Germany, at least of the sphere of German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
-influence. And, at last, in marked contrast to the fate
-of the rival House of Austria, the whole Prussian dominions
-have been incorporated with the new German
-Empire, and form the immediate dominion of its Imperial
-head.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spread of
-the name of
-<i>Prussia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The outward sign of this change, the
-outward sign of the special position of Brandenburg, as
-compared with Holstein or Austria, is the strange
-spread of the name of <i>Prussia</i> over the German dominions
-of the King of Prussia. No such spread has
-taken place with the name of Denmark or of Hungary.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Silesia,
-1741.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Within Germany the greatest enlargement of the
-dominion of Prussia—as we may now begin to call it
-instead of Brandenburg—was the acquisition of by far
-the greater part of <i>Schlesien</i> or <i>Silesia</i>, hitherto part of
-the Bohemian lands, and then held by the House of
-Austria. This, it should be noted, was an acquisition
-which could hardly fail to lead to further acquisitions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-character
-of the
-Prussian
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The geographical characteristic of the Prussian dominions
-was the way in which they lay in detached
-pieces, and the enormous extent of frontier as compared
-with the area of the country. The kingdom
-itself lay detached, hemmed in and intersected by the
-territory of Poland. The electorate, with the Pomeranian
-territory, formed a somewhat more compact
-mass; but even this had a very large frontier compared
-with its area. The Westfalian possessions, the
-district of <i>Cottbus</i>, and other outlying dominions, lay
-quite apart. The addition of Silesia increased this characteristic
-yet further.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Silesia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The newly won duchy, barely
-joining the electorate, ran out as a kind of peninsula
-between Saxony, Bohemia, and Poland. Silesia, first as
-a Polish and then as a Bohemian fief, had formed
-part of a fairly compact geographical mass; as part of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
-the same dominion with Prussia and Brandenburg, it
-was an all but isolated land with an enormous frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisitions
-from
-Poland,
-1772-1795.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The details of the Polish acquisitions of Prussia will be
-best given in our survey of Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their geographical
-character.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it should be
-noted that each of the portions of territory which were
-added to Prussia by the several partitions has a geographical
-character of its own.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1772.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The addition of <i>West-Prussia</i>—that
-is the geographical union of the kingdom
-and the electorate—was something which could not
-fail in the nature of things to come sooner or later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1793.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The second addition of <i>South-Prussia</i> might seem geographically
-needed in order to leave Silesia no longer
-peninsular.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1795.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last, and most short-lived addition of
-<i>New-East-Prussia</i> had no such geographical necessity
-as the other two. Still it helped to give greater compactness
-to the kingdom, and to lessen its frontier in
-comparison with its area.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">Another acquisition of the House of Hohenzollern
-during the eighteenth century, though temporary, deserves
-a passing notice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>East-Friesland,
-1744.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among its Westfalian annexations
-was <i>East-Friesland</i>. The King of Prussia thus
-became, during the last half of the eighteenth century,
-an oceanic potentate, a character which he presently
-lost, and which, save for a moment in the days of confusion,
-he obtained again only in our own day.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Parts of
-Saxony held
-by foreign
-kings.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>A large part of Saxony, both in the older and in the
-later sense, thus came to form part of a dominion containing
-both German and non-German lands, but in
-which the German character was in every way predominant.
-Other parts of Saxony in the same extended
-sense also came to form part of the dominions
-of princes who ruled both in and out of Germany, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>
-in whom the non-German character was yet more
-predominant.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holstein:<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The old <i>Saxony beyond the Elbe</i>, the
-modern <i>Holstein</i>, passed into the hands of the Danish
-Kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>its relation
-to Sleswick.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its shifting relations towards Denmark and
-Germany and towards the neighbouring land of <i>Sleswick</i>,
-as having become matter of international dispute
-between Denmark and Germany, will be best spoken
-of when we come to deal with Denmark. The events
-of the Thirty Years’ War also made the Swedish
-kings for a while considerable potentates in northern
-Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German territories
-of
-Sweden,
-1648-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Peace of Westfalia confirmed to them
-<i>Western Pomerania</i> and the town of <i>Wismar</i> on the
-Baltic, and the bishoprics of <i>Bremen</i> and <i>Verden</i> which
-gave them an oceanic coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1720.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But these last lands were,
-as we have seen afterwards, ceded to Hannover, and
-the Pomeranian possessions of Sweden were also cut
-short by cession to Brandenburg. But the possession
-of Wismar and a part of Pomerania still gave the
-Swedish kings a position as German princes down to
-the dissolution of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">These are the chief powers which rose to historical
-importance within the bounds of Saxony, in the widest
-sense of that word. To trace every division and union
-which created or extinguished any of the smaller principalities,
-or even to mark every minute change of
-frontier among the greater powers, would be impossible.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Free cities
-of Saxony.<br />
-The Hanse
-Towns.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it must be further remembered that the Saxon
-circles were the seats of some of the greatest of the free
-cities of Germany, the leading members of the Hanseatic
-League. In the growth of German commerce the
-Rhenish lands took the lead, and, in the earliest days
-of the Hansa, <i>Köln</i> held the first place among its cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lübeck,
-Bremen,
-Hamburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The pre-eminence afterwards passed to havens nearer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>
-to the Ocean and the Baltic, where, among a crowd of
-others, the Imperial cities of <i>Lübeck</i> and <i>Bremen</i> stand
-out foremost, and with them <i>Hamburg</i>, a rival which
-has in later times outstripped them. And at this point
-it may be noticed that Lübeck and Bremen specially
-illustrate a law which extended to many other of the
-episcopal cities of Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The cities
-and the
-bishoprics.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bishop became a
-prince, and held a greater or smaller extent of territory
-in temporal sovereignty. But the city which contained
-his see remained independent of him in temporal things,
-and knew him only as its spiritual shepherd. Such were
-the archbishopric of Bremen and the bishopric of Lübeck,
-principalities which, after the change of religion,
-passed into secular hands. Thus we have seen the archbishopric
-of Bremen pass, first to Sweden, and then to
-Hannover. But the two cities always remained independent
-commonwealths, owning no superior but the
-Emperor.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Franconia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The next among the great duchies, that of <i>Eastern
-Francia</i>, <i>Franken</i>, or <i>Franconia</i>, is of much less importance
-in European history than that of Saxony.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bishops of
-Würzburg
-Dukes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It
-gave the ducal title to the Bishops of Würzburg; but
-it cannot be said to be in any sense continued in
-any modern state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Circle.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its name gradually retreated, and
-the circle of <i>Franken</i> or <i>Franconia</i> took in only the
-most eastern part of the ancient duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Rhenish
-Circles.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The western
-and northern part of the duchy, together with a good
-deal of territory which was strictly Lotharingian, became
-part of the two Rhenish circles. Thus <i>Fulda</i>, the
-greatest of German abbeys, passed away from the
-Frankish name. In north-eastern Francia, the <i>Hessian</i>
-principalities grew up to the north-west. Within the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-Franconian circle lay <i>Würzburg</i>, the see of the bishops
-who bore the ducal title, the other great bishopric
-of <i>Bamberg</i>, together with the free city of <i>Nürnberg</i>,
-and various smaller principalities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ecclesiastical
-States
-on the
-Rhine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the Rhenish
-lands, both within and without the old Francia, one
-chief characteristic is the predominance of the ecclesiastical
-principalities, <i>Mainz</i>, <i>Köln</i>, <i>Worms</i>, <i>Speyer</i>, and
-<i>Strassburg</i>. The chief temporal power which arose in
-this region was the <i>Palatinate of the Rhine</i>, a power
-which, like others, went through many unions and divisions,
-and spread into four circles, those of Upper and
-Lower Rhine, Westfalia, and Bavaria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bavaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last district,
-though united with the Palatine Electorate, was, from
-the early part of the fourteenth century, distinguished
-from the Palatinate of the Rhine as the <i>Oberpfalz</i> or
-<i>Upper Palatinate</i>. To the south of it lay the <i>Bavarian</i>
-principalities. These, united into a single duchy, formed
-the power which grew into the modern kingdom. But
-neither this duchy nor the whole Bavarian circle at all
-reached to the extent of the ancient Bavaria which
-bordered on Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Shiftings
-between
-Bavaria and
-the Palatinate,
-1623.<br />
-Electorate
-of Bavaria,
-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The early stages of the Thirty
-Years’ War gave the Rhenish Palatinate, with its electoral
-rights, to Bavaria; the Peace of Westfalia restored
-the Palatinate, leaving Bavaria as a new electorate.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of the
-two, 1777.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Late in the eighteenth century, Bavaria itself passed to
-the Elector Palatine, thus forming what may be called
-modern Bavaria with its outlying Rhenish lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession to
-Austria,
-1778.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-acquisition was at the same time partly balanced by the
-cession to Austria of the lands east of the Inn, known
-as the <i>Innviertel</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Archbishopric
-of
-Salzburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other chief state within the
-Bavarian circle was the great ecclesiastical principality
-of the archbishops of <i>Salzburg</i> in the extreme south-east.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lotharingia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The old <i>Lotharingian</i> divisions, as we see them in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
-the time of the great duchies, utterly died out.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lower Lotharingia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The states which arose in the <i>Lower Lotharingia</i> are among
-those which silently fell off from the German Kingdom
-to take a special position under the name of the <i>Netherlands</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Lothringen
-or Lorraine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The special duchy of <i>Lothringen</i> or <i>Lorraine</i> was
-held to belong to the circle of Upper Rhine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Elsass.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Elsass</i> also
-formed part of the same circle, the circle which was
-specially cut short by the encroachments of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Circle of
-Swabia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Swabian</i> circle answered more nearly than most
-of the new divisions to the old Swabian duchy, as that
-duchy stood without counting the marchland of Elsass.
-No part of Germany was more cut up into small states
-than the old land of the Hohenstaufen. A crowd of
-principalities, secular and ecclesiastical, among them
-the lesser principalities of the Hohenzollern House,
-of free cities, and of outlying possessions of the houses
-of Austria made up the main part of the circle.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ecclesiastical
-towns of
-Swabia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Strassburg</i>, <i>Augsburg</i>, <i>Constanz</i>, <i>St. Gallen</i>, <i>Chur</i>, <i>Zürich</i>,
-are among the great bishoprics and other ecclesiastical
-foundations of the old Swabia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Part of
-Swabia becomes
-Switzerland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as I shall
-show more fully in another section, large districts in the
-south-east, those which formed the <i>Old League of High
-Germany</i>, had practically fallen away from the kingdom
-before the new division was made, and were therefore
-never reckoned in any circle.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Baden.<br />
-Württemberg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Two Swabian principalities,
-the mark of <i>Baden</i>, and <i>Württemberg</i>, first county
-and then duchy, came gradually to the first place in
-this region. As such they still remain, preserving in
-some sort a divided representation of the old Swabia.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Two important parts of the old kingdom, two circles
-of the division of Maximilian, still remain. These are
-the lands which form the circles of <i>Burgundy</i> and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
-<i>Austria</i>. These are lands which have, in earlier or
-later times, wholly fallen off from the German Kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Circle of
-<i>Austria</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Austrian</i> circle was formed of the lands in
-southern Germany which gradually gathered in the
-hands of the second Austrian dynasty, the House
-of Habsburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the House
-of Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Starting from the original mark on the
-Hungarian frontier, those lands grew, first into a great
-German, and then into a great European, power, and
-the latest changes have made even their German lands
-politically non-German. The growth of the Austrian
-House will therefore be properly dealt with in a separate
-section.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-its German
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is enough to say here that the Austrian
-dominion in Germany gradually took in, besides the
-original duchy, the south-eastern duchies of <i>Steiermark</i>
-or <i>Styria</i>, <i>Kärnthen</i> or <i>Carinthia</i>, and <i>Krain</i> or <i>Carniola</i>,
-with the Italian borderlands of <i>Görz</i>, <i>Aquileia</i>, and part
-of <i>Istria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tyrol.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Joined to these by a kind of geographical
-isthmus, like that which joins Silesia and Brandenburg,
-lay the western possessions of the house, the Bavarian
-county of <i>Tyrol</i> and various outlying strips and points
-of lands in <i>Swabia</i> and <i>Elsass</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Swabian
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The growth of the
-Confederates cut short the Swabian possessions of Austria,
-as the later cession to France cut short its Alsatian
-possessions. Still a Swabian remnant remained down
-to the dissolution of the Kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia
-and its dependencies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom of
-<i>Bohemia</i>, with the dependent lands of Moravia and <i>Silesia</i>,
-though held by the Archdukes of Austria and
-giving them electoral rank, was not included in any
-German circle.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Trent and
-Brixen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Austrian circle moreover was not
-wholly made up of the dominions of the Austrian house;
-besides some smaller territories it also took in the
-bishoprics of <i>Trent</i> and <i>Brixen</i> on the debateable frontier
-of Italy and old Bavaria.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Circle of
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The <i>Burgundian</i> circle was the last and the strangest
-use of the Burgundian name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion of
-the Valois
-Dukes
-within the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It consisted of those
-parts of the dominions of the Dukes of Burgundy of the
-House of Valois which remained to their descendants
-of the House of Austria at the time of the division into
-circles. These did not all lie strictly within the boundaries
-of the German kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Imperial
-Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within that kingdom
-indeed lay the Northern Netherlands, the Frisian
-lands of <i>Holland</i>, <i>Zealand</i>, and <i>West-Friesland</i>, as also
-<i>Brabant</i> and other Lotharingian lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the circle
-also took in the <i>County of Burgundy or Franche
-Comté</i>, part of the old kingdom of Burgundy, and lastly
-<i>Flanders</i> and <i>Artois</i>, lands beyond the bounds of the
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Flanders
-and Artois
-released
-from
-homage to
-France,
-1526.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were fiefs of France which were released
-from their homage to that crown by the treaty between
-Charles the Fifth and Francis the First of France. The
-Burgundian circle thus took in all the Imperial fiefs of
-the Valois dukes, together with a small part of their
-French fiefs. As all, or nearly all, of these lands
-altogether fell away from the German kingdom, and as
-those parts of them which now form the two kingdoms
-of the Low Countries have a certain historical being of
-their own, it will be well to keep their more detailed
-mention also for a special section.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Confederation and Empire of Germany.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germany
-changed
-from a
-kingdom to
-a confederation.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-
-<p>Our survey in the last section has carried us down
-to the beginning of the changes which led to the break-up
-of the old German Kingdom. Germany is the
-only land in history which has changed from a
-kingdom to a confederation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sketch of
-the process,
-1806-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The tie which bound
-the vassal princes to the king became so lax that it
-was at last thrown off altogether. In this process<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span>
-foreign invasion largely helped. Between the two processes
-of foreign war and domestic disintegration, a
-chaotic time followed, in which boundaries were ever
-shifting and new states were ever rising and falling.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The German
-<i>Bund</i>,
-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the end, nearly all the lands which had formed the
-old kingdom came together again, with new names and
-boundaries, as members of a lax Confederation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The new
-Confederation
-and
-Empire,
-1866-1871.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-latest events of all have driven the former chief of the
-Confederation beyond its boundaries; they have joined its
-other members together by a much closer tie; they have
-raised the second member of the former Confederation
-to the post of perpetual chief of the new Confederation,
-and they have further clothed him with the Imperial
-title.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The new
-Empire
-still federal.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it must be remembered that the modern
-Empire of Germany is still a Federal state. Its chief
-bears the title of Emperor; still the relation is federal
-and not feudal. The lesser members of the Empire
-are not vassals of the Emperor, as they were in the days
-of the old kingdom. They are states bound to him and
-to one another by a tie which is purely federal. That
-the state whose prince holds Imperial rank far surpasses
-any of its other members in extent and power
-is an important political fact; but it does not touch the
-federal position of all the states of the Empire, great
-and small. Reuss-Schleiz is not a vassal of Prussia; it
-is a member of a league in which the voice of Prussia
-naturally goes for more than the voice of Reuss-Schleiz.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars of the
-French
-Revolution,
-1793-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dissolution of the German kingdom, and with it
-the wiping out of the last tradition of the Roman Empire,
-cannot be separated from the history of wars of the
-French Revolution which went before it, and which
-indeed led to it. For our purely geographical purpose,
-we must distinguish the changes which directly affected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
-the German kingdom from those which affected the
-Austrian states, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, lands
-which have now a separate historic being from Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>War between
-France and
-the Empire,
-1793-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last war which the Empire as such waged with
-France was the eight years’ war which was ended by the
-Peace of Luneville.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The left
-bank of the
-Rhine ceded
-by the
-Peace of
-Luneville,
-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By that peace, all Germany on the
-left bank on the Rhine was ceded to France. What a
-sacrifice this was we at once see, when we bear in mind
-that it took in the three metropolitan cities of Köln,
-Mainz, and Trier, the royal city of Aachen, and the
-famous bishoprics of Worms and Speyer.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The <i>Reichs&shy;deputations&shy;haupt&shy;schluss</i>,
-1803.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A number
-of princes thus lost all or part of their dominions, and
-it was presently agreed that they should compensate
-themselves within the lands which remained to the
-kingdom at the expense of the free cities and the ecclesiastical
-princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>End of the
-Ecclesiastical
-principalities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great German hierarchy of
-princely bishops and abbots now came to an end, with
-a solitary exception.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Prince-Primate
-of
-Regensburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the ancient metropolis of
-Mainz had passed to France, the see of its archbishop
-was removed to <i>Regensburg</i>, where, under the title
-of <i>Prince-Primate</i>, he remained an Elector and Arch-Chancellor
-of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Salzburg a
-secular
-electorate.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Salzburg</i> became a secular
-electorate.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Free
-Cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other ecclesiastical states were annexed
-by the neighbouring princes, and of the free
-cities six only were left. These were the Hanseatic
-towns of <i>Lübeck</i>, <i>Bremen</i>, and <i>Hamburg</i>, and the inland
-towns of <i>Frankfurt</i>, <i>Nürnberg</i>, and <i>Augsburg</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New Electorates.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides
-Salzburg, three new Electorates arose, <i>Württemberg</i>,
-<i>Baden</i>, and <i>Hessen-Cassel</i>. None of these new Electors
-ever chose any King or Emperor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Pressburg,
-1805.<br />
-Kingdom of
-Württemberg
-and
-Bavaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next war led
-to the Peace of Pressburg, in which the Electors of
-Bavaria, Württemberg, and Baden appear as allies of
-France, and by which those of Bavaria and Württemberg<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-are acknowledged as Kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>They divide
-the western
-lands of
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Austria was now wholly
-cut off from south-western Germany. Württemberg and
-Baden divided her Swabian possessions, while Tyrol,
-Trent, Brixen, together with the free city of Augsburg,
-fell to the lot of Bavaria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grand
-Duchy of
-Würzburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Austria received Salzburg; its
-prince removed himself and his electorate to Würzburg,
-and a <i>Grand Duchy of Würzburg</i> was formed to
-compensate its Elector.</p>
-
-<p>These were the last changes which took place while
-any shadow of the old Kingdom and Empire lasted.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Title of
-‘Emperor of
-Austria.’<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The reigning King of Germany and Emperor-elect,
-Francis King of Hungary and Bohemia and Archduke
-of Austria, had already begun to call himself ‘<i>Hereditary
-Emperor of Austria</i>.’ In the treaty of Pressburg
-he is described by the strange title, unheard of before
-or after, of ‘Emperor of Germany and Austria,’ and
-the Empire itself is spoken of as a ‘Germanic Confederation.’
-These formulæ were prophetic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Confederation
-of
-the Rhine,
-July 12,
-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next year
-a crowd of princes renounced their allegiance, and formed
-themselves into the <i>Confederation of the Rhine</i> under
-the protectorate of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dissolution
-of the Empire,
-August
-6, 1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The formal dissolution of
-the Empire followed at once. The succession which
-had gone on from Augustus ended; the work of Charles
-the Great was undone. Instead of the Frank ruling
-over Gaul, the Frenchman ruled over Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Repeated
-changes,
-1806-1811.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A time
-of confusion followed, in which boundaries were constantly
-shifting, states were constantly rising and falling,
-and new portions of German ground were being constantly
-added to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germany in
-1811-1813.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the time of the greatest
-extent of French dominion, the political state of Germany
-was on this wise.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territories
-of Denmark
-and Sweden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dissolution of the Empire
-had released all its members from their allegiance, and
-the German possessions of the Kings of Denmark and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-Sweden had been incorporated with their several kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Losses of
-Prussia and
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hannover was wholly lost to its island sovereign;
-seized and lost again more than once by Prussia and by
-France, it passed at last wholly into the hands of the
-foreign power. Prussia had lost, not only its momentary
-possession of Hannover, but also everything west of the
-Elbe. Austria had yielded <i>Salzburg</i> to Bavaria, and
-part of her own south-western territory in Krain and
-Kärnthen had passed to France under the name of the
-<i>Illyrian Provinces</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexations
-to
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France too, beside all the lands
-west of the Rhine, had incorporated <i>East Friesland</i>,
-<i>Oldenburg</i>, part of <i>Hannover</i>, and the three <i>Hanseatic</i>
-cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Confederation
-of the
-Rhine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The remaining states of Germany formed the
-<i>Confederation of the Rhine</i>. The chief among these
-were the four Kingdoms of <i>Bavaria</i>, <i>Württemberg</i>,
-<i>Saxony</i>, and <i>Westfalia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdoms
-of Saxony
-and Westfalia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Saxony had become a kingdom
-under its own Elector presently after the dissolution of
-the Empire: the new-made kingdom of Westfalia had
-a French king in Jerome Buonaparte.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grand
-Duchy of
-Frankfurt.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides <i>Mecklenburg</i>,
-<i>Baden</i>—now a Grand Duchy—<i>Berg</i>, <i>Nassau</i>,
-<i>Hessen</i>, and other smaller states, there were now among
-its members the Grand Duchy of <i>Würzburg</i>, and also a
-Grand Duchy of <i>Frankfurt</i>, the possession of the Prince
-Primate, once of Mainz, afterwards of Regensburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germany
-wiped out.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We may say with truth that during this time Germany
-had ceased to exist; its very name had vanished
-from the map of Europe.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Prussia was a power so thoroughly German that
-the fate even of its non-German possessions cannot
-well be separated from German geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom of
-Prussia cut
-short, 1807.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The same
-blow which cut short the old electorate of Brandenburg
-no less cut short the kingdom of Prussia in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span>
-its Polish acquisitions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Commonwealth
-of
-Danzig.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>West-Prussia</i> only was left,
-and even here <i>Danzig</i> was cut off to form a separate
-republic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Warsaw,
-1806-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other Polish territories of Prussia formed
-the <i>Duchy of Warsaw</i>, which was held by the new
-King of Saxony.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Silesia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Silesia thus fell back again on its
-half-isolated position, all the more so as it lay between
-the German and the Polish possessions of the
-Saxon king. The territory left to Prussia was now
-wholly continuous, without any outlying possessions;
-but the length of its frontier and the strange irregularity
-of its shape on the map were now more striking
-than ever.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The liberation of Germany and the fall of Buonaparte
-brought with it a complete reconstruction of the
-German territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The German
-Confederation,
-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Germany again arose, no longer as
-an Empire or Kingdom, but as a lax Confederation.
-Austria, the duchy whose princes had been so often
-chosen Emperors, became its presiding state. The
-boundaries of the new Confederation differed but
-slightly from those of the old Kingdom; but the internal
-divisions had greatly changed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Princes
-holding
-lands both
-within the
-Confederation
-and out
-of it.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Once more a
-number of princes held lands both in Germany and out
-of it. The so-called ‘Emperor’ of Austria, the Kings of
-Prussia, Denmark, and the Netherlands, became members
-of the Confederation for those parts of their
-dominions which had formerly been states of the
-Empire. In the like sort, the King of Great Britain
-and Ireland, having recovered his continental dominions,
-entered the Confederation by the title of <i>King of Hannover</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Hannover,
-1815-1866.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This new kingdom was made up of the former
-electorate with some additions, including <i>East-Friesland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Increase of
-the Prussian
-territory.<br />
-Dismemberment
-of
-Saxony.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In other parts the Prussian territories were largely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span>
-increased. <i>Magdeburg</i> and <i>Halberstadt</i> were recovered.
-<i>Swedish Pomerania</i> was added to the rest of the ancient
-duchy; and, more important than this, a large part of
-the kingdom of <i>Saxony</i>, including the greater part of
-<i>Lausitz</i> and the formerly outlying-land of <i>Cottbus</i>, was
-incorporated with Prussia. This change, which made
-the Saxon kingdom far smaller than the old electorate,
-altogether put an end to the peninsular position of
-Silesia, even as regarded the strictly German possessions
-of Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Posen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom was at the same time rendered
-more compact by the recovery of part of its Polish
-possessions under the name of the Grand Duchy of
-<i>Posen</i>. In western Germany again Prussia now made
-great acquisitions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rhenish
-and Westfalian
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its old outlying Rhenish and
-Westfalian possessions grew into a large and tolerably
-compact territory, though lying isolated from
-the great body of the monarchy. The greater part
-of the territory west of the Rhine which had been
-ceded to France now became Prussian, including the
-cities of <i>Köln</i>, no longer a metropolitan see, <i>Trier</i>, <i>Münster</i>,
-and <i>Paderborn</i>. The main part of the Prussian
-possessions thus consisted of two detached masses,
-of very unequal size, but which seemed to crave
-for a closer geographical union.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Neufchâtel.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Principality of
-<i>Neufchâtel</i>, which made the Prussian king a member
-of the Swiss Confederation, will be mentioned elsewhere.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territory
-recovered
-by Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of the other powers which entered the Confederation
-for the German parts of their dominions, but
-which also had territories beyond the Confederation,
-<i>Austria</i> recovered <i>Salzburg</i>, <i>Tyrol</i>, <i>Trent</i>, and <i>Brixen</i>,
-together with the south-eastern lands which had passed
-to France. Thus the territory of the Confederation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span>
-like that of the old Kingdom, again reached to the
-Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possession
-of Denmark.<br />
-Holstein
-and Lauenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Denmark</i> entered the Confederation for <i>Holstein</i>,
-and for a new possession, that of <i>Lauenburg</i>, the
-duchy which in a manner represented ancient Saxony.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Luxemburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The King of the <i>Netherlands</i> entered the Confederation
-for the Grand Duchy of <i>Luxemburg</i>, part of which
-however was cut off to be added to the Rhenish
-possessions of Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden
-gives up
-Pomerania.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Sweden, by the cession of its
-last remnant of <i>Pomerania</i>, ceased altogether to be a
-German power.</p>
-
-<p>There were thus five powers whose dominions lay
-partly within the Confederation, partly out of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussia the
-greatest
-German
-Power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-the case of one of these, that of Prussia, the division of
-German and non-German territory was purely formal.
-Prussia was practically a purely German power, and
-the greatest of purely German powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Her rival
-Austria stood higher in formal rank in the Confederation,
-and ruled over a much greater continuous territory;
-but here the distinction between German and
-non-German lands was really practical, as later events
-have shown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-of the position
-of
-Austria and
-Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It has been found possible to shut out
-Austria from Germany. To shut out Prussia would
-have been to abolish Germany altogether.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hannover.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hannover,
-though under a common sovereign with Great Britain,
-was so completely cut off from Great Britain, and had
-so little influence on British politics, that it was practically
-as much a purely German state before its separation
-from Great Britain as it was afterwards.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holstein
-and
-Luxemburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the
-cases of Denmark and the Netherlands, princes the
-greater part of whose territories lay out of Germany
-held adjoining territories in Germany. Here then were
-materials for political questions and difficulties; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
-in the case of Denmark, these questions and difficulties
-became of the highest importance.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Bavaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among those members of the Confederation, whose
-territory lay wholly within Germany, the Kingdom
-of <i>Bavaria</i> stood first. Its newly acquired lands to
-the south were given back to Austria; but it made
-large acquisitions to the north-east. Modern Bavaria
-consists of a large mass of territory, Bavarian,
-Swabian, and Frankish, counting within its boundaries
-the famous cities of <i>Augsburg</i> and <i>Nürnberg</i> and
-the great bishoprics of <i>Bamberg</i> and <i>Würzburg</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her Rhenish
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides this, Bavaria recovered a considerable part
-of the ancient Palatinate west of the Rhine, which
-adds <i>Speyer</i> to the list of Bavarian cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Württemberg.<br />
-Saxony.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other
-states which bore the kingly title, <i>Württemberg</i> and
-the remnant of <i>Saxony</i>, were of much smaller extent.
-Saxony however kept a position in many ways out
-of all proportion to the narrowed extent of its geographical
-limits. Württemberg, increased by various
-additions from the <i>Swabian</i> lands of <i>Austria</i> and from
-other smaller principalities, had, though the smallest
-of kingdoms, won for itself a much higher position
-than had been held by its former Counts and Dukes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Baden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Along with them might be ranked the Grand Duchy
-of <i>Baden</i>, with its strange irregular frontier, taking in
-Heidelberg and Constanz.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hessen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among a crowd of smaller
-states stand out the two Hessian principalities, the
-Grand Duchy of <i>Hessen-Darmstadt</i>, and <i>Hessen-Cassel</i>,
-whose prince still kept the title of Elector, and the
-Grand Duchy of <i>Nassau</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Oldenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Grand Duchy of <i>Oldenburg</i>
-nearly divided the Kingdom of Hannover into two
-parts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Anhalt.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The principalities of <i>Anhalt</i> stretched into the
-Prussian territory between Halberstadt and the newly-won<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>
-Saxon lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Brunswick.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Duchy of <i>Brunswick</i> helped to
-divide the two great masses of Prussian territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mecklenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-the north <i>Mecklenburg</i> remained, as before, unequally
-divided between the Grand Dukes of <i>Schwerin</i> and
-<i>Strelitz</i>. Germany was thus thoroughly mapped out
-afresh. Some of the old names had vanished; some
-had got new meanings. The greater states, with
-the exception of Saxony, became greater. A crowd
-of insignificant principalities passed away. Another
-crowd of them remained, especially the smaller Saxon
-duchies in the land which had once been Thuringian.
-But, if we look to two of the most characteristic
-features of the old Empire, we shall find that one
-has passed away for ever, while the other was sadly
-weakened.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No ecclesiastical
-principality.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-No ecclesiastical principality revived in the
-new state of things.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lüttich
-added to
-Belgium.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The territory of one of the
-old bishoprics, that of <i>Lüttich</i>, formerly absorbed by
-France, now passed wholly away from Germany, and
-became part of the new kingdom of Belgium.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The four
-Free Cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the
-free cities four did revive, but four only. The three
-<i>Hanse Towns</i>, no longer included in French departments,
-and Frankfurt, no longer a Grand Duchy, entered
-the Confederation as independent commonwealths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revival of
-German
-national
-life.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Germany, for a while utterly crushed, had come to
-life again; she had again reached a certain measure
-of national unity, which could hardly fail to become
-closer.<a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Confederation thus formed lasted, with hardly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></span>
-any change that concerns geography, till the war of
-1866.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-Luxemburg,
-1831.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Grand Duchy of <i>Luxemburg</i>, which had,
-by the arrangements of 1815, been held by the King
-of the Netherlands as a member of the German Confederation,
-was, on the separation of Belgium and the
-Netherlands, cut into two parts. Part was added to
-Belgium; another part, though quite detached from the
-kingdom of the Netherlands, was held by its king as
-a member of the Confederation. In 1839 he also entered
-it for the Duchy of Limburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>War in
-Sleswick
-and Holstein,
-1848-1851.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The internal movements
-which began in 1848, and the war in <i>Sleswick</i> and
-<i>Holstein</i> which began in the same time, led to no lasting
-geographical changes. In 1849 the Swabian principalities
-of Hohenzollern were joined to the Prussian crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession of
-the Duchies
-to Austria
-and Prussia,
-1864.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last Danish war ended by the cession of Sleswick and
-Holstein, together with Lauenburg, to Prussia and Austria
-jointly, an arrangement in its own nature provisional.
-Austria ceded her right in Lauenburg to Prussia in the
-next year, and in the next year again came the Seven
-Weeks’ War, and the great geographical changes which
-followed it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Abolition
-of the Confederation.<br />
-Exclusion
-of Austria.<br />
-North-German
-Confederation.<br />
-Cession of
-Sleswick
-and Holstein
-to
-Prussia,
-1866.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The German Confederation was abolished;
-Austria was shut out from all share in German affairs,
-and she ceded her joint right in Sleswick and Holstein to
-Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussian annexations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Northern states of Germany became a
-distinct Confederation under the presidency of Prussia,
-whose immediate dominion was increased by the annexation
-of the kingdom of <i>Hannover</i>, the duchy of <i>Nassau</i>,
-the electorate of <i>Hessen</i>, and the city of <i>Frankfurt</i>. The
-States south of the Main, Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden,
-and the southern part of Hessen-Darmstadt, remained for
-a while outside of the new League.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>All the
-Prussian
-lands admitted
-to
-the Confederation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The non-German
-dominions of Prussia, Prussia strictly so called with the
-Polish duchy of Posen and the newly acquired land of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
-Sleswick, were now incorporated with the Confederation;
-on the other hand, all that Austria had held within
-the Confederation was now shut out of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-of Luxemburg,
-1867.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Luxemburg</i>
-also was not included in the new League, and, after some
-disputes, it was in the next year recognized as a neutral
-territory under its own duke the King of the Netherlands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Liechtenstein.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The little principality of <i>Liechtenstein</i> was perhaps
-forgotten altogether; but, as not being included in
-the Confederation, nor yet incorporated with anything
-else, it must be looked on as becoming an absolutely
-independent state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great geographical
-changes,
-1866.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the geographical frontiers of
-Germany underwent, at a single blow, changes as great
-as they had undergone in the wars of the French Revolution.
-The geography of the presiding power of the
-new League was no less changed.</p>
-
-<p>That extraordinary extent of frontier which had
-hitherto been characteristic of Prussia was not wholly
-taken away by the new annexations, but it was greatly
-lessened. The kingdom, as a kingdom, is made far
-more compact, and the two great detached masses in
-which it formerly lay are now joined together. Moreover,
-the geographical character of Prussia becomes of
-much less political importance, now that her frontier
-marches to so great an extent on the smaller members
-of the League of which she is herself President.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>War with
-France,
-1870-1871.<br />
-The German
-Empire.<br />
-Incorporation
-of the
-Southern
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Next
-came the war with France, the first effect of which
-was the incorporation of the southern states of Germany
-with the new League, which presently took the
-name of an Empire, with the Prussian King as hereditary
-Emperor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Elsass-Lothringen,
-1871.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then by the peace with France, nearly
-the whole of <i>Elsass</i> and part of <i>Lotharingia</i>, including
-the cities of <i>Strassburg</i> and <i>Metz</i>, were restored to
-Germany. They have, under the name of <i>Elsass-Lothringen</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">{230}</a></span>
-become an Imperial territory, forming
-part of the Empire and owning the sovereignty of
-the Emperor, but not becoming part of the kingdom of
-Prussia or of any other German state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Imperial
-title.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The assumption
-of the Imperial title could hardly be avoided in a
-confederation whose constitution was monarchic, and
-which numbered kings among its members. No title
-but Emperor could have been found to express the
-relation between the presiding chief and the lesser
-sovereigns.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The new
-Empire a
-revival of
-the German
-Kingdom,
-but not of
-the Roman
-Empire.<br />
-Comparison
-of the old
-Kingdom
-and the
-new Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Still it must be borne in mind that the new German
-Empire is in no sense a continuation or restoration of
-the Holy Roman Empire which fell sixty-four years
-before its creation. But it may be fairly looked on as
-a restoration of the old German Kingdom, the Kingdom
-of the East-Franks. Still, as far as geography
-is concerned, no change can be stranger than the
-change in the boundaries of Germany between the ninth
-century and the nineteenth. The new Empire, cut short
-to the north-west, south-west, and south-east, has grown
-somewhat to the north, and it has grown prodigiously
-to the north-east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Name of
-<i>Prussia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its ruling state, a state which
-contains such illustrious cities as Köln, Trier, and
-Frankfurt, is content to call itself after an extinct
-heathen people whose name had most likely never
-reached the ears of Charles the Great.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Berlin.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The capital of the
-new Empire, placed far away from any of the antient
-seats of German kingship, stands in what in his day, and
-long after, was a Slavonic land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formation
-of the new
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Germany, with its
-chief state bearing the name of <i>Prussia</i>, with the place
-of its national assemblies transferred from Frankfurt to
-Berlin, presents one of the strangest changes that historical
-geography can show us. But, strange as is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
-geographical change, it has come about gradually, by
-the natural working of historical causes. The Slavonic
-and Prussian lands have been Germanized, while the
-western parts of the old kingdom which have fallen away
-have mostly lost their German character. Those German
-lands which have formed the kernel of the Swiss
-Confederation have risen to a higher political state than
-that of any kingdom or Empire. But the German
-lands which still remain so strangely united to the
-lands of the Magyar and the southern Slave await, at
-however distant a time, their natural and inevitable reunion.
-So does a Danish population in the extreme
-north await, with less hope, its no less natural separation
-from the German body. Posen, still mainly Slavonic,
-remains unnaturally united to a Teutonic body, but
-it is not likely to gain by a transfer to any other ruler.
-The reconstruction of the German realm in its present
-shape, a shape so novel to the eye, but preserving
-so much of ancient life and ancient history, has been
-the greatest historical and geographical change of our
-times.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Kingdom of Italy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Small geographical
-importance
-of the kingdom
-as
-such.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We parted from the Italian kingdom at the moment
-of its separation from the Eastern and Western kingdoms
-of the Franks. Its history, as a kingdom, consists in
-little more than its reunion with the East-Frankish
-crown, and in the way in which the royal power gradually
-died out within its limits. There is but little to
-say as to any changes of frontier of the kingdom as
-such. As long as Germany, Italy, and Burgundy acknowledged
-a single king, any shiftings of the frontiers
-of his three kingdoms were of secondary importance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
-When the power of the Emperors in Italy had died
-out, the land became a system of independent commonwealths
-and principalities, which had hardly that degree
-of unity which could enable us to say that a certain
-territory was added to Italy or taken from it. Even if
-a certain territory passed from an Italian to a German
-or Burgundian lord, the change was rather a change in
-the frontier of this or that Italian state than in the frontier
-of Italy itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes on
-the Alpine
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The shiftings of frontier along the
-whole Alpine border have been considerable; but it is
-only in our own day that we can say that Italy as such
-has become capable of extending or lessening her
-borders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Case of
-Verona.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When, in 1866, Venice and Verona were
-added to the Italian kingdom, that was a distinct change
-in the frontier of Italy. We can hardly give that
-name to endless earlier changes on the same marchland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Case of
-Trieste,
-1380.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the fourteenth century, for instance, the town of
-<i>Trieste</i>, disputed between the patriarchs of Aquileia
-and the commonwealth of Venice, was acknowledged
-as an independent state, and it presently gave up its
-independence by commendation to the Duke of Austria.
-It is not likely that the question entered into any man’s
-mind whether the frontiers of the German and Italian
-kingdoms were affected by such a change. Whether as a
-free city or as an Austrian lordship, Trieste remained
-under the superiority, formally undoubted but practically
-nominal, of the common sovereign of Germany and Italy,
-the Roman Emperor or King. Whether the nominal
-allegiance of the city was due to him in his German
-or in his Italian character most likely no one stopped
-to think.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No eastern
-or western
-frontiers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-East and west, the Italian kingdom had no
-frontiers; the only question which could arise was as
-to the relation of the islands of Corsica and Sardinia to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></span>
-the kingdom itself or to any of the states which arose
-within it. To the south lay the independent Lombard
-duchies, and the possessions which still remained to the
-Eastern Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Norman
-kingdom
-of
-Sicily not
-an Imperial
-fief.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These changed in time into the
-Norman duchy of <i>Apulia</i> and kingdom of <i>Sicily</i>; but
-that kingdom, held as it was as a fief of the see of
-Rome, was never incorporated with the Italian kingdom
-of the Emperors, nor did its kings ever become
-the men of the Emperor. Particular Emperors in
-the thirteenth century, in the sixteenth, and in the
-eighteenth, were also kings of one or both the Sicilian
-kingdoms; but at no time before our own day were
-Sicily and southern Italy ever incorporated with a
-Kingdom of Italy. When we remember that it was to
-the southern part of the peninsula that the name of
-Italy was first given, we see here a curiosity of nomenclature
-as remarkable as the shiftings of meaning
-in the names of Saxony and Burgundy.</p>
-
-<p>Naples and Sicily then, the Two Sicilies of later
-political nomenclature, lie outside our present subject.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice no
-part of
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So does the commonwealth of <i>Venice</i>, except so far as
-Venice afterwards won a large subject territory on the
-Italian mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her Italian
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both these states have to do with
-Italy as a geographical expression, but neither the
-Venetian commonwealth nor the Sicilian kingdom is
-Italian within the meaning of the present section. They
-formed no part of the Carolingian dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice and
-the Sicilies
-part of the
-Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They
-were parts of the Eastern Empire, not of the Western.
-They remained attached to the New Rome after an
-Imperial throne had again been set up in the Old.
-They gradually fell away from their allegiance to
-the Eastern Empire, but they were never incorporated
-with the Empire of the West. I shall deal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span>
-with them here only in their relations to the Imperial
-Kingdom of Italy, and treat of their special history
-elsewhere among the states which arose out of the
-break-up of the Eastern Empire. Again, on the north-western
-march of Italy a power gradually arose, partly
-Italian, but for a long time mainly Burgundian, which
-has in the end, by a strange fate, grown into a new
-Italian Kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The House
-of Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is the House of <i>Savoy</i>. The
-growth of the dominions of that house, the process
-by which it gradually lost territory in Burgundy and
-gained it in <i>Italy</i>, form another distinct subject.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its special
-history.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It
-will be dealt with here only in its relations to the kingdom
-of Italy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of Italy
-continues
-the Lombard
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Italian Kingdom of the Karlings, the kingdom
-which was reunited to Germany under Otto the Great,
-was, as has been already said, a continuation of the old
-Lombard kingdom. It consisted of that kingdom,
-enlarged by the Italian lands which fell off from the
-Eastern Empire in the eighth century; that is by the
-<i>Exarchate</i> and the adjoining <i>Pentapolis</i>, and the immediate
-territory of <i>Rome</i> itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria
-and Neustria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Lombard kingdom,
-in the strictest sense, took in the two provinces north of
-the Po, in which we again find, as in other lands, an
-<i>Austria</i> to the east and a <i>Neustria</i> to the west.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Æmilia.<br />
-Tuscany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It
-took in <i>Æmilia</i> south of the Po—the district of Piacenza,
-Parma, Reggio, and Modena—also <i>Tuscany</i>, a
-name, which, as it no longer reaches to the Tiber,
-answers pretty nearly to its modern use.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Romagna.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Tuscan
-name has lived on; the Exarchate and Pentapolis, as
-having been the chief seat of the later Imperial power
-in Italy, got the name of <i>Romania</i>, <i>Romandiola</i>, or
-<i>Romagna</i>. This name also lives on; but the Lombard
-Neustria and Austria soon vanish from the map. Their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
-disappearance was perhaps lucky, as one knows not
-what arguments might otherwise have been built on
-the presence of an Austria south of the Alps.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lombardy
-proper.<br />
-Venetia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Lombard Neustria together with Æmilia got the special
-name of <i>Lombardy</i>, while the Lombard Austria, after
-various shiftings of names taken from the principalities
-which rose and fell within it, came back in the end
-to its oldest name, that of <i>Venetia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mark of
-Ivrea.<br />
-Duchy of
-Friuli.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the north-west
-corner <i>Iporedia</i> or <i>Ivrea</i> appears as a distinct march;
-but the Venetian march at the other corner, known at
-this stage as the duchy of <i>Friuli</i>, is of more importance.
-It takes in the county of <i>Trent</i>, the special march of
-<i>Friuli</i>, and the march of <i>Istria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuation
-of boundary
-at the
-north-west
-corner.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is the corner
-in which the German and Italian frontier has so often
-fluctuated. We have seen that, after the union of the
-Italian and German crowns, even Verona itself was
-sometimes counted as German ground.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-of Italy and
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Under the German kings Italy came under the
-same influences as the other two Imperial kingdoms.
-Principalities grew up; free cities grew up; but, while
-in Germany the principalities were the rule and the
-cities the exception, in Italy it was the other way.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of a
-system of
-commonwealths
-in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The land gradually became a system of practically
-independent commonwealths. Feudal princes, ecclesiastical
-or temporal, flourished only in the north-western
-and north-eastern corners of the kingdom. But, if the
-range of the German cities was less wide, and their
-career less brilliant, than those of Italy, their freedom
-was more lasting.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tyrants
-grow into
-princes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Italian cities gradually fell
-under tyrants, and the tyrants gradually grew into
-acknowledged princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the dominion
-of
-the Popes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bishops of Rome too, by
-a series of claims dexterously pressed at various times,
-contrived to form the greatest of ecclesiastical principalities,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">{236}</a></span>
-one which stretched across the peninsula from
-sea to sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Four stages
-of Italian
-history.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The geographical history of Italy consists
-of four stages. In the first the kingdom fell asunder
-into principalities. In the second the principalities
-vanished before the growth of the free cities. In the
-third the cities were again massed into principalities,
-till in the fourth the principalities were at last merged
-in a kingdom of united Italy.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Under the Saxon and Frankish Emperors the old
-Lombard names of Neustria and Æmilia pass away.
-Several small marches lie along the Burgundian frontier,
-as <i>Savona</i> on the coast, <i>Ivrea</i> among the mountains
-to the north-west, between them <i>Montferrat</i>, <i>Vasto</i>, and
-<i>Susa</i>, whose princes, as special guardians of the passage
-between the two kingdoms, bore the title of Marquess
-in Italy. It was in this region that the feudal princes
-were strongest, and that the system of free cities had
-the smallest developement.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Marquesses
-of
-Montferrat,
-938-1533.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Savoyard power was
-already beginning to grow up in the extreme north-west
-corner; but at this time a greater part in strictly Italian
-history is played by the Marquesses of Montferrat, who
-for many centuries kept their position as important
-feudal princes quite apart from the lords of the cities.
-In the north-east corner of the kingdom the place of the
-old Austria is taken by the border principalities where
-the Italian, the German, and the Slave all come in
-contact, and which fluctuated more than once between
-the Italian and the German crowns. We have here the
-great march of Verona, beyond it that of Friuli, Trent,
-the marchland of the marchland, between Verona and
-Bavaria, and the Istrian peninsula on the Slavonic
-side of the Hadriatic. Between the border districts on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></span>
-either side lay the central land, Lombardy, in the narrower
-sense, the chosen home of the free cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the Lombard
-cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here,
-by the middle of the twelfth century, every city had
-practically become a separate commonwealth, owning
-only the most nominal superiority in the Emperor.
-Guelfic cities withstood the Emperor; Ghibelin cities
-welcomed him; but both were practically independent
-commonwealths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars of the
-Swabian
-Emperors.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hence came those long wars between
-the Swabian Emperors and the Italian cities which form
-the chief feature of Italian history in the second half of
-the twelfth century and the first half of the thirteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Milan and
-Pavia.<br />
-The other
-Lombard
-cities.<br />
-Alessandria,
-1168.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Round the younger and the elder capital, round Guelfic
-Milan and Ghibelin Pavia, gathered a crowd of famous
-names, <i>Como</i>, <i>Bergamo</i>, and <i>Brescia</i>, <i>Lodi</i>, <i>Crema</i>,
-and <i>Cremona</i>, <i>Tortona</i>, <i>Piacenza</i>, and <i>Parma</i>, and
-<i>Alessandria</i>, the trophy of republican and papal victory
-over Imperial power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Verona and
-Padua.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Veronese march was less rich
-in cities of the same historical importance;
-but both
-<i>Verona</i> itself and <i>Padua</i> played a great part, as the
-seats first of commonwealths, then of tyrants. Further
-north and east, the civic element was weaker again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Trent.<br />
-Aquileia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Trent</i> gradually parted off from Italy to become an
-ecclesiastical principality of the German kingdom;
-and the Patriarchs of <i>Aquileia</i> grew into powerful
-princes at the north-eastern corner of the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The lords of
-Romano
-and Este.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within the Veronese or Trevisan march itself, the
-lords of <i>Romano</i> and the more important marquesses
-of <i>Este</i> also demand notice. Romano gave the Trevisan
-march its famous tyrant Eccelino in the days of
-Frederick the Second, and the Marquesses of Este,
-kinsmen of the great Saxon dukes, came in time to
-rank among the chief Italian princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The north-eastern
-march falls
-off from
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The extreme
-north-eastern march so completely fell off from Italy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></span>
-that it will be better treated in tracing the growth of
-the powers of Venice and Austria.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tuscany,
-Romagna,
-and the
-March of
-Ancona.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">In the more central lands of the kingdom, in the
-old exarchate, now known as <i>Romagna</i>, in the march
-variously called by the names of <i>Camerino</i>, <i>Fermo</i>, or
-<i>Ancona</i>, and above all in the march of <i>Tuscany</i> on the
-southern sea, the same developement of city life also
-took place, but somewhat later. North of the Apennines,
-along the Hadriatic coast, arose a crowd of
-small commonwealths which gradually passed into
-small tyrannies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Tuscan
-commonwealths.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Tuscany, on the other hand, was
-parted off into a few commonwealths of illustrious
-name. For a while one of these ran a course which
-stood rather apart from the common run of Italian
-history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pisa;<br />
-her wars
-with the
-Saracens
-1005-1115.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Pisa</i>, then one of the great maritime and commercial
-states of Europe, became, early in the eleventh
-century, a power which forestalled the crusades and
-won back lands from the Saracen. Though she was
-in every sense a city of the Italian kingdom, Pisa at
-this time held a position not unlike that which was
-afterwards held by Venice. Like her, she was a power
-which colonized and conquered beyond the seas, but
-which came only gradually to take a share in the
-main course of Italian affairs.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Genoa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Beyond the borders of
-Tuscany, the same position was held by <i>Genoa</i> on the
-Ligurian gulf.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occupation
-of the island
-of Sardinia
-by Pisa,
-and of Corsica
-by
-Genoa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Pisa won <i>Sardinia</i> from the Saracen;
-Genoa, after long disputes with Pisa, obtained a more
-lasting possession of <i>Corsica</i>. Returning to Tuscany,
-three great commonwealths here grew up, which gradually
-divided the land between them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lucca,
-Siena,
-Florence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were
-<i>Lucca</i> and <i>Siena</i>, and <i>Florence</i>, the last of Italian
-cities to rise to greatness, but the one which became
-in many ways the greatest among her fellows.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Perugia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">{239}</a></span>
-centre of Italy, within the bounds of old Etruria but
-not within those of modern Tuscany, <i>Perugia</i>, both as
-commonwealth and as tyranny, held a high place among
-Italian cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rome.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of Rome herself it is almost impossible
-to speak. She has much history, but she has little
-geography. Emperors were crowned there; Popes
-sometimes lived there; sometimes Rome appears once
-more as a single Latin city, waging war against Tusculum
-or some other of her earliest fellows.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Claims of
-the Popes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-claims of her Bishops to independent temporal power,
-founded on a succession of real or pretended Imperial
-and royal grants, lay still in the background; but they
-were ready to grow into reality as occasion served.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-stage, c.
-1250-1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The next stage of Italian political geography may
-be dated from the death of Frederick the Second, when
-all practical power of an Imperial kingdom in Italy may
-be said to have passed away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-tyrannies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently begins the
-gradual change of the commonwealths into tyrannies,
-and the grouping together of many of them into larger
-states. We also see the beginning of more definite
-claims of temporal dominion on behalf of the Popes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion
-of Spain,
-1555-1701.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course of the three hundred years between
-Frederick the Second and Charles the Fifth, these
-processes gradually changed the face of the Italian
-kingdom. It became in the end a collection of principalities,
-broken only by the survival of a few oligarchic
-commonwealths and by the anomalous dominion of
-Venice on the mainland. Between Frederick the
-Second and Charles the Fifth, we may look on the
-Empire as practically in abeyance in Italy. The coming
-of an Emperor always caused a great stir for the
-time, but it was only for the time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grant of
-Rudolf,
-1278.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After the grant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span>
-of Rudolf of Habsburg to the Popes, a distinction was
-drawn between Imperial and papal territory in Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Imperial
-and papal
-fiefs.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While certain princes and commonwealths still acknowledged
-at least the nominal superiority of the
-Emperor, others were now held to stand in the same
-relation of vassalage to the Pope.</p>
-
-<p>We must now trace out the growth of the chief
-states which were formed by these several processes.
-Beginning again in the north, it must be remembered
-that all this while the power of Savoy was advancing
-in those north-western lands in which the influences
-which mainly ruled this period had less force than
-elsewhere. Montferrat too kept its old character of
-a feudal principality, a state whose rulers had in various
-ways a singular connexion with the East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Palaiologoi
-at Montferrat,
-1306.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As
-Marquesses of Montferrat had claimed the crown of
-Jerusalem and had worn the crown of Thessalonica, so,
-as if to keep even the balance between East and West, in
-return a branch of the Imperial house of Palaiologos
-came to reign at Montferrat. To the east of these more
-ancient principalities, two great powers of quite different
-kinds grew up in the old Neustria and Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Milan.
-Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These
-were the <i>Duchy of Milan</i> and the land power of <i>Venice</i>.
-Milan, like most other Italian cities, came under the influence
-of party leaders, who grew first into tyrants and
-then into acknowledged sovereigns.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Visconti
-at
-Milan,
-1310-1447.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These at Milan,
-after the shorter domination of the Della Torre, were the
-more abiding house of the Visconti. Their dominion,
-after various fluctuations and revolutions, was finally
-established when the coming of the Emperor Henry the
-Seventh generally strengthened the rule of the Lords
-of the cities throughout Italy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grant of the
-Duchy by
-King
-Wenceslaus,
-1395.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>At the end of the fourteenth
-century their informal lordship passed by a royal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span>
-grant into an acknowledged duchy of the Empire. The
-dominion which they had gradually gained, and which
-was thus in a manner legalized, took in all the great
-cities of Lombardy, those especially which had formed
-the Lombard League against the Swabian Emperors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Pavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Pavia indeed, the ancient rival of Milan, kept a kind of
-separate being, and was formed into a distinct county.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the duchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the duchy granted by Wenceslaus to Gian-Galeazzo
-stretched far on both sides of the lake of Garda.
-<i>Belluno</i> at one end and <i>Vercelli</i> at the other formed
-part of it. It took in the mountain lands which
-afterwards passed to the two Alpine Confederations;
-it took in <i>Parma</i>, <i>Piacenza</i>, and <i>Reggio</i> south of
-the Po, and <i>Verona</i> and <i>Vicenza</i> in the old Austrian
-or Venetian land. Besides all this, <i>Padua</i>, <i>Bologna</i>,
-even <i>Genoa</i> and <i>Pisa</i>, passed at various times under
-the lordship of the Visconti. But this great power
-was not lasting. The Duchy of Milan, under various
-lords, native and foreign, lasted till the wars of the
-French Revolution; but, long before that time, it
-had been cut short on every side.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decrease on
-the death of
-Gian Galeazzo,
-1402.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The death of the
-first Duke was followed by a separation of the duchy
-of Milan and the county of Pavia between his sons,
-and the restored duchy never rose again to its former
-power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The eastern
-cities won
-by Venice,
-1406-1447.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The eastern parts, Padua, Verona, Brescia,
-Bergamo, were gradually added to the dominion of
-Venice. By the middle of the fifteenth century, that
-republic had become the greatest power in northern
-Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>House of
-Sforza,
-1450-1535.<br />
-Claims of
-the Kings
-of France,
-1499-1525.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the duchy of Milan the house of Sforza
-succeeded that of Visconti;
-but the opposing claims
-of the Kings of France were one chief cause of the
-long wars which laid Italy waste in the latter years
-of the fifteenth century and the early years of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
-sixteenth. The duchy was tossed to and fro between
-the Emperor, the French King, and its own dukes.
-Meanwhile the dominion which was thus struggled
-for was cut short at the two ends.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession to
-the Alpine
-Leagues,
-1512-1513.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was dismembered
-to the north in favour of the two Alpine
-Leagues, as will be hereafter shown more in detail.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Popes
-obtain
-Parma and
-Piacenza,
-1515.<br />
-Duchy of
-Parma and
-Piacenza,
-1545.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-South of the Po, the Popes obtained <i>Parma</i> and
-<i>Piacenza</i>, which were afterwards granted as papal fiefs
-to form a duchy for the house of Farnese. Thus the
-Duchy of Milan which became in the end a possession
-of Charles the Fifth, and afterwards of his Spanish
-and Austrian successors, was but a remnant of the great
-dominion of the first Duke. The duchy underwent still
-further dismemberments in later times.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Land power
-of Venice
-only.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>With Venice we have here to deal in her somewhat
-unnatural position as an Italian land power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>War of the
-League of
-Cambray,
-1508-1517.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This position
-she took on herself in the fifteenth century; in
-the sixteenth it led to the momentary overthrow and
-wonderful recovery of her dominion in the war of the
-League of Cambray. This land power of Venice stands
-quite distinct from the Venetian possessions east of
-the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Istria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With this last her possession of the
-coast of the <i>Istrian</i> peninsula must be reckoned, rather
-than with her Italian dominions. Between these lay
-Aquileia, Trieste, and the other lands in this quarter
-which gradually came under the power of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Venetian
-dominion.<br />
-Ravenna,
-1441-1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The continuous Italian dominion of Venice took in
-<i>Udine</i> at one end and <i>Bergamo</i> at the other, besides
-<i>Crema</i>, and for a while <i>Ravenna</i>, as outlying possessions.
-Thus the Byzantine city which lay anchored off the
-shore of the Western Empire could for a season call
-the ancient seat of the Exarchate its own.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two parts of
-the Venetian
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But even
-the continuous land territory of Venice lay in two portions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
-Brescia and Bergamo were almost cut off from
-Verona and the other possessions to the east by the
-Lake of Garda, the bishopric of Trent to the north,
-and the principality of <i>Mantua</i> to the south.</p>
-
-<p>The mention of this last state leads us back again to
-the commonwealths which, like Milan, changed, first into
-tyrannies, and then into acknowledged principalities.
-It is impossible to mention all of them, and some of
-those which played for a while the most brilliant part in
-Italian history had no lasting effect on Italian geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rule of the
-Scala at
-Verona,
-1260-1387;
-of the Carrara
-at
-Padua,
-1318-1405;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The rule of the house of Scala at Verona, the rule of the
-house of Carrara at Padua, left no lasting trace on the
-map. It was otherwise with the two states which bordered
-on the Venetian possessions to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the Gonzaga
-at
-Mantua,
-1328-1708.
-Marquesses,
-1433;
-Dukes, 1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-house of Gonzaga held sovereign power at <i>Mantua</i>,
-first as captains, then as marquesses, then as dukes,
-for nearly four hundred years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>House of
-Este.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of greater fame was
-the power that grew up in the house of <i>Este</i>, the
-Italian branch of the house of Welf. Their position
-is one specially instructive, as illustrating the various
-tenures by which dominion was held.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The lords of
-Ferrara and
-Modena,
-1264-1288.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The marquesses
-of Este, feudal lords of that small principality, became,
-after some of the usual fluctuations, permanent
-lords of the cities of <i>Ferrara</i> and <i>Modena</i>. About
-the same time they lost their original holding of Este,
-which passed to Padua, and with Padua to Venice.
-Thus the nominal marquess of Este and real lord of
-Ferrara was not uncommonly spoken of as Marquess of
-Ferrara. In the fifteenth century these princes rose to
-ducal rank; but by that time the new doctrine of the
-temporal dominion of the Popes had made great
-advances. Modena, no man doubted, was a city of the
-Empire; but Ferrara was now held to be under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">{244}</a></span>
-supremacy of the Pope. The Marquess Borso had thus
-to seek his elevation to ducal rank from two separate
-lords.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Modena,
-1453.<br />
-Duchy of
-Ferrara,
-1471.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-He was created Duke of Modena and Reggio
-by the Emperor, and afterwards Duke of Ferrara by the
-Pope. This difference of holding, as we shall presently
-see, led to the destruction of the power of the house
-of Este. In the times in which we are now concerned,
-their dominions lay in two masses. To the west lay
-the duchy of Modena and Reggio; apart from it to the
-east lay the duchy of Ferrara.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Rovigo,
-1484.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Not long after its creation,
-this last duchy was cut short by the surrender of
-the border-district of <i>Rovigo</i> to Venice.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cities of
-Romagna.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Between the two great duchies of the house of Este
-lay <i>Bologna</i>, gradually changed from <i>Romania</i> in one
-sense into <i>Romagna</i> in another. Like most other Italian
-cities, the commonwealths of the Exarchate and the Pentapolis
-changed into tyrannies, and their petty princes
-were one by one overthrown by the advancing power of
-the Popes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bologna,
-Perugia,
-Rimini.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Every city had its dynasty; but it was only
-a few, like the houses of <i>Bentevoglio</i> at <i>Bologna</i>, of <i>Baglioni</i>
-at <i>Perugia</i>, and <i>Malatesta</i> at <i>Rimini</i>, that rose to
-any historical importance. One only combined historical
-importance with acknowledged princely rank.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Duchy
-of Urbino,
-1478-1631.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-house of <i>Montefeltro</i>, lords of <i>Urbino</i>, became acknowledged
-dukes by papal grants. From them the duchy
-passed to the house of La Rovere, and it flourished
-under five princes of the two dynasties.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Expansion
-of the papal
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Gradually, by
-successive annexations, the papal dominions, before the
-middle of the sixteenth century, stretched from the Po
-to Tarracina. Ferrara and Urbino still remained distinct
-states, but states which were confessedly held as fiefs of
-the Holy See.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Creation of
-the Tuscan
-cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>To the west, in Tuscany, the phænomena are somewhat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></span>
-different. The characteristic of this part of Italy
-was the grouping together of the smaller cities under
-the power of the larger. Nearly all the land came
-in the end under princely rule; but both acknowledged
-princely rule and the tyrannies out of which it
-sprang came into importance in Tuscany later than
-anywhere else.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lucca under
-Castruccio
-Castracani,
-1320-1338.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Lucca</i> had in the fourteenth century
-a short time of greatness under her illustrious tyrant
-Castruccio; but, before and after his day, she plays,
-as a commonwealth, only a secondary part in Italy.
-Still she remained a commonwealth, though latterly
-an oligarchic one, through all changes down to the
-general crash of the French Revolution.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pisa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span> <i>Pisa</i> kept for
-a while her maritime greatness, and her rivalry with
-the Ligurian commonwealth of <i>Genoa</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Genoa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Genoa, less
-famous in the earliest times, proved a far more lasting
-power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her rule in
-Corsica.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-She established her dominion over the coast
-on both sides of her, and kept her island of Corsica
-down to modern times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sardinia
-ceded to
-Aragon,
-1428.<br />
-Pisa subject
-to
-Florence,
-1416.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Physical causes caused the fall
-of the maritime power of Pisa;
-Sardinia passed from her
-to become a kingdom of the House of Aragon, and she
-herself passed under the dominion of <i>Florence</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatness of
-Florence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-last illustrious city, the greatest of Tuscan and even of
-Italian commonwealths, begins to stand forth as the
-foremost of republican states about the time when her
-forerunner Milan came under the rule of tyrants. She
-extended her dominion over <i>Volterra</i>, <i>Arezzo</i>, and many
-smaller places, till she became mistress of all northern
-Tuscany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Siena.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south the commonwealth of <i>Siena</i>
-also formed a large dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rule of the
-Medici.
-1434-1494.
-1512-1527.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Florence the rule of
-the Medici grew step by step into a hereditary tyranny;
-but it was an intermittent tyranny, one which was supported
-only by foreign force, and which was overturned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">{246}</a></span>
-whenever Florence had strength to act for herself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Alexander,
-Duke of
-Florence,
-1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It
-was only after her last overthrow by the combined powers
-of Pope and Cæsar that she became, under Alexander,
-the first duke of the house of Medici, an acknowledged
-principality.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cosmo
-annexes
-Siena, 1557.<br />
-Elba, &amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cosmo the First, the second duke, annexed
-Siena, and all the territory of that commonwealth,
-except the lands known as <i>Stati degli Presidi</i>, that
-is the isle of <i>Elba</i> and some points on the coast.
-These became parts of the kingdom of Naples; that is,
-at that time, parts of the dominion of Spain. The state
-thus formed by Cosmo was one of the most considerable
-in Italy, taking in the whole of Tuscany except the
-territory of Lucca and the lands which became Spanish.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cosmo
-Grand Duke
-of Tuscany,
-1567.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its ruler presently exchanged by papal authority the
-title of Duke of Florence for that of Grand Duke of
-Tuscany.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>The Later Geography of Italy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Abeyance of
-the kingdom
-of
-Italy, 1530-1805.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Under Charles the Fifth it might have seemed that
-both the Roman Empire and the kingdom of Italy had
-come to life again. A prince who wore both crowns
-was practically master of Italy. But though the power
-of the Emperor was restored, the power of the Empire
-was not. In truth we may look on all notion of a kingdom
-of Italy in the elder sense as having passed away
-with the coronation of Charles himself. The thing
-had passed away long before; after the pageant at
-Bologna the name was not heard for more than two
-centuries and a half.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italy a geographical
-expression.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Italy became truly a ‘geographical
-expression;’ the land consisted of a number of
-principalities and a few commonwealths, all nominally
-independent, some more or less practically so, but the
-more part of which were under foreign influence, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></span>
-some of them were actually ruled by foreign princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes
-among the
-Italian
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-states of Italy were united, divided, handed over from
-one ruler to another, according to the fluctuations of war
-and diplomacy, without any regard either to the will of
-the inhabitants or to the authority of any central power.
-A practically dominant power there was during the
-greater part of this period; but it was not the power
-of even a nominal King of Italy. For a long time that
-dominant power was held by the House of Austria in
-its two branches. The supremacy of Charles in Italy
-passed, not to his Imperial brother, but to his Spanish
-son.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion
-of Spain,
-1555-1701;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then followed the long dominion of the Spanish
-branch of the Austrian house; then came the less
-thorough dominion of the German branch.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Austria,
-1713-1793.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last
-was a dominion strictly of the House of Austria as such,
-not of the Empire or of either of the Imperial kingdoms.
-And now that the name of Italy means merely a certain
-surface on the map, we must take some notice, so far
-as they regard Italian history, at once of Savoy at one
-end and of the Sicilian kingdoms at the other. From
-this time both of them have a more direct bearing on
-Italian history.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Massing of
-Italy into
-larger
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>By the time of the coronation of Charles the Fifth,
-or at least within the generation which could remember
-his coronation, the greater part of Italy had been
-massed into a few states, which, as compared with the
-earlier state of things, were of considerable size.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Monaco<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A few
-smaller principalities and lordships still kept their place,
-of which one of the smallest, that of <i>Monaco</i> in the
-extreme south-west, has lived on to our own time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>San Marino<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So has
-the small commonwealth of <i>San Marino</i>, surrounded,
-first by the dominions of the Popes and now by the
-modern kingdom. But such states as these were mere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
-survivals.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion of
-Venice on
-the mainland,
-1406-1797.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the north-east, Venice kept her power
-on the mainland untouched, from the recovery of her
-dominions after the league of Cambray down to her
-final fall.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>She loses her
-outlying
-Italian
-possessions,
-1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the treaty of Bologna she lost <i>Ravenna</i>;
-she lost too the towns of <i>Brindisi</i> and <i>Monopoli</i>
-which she had gained during the wars of Naples; but
-her continuous dominion, both properly Venetian and
-Lombard, remained.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Milan:<br />
-Spanish,
-1540-1706;<br />
-Austrian,
-1706-1796.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy of <i>Milan</i> to the west
-of her was held in succession by the two branches of
-the House of Austria, first the Spanish and then the
-German.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Savoy towards
-Milan.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the duchy, as an Austrian possession,
-was being constantly cut short towards the west by
-the growing power of Savoy. For a while the Milanese
-and Savoyard states were conterminous only
-during a small part of their frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Montferrat.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The marquisate
-of <i>Montferrat</i>, as long as it remained a separate principality,
-lay between the southern parts of the two
-states. On the failure of the old line of marquesses,
-Montferrat was disputed between the Dukes of Savoy
-and Mantua.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>United to
-Mantua
-1536, but
-claimed by
-Savoy,
-1613-1631.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Adjudged to Mantua, and raised into
-a duchy by Imperial authority, it was still claimed,
-and partly conquered by, Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mantua forfeited
-to
-the Empire,
-and Montferrat
-joined
-to Savoy,
-1708-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last, by one of
-the last exercises of Imperial authority in Italy, the
-duchy of Mantua itself was held to be forfeited to the
-Empire; that is, it became an Austrian possession. At
-the same time the Imperial authority confirmed Montferrat
-to Savoy. The Austrian dominions in Italy were thus
-extended to the south-east by the accession of the
-Mantuan territory; but the whole western frontier of
-the Milanese now lay open to Savoyard advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First dismemberment
-of
-Milan in
-favour of
-Savoy, 1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-same treaties which confirmed Montferrat to Savoy and
-Milan to Austria also dismembered Milan in favour of
-Savoy. A corner of the duchy to the south-west,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span>
-<i>Alessandria</i> and the neighbouring districts, were now
-given to Savoy; the Peace of Vienna further cut off
-<i>Novara</i> to the north and <i>Tortona</i> to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Further cessions,
-1738.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-next peace, that of Aix-la-Chapelle, gave up all west
-of the Ticino, which river became a permanent frontier.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Parma and
-Piacenza
-given to the
-Spanish
-Bourbons,
-1731-1749.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among the other states, the duchy of <i>Parma</i> and
-<i>Piacenza</i> was, on the extinction of the house of Farnese,
-handed over to princes of the Spanish branch of the Bourbons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ferrara
-confiscated
-to the
-Popes, 1598.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Modena</i> and <i>Ferrara</i> remained united, till Ferrara
-was annexed as an escheated fief to the dominions of
-its spiritual overlord.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1718.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the house of Este still reigned
-over Modena with <i>Reggio</i> and <i>Mirandola</i>, while its
-dominions were extended to the sea by the addition
-of <i>Massa</i> and other small possessions between
-Lucca and Genoa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1771-1803.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy in the end passed by
-female succession to the House of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Corsica
-ceded to
-France,
-1768.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Genoa</i> and
-<i>Lucca</i> remained aristocratic commonwealths;
-but Genoa
-lost its island possession of <i>Corsica</i>, which passed to
-France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extinction
-of the
-Medici,
-1737.<br />
-Francis of
-Lorraine
-Grand Duke
-of Tuscany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Grand Duchy of <i>Tuscany</i> remained in
-the house of Medici, till it was assigned to Duke
-Francis of Lorraine, afterwards the Emperor Francis
-the First, and after that it remained in the House of
-Habsburg-Lorraine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Urbino annexed
-by
-the Popes,
-1631.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The States of the Church, after
-the annexation of Ferrara, were in the next century
-further enlarged by the annexation of the duchy of
-Urbino.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>1530-1797.<br />
-Comparatively
-little
-geographical
-change.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Thus, except on the frontier of Piedmont and
-Milan, the whole time from Charles the Fifth to the
-French Revolution was, within the old kingdom of
-Italy, much less remarkable for changes in the geographical
-frontiers of the several states than for the way
-in which they are passed to and fro from one master to
-another.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-the Two
-Sicilies<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is yet more remarkable, if we look to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></span>
-southern part of the peninsula, and to the two great
-islands which in modern geography we have learned
-to look on as attached to Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Norman
-kingdom
-of
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Norman kingdom
-which, by steps which will be told elsewhere, grew up to
-the south of the Imperial Kingdom of Italy, has hardly
-ever changed its boundaries, except by the various
-separations and unions of the insular and the continental
-kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Benevento.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Even the outlying papal possession
-of <i>Benevento</i> after each war went back to its ecclesiastical
-master. But the shiftings, divisions, and reunions
-of the Two Sicilies and of the island of Sardinia
-have been endless.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Charles of
-Anjou, 1265.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Sicilian kingdom of the
-Norman and Swabian kings, containing both the island
-and the provinces on the mainland, passed unchanged
-to Charles of Anjou.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revolt of
-the island of
-Sicily, 1282.<br />
-The two
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The revolt of the island split the
-kingdom into two, one insular, one continental, each of
-which called itself the <i>Kingdom of Sicily</i>, though the
-continental realm was more commonly known as the
-<i>Kingdom of Naples</i>. The wars of the fourteenth and
-fifteenth centuries caused endless changes of dynasty
-in the continental kingdom, but no changes of frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Aragon,
-Sardinia,
-and continental
-Sicily
-under
-Alfonso,
-1442.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under the famous Alfonso in the fifteenth century,
-Aragon, Sardinia, and the continental Sicily were
-three kingdoms under one sovereign, while the insular
-Sicily was ruled by another branch of the same house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aragonese
-kings of the
-island,
-1296-1442.
-1458-1701.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then continental Sicily passed to an illegitimate branch
-of the House of Aragon, while Sardinia and insular
-Sicily were held by the legitimate branch.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars beginning
-with
-Charles the
-Eighth,
-1494-1528.<br />
-Spanish,
-1556-1701.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The French
-invasion under Charles the Eighth and the long wars
-that followed, the conquests, the restorations, the
-schemes of division, all ended in the union of both the
-Sicilian kingdoms, now known as the <i>Kingdom of the
-Two Sicilies</i>, along with Sardinia, as part of the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
-Spanish monarchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1554-1555.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A momentary separation of the
-insular kingdom, in order to give the husband of Mary
-of England royal rank while his father yet reigned, is
-important only as the first formal use of the title of
-<i>King of Naples</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sardinia
-and Naples
-Austrian.<br />
-Duke of
-Savoy king
-of Sicily,
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the division of the Spanish monarchy,
-Sardinia and Naples fell to the lot of the Austrian
-House, while Sicily was given to the Duke of
-Savoy, who thus gained substantial kingly rank.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Exchange
-of Sicily
-and Sardinia,
-1718.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently
-the kings of the two island kingdoms made an
-exchange; Sardinia passed to Savoy, and the Emperor
-Charles the Sixth ruled, like Frederick the Second and
-Charles the Fifth, over both Sicilies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Spanish
-Bourbons,
-1735-1806.
-1817-1860.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, the kingdom
-was handed over from an Austrian to a new
-Spanish master, the first of the line of Neapolitan
-Bourbons. Thus, at the end of the last century, the
-Two Sicilies formed a distinct and united kingdom,
-while Sardinia formed the outlying realm of the Duke
-of Savoy and Prince of Piedmont. His kingdom was
-of far less value than his principality or his duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name <i>Sardinia</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as Sardinia gave their common sovereign his
-highest title, the Sardinian name often came in common
-speech to be extended to the continental dominions of
-its king.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Time of the
-Revolution,
-1797-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This period, a period of change, but of comparatively
-slight geographical change, was followed by a time
-when, in Italy as in Germany, boundaries were changed,
-new names were invented or forgotten names revived,
-when old land-marks were rooted up, and thrones were
-set up and cast down, with a speed which baffles the
-chronicler. The first strictly geographical change
-which was wrought in Italy by the revolutionary wars
-was a characteristic one.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cispadane Republic,
-1796.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A <i>Cispadane Republic</i>, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">{252}</a></span>
-first of a number of momentary commonwealths bearing
-names dug up from the recesses of bygone times,
-took in the duchy of Modena and the Papal Legations
-of Romagna. Without exactly following the same
-boundaries, it answered roughly to the old Exarchate.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Transpadane
-Republic, 1797.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the French victories over Austria caused the
-Austrian duchies of Milan and Mantua to become a
-<i>Transpadane Republic</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Campo
-Formio,
-1797.
-Cisalpine
-Republic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then Venice was wiped out at
-Campo Formio, and her Lombard possessions were joined
-together with the two newly made commonwealths, to
-form a <i>Cisalpine Republic</i>. But the same treaty wrought
-another change which was more distinctly geographical.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice surrendered
-to
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Venice and the eastern part of her possessions on the
-mainland, the old Venetia, the Lombard <i>Austria</i>, was
-now handed over to the modern state which bore the
-latter name. This change may be looked on as distinctly
-cutting short the boundaries of Italy. The duchy of
-Milan in Austrian hands had been an outlying part
-of the Austrian dominions; but Venetia marches on
-the older territory of the Austrian house, and was
-thus more completely severed from Italy. The whole
-north of the Hadriatic coast thus became Austrian in the
-modern sense. One Italian commonwealth—for Venice
-had long counted as Italian—was thus wiped out, and
-handed over to a foreign king. But elsewhere, at
-this stage of revolutionary progress, the fashion ran in
-favour of the creation of local commonwealths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ligurian
-Republic,
-1797.<br />
-Parthenopæan
-Republic.<br />
-Tiberine
-Republic,
-1798-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-dominions of Genoa became a <i>Ligurian Republic</i>;
-Naples became a <i>Parthenopæan Republic</i>; Rome herself
-exchanged for a moment the memories of kings,
-consuls, emperors, and pontiffs to become the head of a
-<i>Tiberine Republic</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Piedmont
-joined to
-France,
-1798-1800.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Piedmont was overwhelmed; the
-greater part was incorporated with France. Some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
-small parts were added to the neighbouring republics,
-and the king of Sardinia withdrew to his island kingdom.
-Amid this crowd of new-fangled states and new-fangled
-names, ancient San Marino still lived on.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far revolutionary Italy followed the example of
-revolutionary France, and the new states were all at
-least nominal commonwealths. In the next stage,
-when France came under the rule of a single man,
-above all when that single ruler took on him the Imperial
-title, the tide turned in favour of monarchy. In
-Rome and Naples it had already turned so in another
-way.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Restoration
-of the Pope
-and the
-King of the
-Two Sicilies,
-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By help of the Czar and the Sultan, the new republics
-vanished, and the old rulers, Pope and King,
-came back again. And now France herself began to
-create kingdoms instead of commonwealths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Etruria,
-1801-1808.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Parma
-was annexed to France, and its Duke was sent to rule
-in Tuscany by the title of <i>King of Etruria</i>. Presently
-Italy herself gave her name to a kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Italy, 1805-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Cisalpine
-republic, further enlarged by Venice and the other
-territory ceded to Austria at Campo Formio, enlarged
-also by the <i>Valtellina</i> and the former bishopric of
-<i>Trent</i> at one end and by the march of <i>Ancona</i> at the
-other, became the <i>Kingdom of Italy</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Buonaparte
-king of
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its King, the first
-since Charles the Fifth who had worn the Italian crown,
-was no other than the new ruler of France, the self-styled
-‘Emperor.’ But, in Buonaparte’s later distributions
-of Italian territory, it was not his Italian kingdom,
-but his French ‘empire’ whose frontiers were extended.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of Liguria,
-1805;<br />
-of Etruria,
-1808.<br />
-Grand
-duchy of
-Lucca.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ligurian Republic was annexed;
-so before
-long was the new kingdom of Etruria;
-<i>Lucca</i> meanwhile
-was made into a grand duchy for the conqueror’s
-sister.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of Rome
-and France,
-1809.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, Rome itself, with what was left of the
-papal dominions, was also incorporated with the French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
-dominion. The work alike of Cæsar and of Charles
-was wiped out from the Eternal City. The Empire of
-the Gauls, which Civilis had dreamed of more than
-seventeen centuries before, had come at last.</p>
-
-<p>The fate of the remainder of the peninsula had been
-already sealed before Rome became French. The kingdom
-of the Two Sicilies fell asunder. The Bourbon
-king kept his island, as the Savoyard king kept his.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdoms
-of Naples
-and Sicily,
-1806.
-1809.
-<i>Stati degli
-Presidi.</i><span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The continental kingdom passed, as a <i>Kingdom of
-Naples</i>, first to Joseph Buonaparte, and then to Joachim
-Murat.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Benevento.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the outlying Tuscan possessions of
-the Sicilian crown had already passed to France, and
-<i>Benevento</i>, the outlying papal possession in the heart
-of the kingdom, became a separate principality.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italy under
-French
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Thus all Italy—unless we count the island kingdoms
-of Sardinia and Sicily as parts of Italy—was brought
-under French dominion in one form or another. But
-of that dominion there were three varieties.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Part incorporated
-with
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The whole
-western part of the land, from Aosta to Tarracina—unless
-it is worth while to except the new Lucchese
-duchy—was formally incorporated with France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the kingdom
-of
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-north-eastern side, from Bözen to Ascoli, formed a
-Kingdom of Italy, distinct from France, but held by
-the same sovereign. And this Kingdom of Italy was
-further increased to the north by part of those Italian
-lands which had become Swiss and German.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Naples.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Southern
-Italy, the Kingdom of Naples, remained in form an independent
-kingdom; but it was held by princes who could
-not be looked on as anything but the humble vassals
-of their mighty kinsman. Never had Italy been brought
-more completely under foreign dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revival of
-the Italian
-name.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Still, in a
-part at least of the land, the name of Italy, and the
-shadow of a Kingdom of Italy, had been revived.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">{255}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its effects.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, as names and shadows are not without influence
-in human affairs, the mere existence of an Italian
-state, called by the Italian name, did something. The
-creation of a sham Italy was no unimportant step
-towards the creation of a real one.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-of, 1814-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The settlement of Italy after the fall of Buonaparte
-was far more strictly a return to the old state of things
-than the contemporary settlement of Germany. Italy
-remained a geographical expression. Its states were, as
-before, independent of one another.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No tie between
-the
-Italian
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They were practically
-dependent on a foreign power: but they were in
-no way bound together, even by the laxest federal tie.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The princes
-restored,
-but not the
-commonwealths.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The main principle of settlement was that the princes
-who had lost their dominions should be restored, but
-that the commonwealths which had been overthrown
-should not be restored. Only harmless San Marino
-was allowed to live on. Venice, Lucca, and Genoa
-remained possessions of princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Lombardy
-and Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The sovereign of
-Hungary and Austria, now calling himself ‘Emperor’
-of his archduchy, carved out for himself an Italian
-kingdom which bore the name of the <i>Kingdom of
-Lombardy and Venice</i>. On the strength of this, the
-Austrian, like his French predecessor, took upon him to
-wear the Italian crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its extent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The new kingdom consisted
-of the former Italian possessions of Austria, the duchies
-of Milan and Mantua, enlarged by the former possessions
-of Venice, which had become Austrian at Campoformio.
-The old boundary between Germany and
-Italy was restored. Trent, Aquileia, Trieste, were
-again severed from Italy. They remained possessions
-of the same prince as Milan and Venice, but they
-formed no part of his Lombardo-Venetian kingdom.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span>
-On another frontier, where restoration would have had
-to be made to a commonwealth, the arrangements
-were less conservative, and the <i>Valtellina</i> remained
-part of the new kingdom. The Ticino formed, as
-before, the boundary towards Piedmont.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Genoa annexed
-to
-Piedmont.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The King
-of Sardinia came again into possession of this last
-country, enlarged by the former dominions of <i>Genoa</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Monaco.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This gave him the whole Ligurian seaboard, except
-where the little principality of <i>Monaco</i> still went on.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tuscany,
-Parma,
-Modena,
-Lucca.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Parma</i>, <i>Modena</i>, and <i>Tuscany</i> again became separate
-duchies. <i>Lucca</i> remained a duchy alongside of them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lucca annexed
-to
-Tuscany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The family arrangements by which these states were
-handed about to this and that widow do not concern
-geography; all that need be marked is that, by virtue of
-one of these compacts, Lucca was in the end added to
-Tuscany. That grand-duchy was further increased by
-the addition of the former outlying possessions of the
-Sicilian crown, including Elba, the island which for a
-moment was an Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Papal
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Pope came back to all
-his old Italian possessions, outlying Benevento included.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Two
-Sicilies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was formed again by
-the restoration of the Kingdom of Naples to the
-Bourbon king. Thus was formed the Italy of 1815,
-an Italy which, save in the sweeping away of its commonwealths,
-and the consequent extension of Sardinian
-and Austrian territory, differed geographically but little
-from the Italy of 1748. But in 1815 there were hopes
-which had had no being in 1748. Italy was divided
-on the map; but she had made up her mind to be one.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The union
-of Italy
-comes from
-Piedmont.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The union of Italy was at last to come from one of
-those corners which in earlier history we have looked
-on as being hardly Italian at all. It was not Milan or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
-Florence or Rome which was to grow into the new
-Italy. That function was reserved for a princely house
-whose beginnings had been Burgundian rather than
-Italian, whose chief territories had long lain on the Burgundian
-side of the Alps, but which had gradually put
-on an Italian character, and which had now become the
-one national Italian dynasty. The Italian possessions of
-the Savoyard house, Piedmont, Genoa, and the island of
-Sardinia, now formed one of the chief Italian states, and
-the only one whose rule, if still despotic, was not foreign.
-Savoy, by ceasing to be Savoy, was to become Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Movements
-of 1848.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The movements of 1848 in Italy, like those in Germany,
-led to no lasting changes on the map: but they do so far
-affect geography that new states were actually founded,
-if only for a moment.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Momentary
-commonwealths.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Rome, Venice, Milan, were actually
-for a while republics, and the Two Sicilies were
-for a while separated. In the next year all came back
-as before. The next lasting change on the map was
-that which at last restored a real Kingdom of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Campaign
-of 1859.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The joint campaign of France and Sardinia won <i>Lombardy</i>
-for the Sardinian kingdom. Lombardy was now
-defined as that part of the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom
-which lay west of the Mincio, except that Mantua
-was left out. She was left to Austria. A French
-scheme for an Italian confederation came to nothing.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the smaller
-states, 1860.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Tuscany, Modena, Parma, and Romagna voted their
-own annexation to Piedmont. The Two Sicilies were
-won by Garibaldi, and the kingly title of Sardinia was
-merged in that of the restored Kingdom of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Addition of
-the Sicilies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-new Italian kingdom was, by the addition of the
-Sicilies, extended over lands which had never been
-part of the elder Italian kingdom. But Venetia was
-still cut off; the Pope kept the lands on each side of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></span>
-Rome, the so-called <i>Patrimony</i> and the <i>Campagna</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession of
-Savoy and
-Nizza to
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But France annexed the lands, strictly Burgundian
-rather than Italian, of <i>Savoy</i> and <i>Nizza</i>. The Italian
-kingdom was thus again called into being; but it had
-not yet come to perfection. Italy had ceased to be
-a geographical expression; but the Italian frontier still
-presented some geographical anomalies.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Venetia,
-1866;<br />
-of Rome,
-1870.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The war between Prussia and Austria gave Venetia
-to Italy; the war between Germany and France allowed
-Italy to recover Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Part of the
-old kingdom
-not yet
-recovered.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The two great gaps in her
-frontier were thus made good; but, to say nothing of the
-annexations made by France, a large Italian-speaking
-population, lying within the bounds of the old Italian
-kingdom, still remains outside its modern revival. Trent,
-Aquileia, Trieste, Istria, are still parts, not of an Italian
-kingdom, not of a German kingdom, confederation, or empire,
-but of an Austro-Hungarian monarchy. Otherwise
-the Italian kingdom has formed itself, and it has taken its
-place among the great powers of Europe. Yet the whole
-peninsula does not form part of the Italian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>San Marino
-remains
-free.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Surrounded on every side by that kingdom, the commonwealth
-of <i>San Marino</i>, like Rhodes or Byzantium
-under the early Cæsars, still keeps its ancient freedom.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The Kingdom of Burgundy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Burgundy
-with Germany
-and
-Italy, 1032.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Burgundian Kingdom, which was united with
-those of Germany and Italy after the death of its last
-separate king Rudolf the Third, has had a fate unlike
-that of any other part of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dying out
-of the kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its memory, as a
-separate state, has gradually died out.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chiefly
-annexed by
-France;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greater part
-of its territory has been swallowed up bit by bit by
-a neighbouring power, and the small part which has
-escaped that fate has long lost all trace of its original<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
-name or its original political relations. By a long series
-of annexations, spreading over more than five hundred
-years, the greater part of the kingdom has gradually
-been incorporated with France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>part Italian;<br />
-part Swiss.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of what remains, a
-small corner forms part of the modern kingdom of Italy,
-while the rest still keeps its independence in the form
-of the commonwealths which make up the western
-cantons of Switzerland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundy
-represented
-by Switzerland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These cantons, in fact, are the
-truest modern representatives of the Burgundian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Neutrality
-of Switzerland
-and
-Belgium.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And it is on the Confederation of which they
-form a part, interposed as it is between France, Italy,
-the new German Empire, and the modern Austrian monarchy,
-as a central state with a guaranteed neutrality,
-that some trace of the old function of Burgundy, as the
-middle kingdom, is thrown. This function it shares
-with the Lotharingian lands at the other end of the
-Empire, which now form part of the equally neutral
-kingdom of Belgium, lands which, oddly enough, themselves
-became Burgundian in another sense.</p>
-
-<p>The Burgundian Kingdom, lying between the Alps,
-the Saône and the Rhone, and the Mediterranean,
-might be thought to have a fair natural boundary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundaries
-of the kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, while it kept any shadow of separate being, its
-boundaries did not greatly change.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuation
-of its
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They were however
-somewhat fluctuating on the side of the Western
-kingdom, being sometimes bounded by the Rhone and
-sometimes reaching to the line of hills to the west of
-it. They were also, as we have seen, somewhat fluctuating
-on the side of Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chiefly
-Romance
-speaking.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At this end the kingdom
-took in some German-speaking districts; otherwise
-the language was Romance, including several dialects
-of the tongue of <i>Oc</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>County
-Palatine. <br />
-Lesser Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The northern part of the kingdom, answering to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">{260}</a></span>
-former Transjurane kingdom—the <i>Regnum Jurense</i>—formed
-two chief states, the <i>County Palatine of Burgundy</i>—the
-modern <i>Franche Comté</i>—and the <i>Lesser
-Burgundy</i>, roughly taking in western Switzerland and
-northern Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Provence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the Mediterranean lay the great
-county of <i>Provence</i>, with a number of smaller counties
-lying between it and the two northern principalities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Free
-Cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the great characteristic of the land was that, next
-to Italy, no part of Europe contained so many considerable
-cities lying near together. Many of these at
-different times strove more or less successfully after a
-republican independence, and a few have kept it to our
-own day.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Little real
-unity in the
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But, though the Burgundian kingdom might be
-thought to have, on three sides at least, a good natural
-frontier, it had but little real unity. The northern
-part naturally clave to its connexion with the Empire
-much longer than the southern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Burgundian
-Palatinate.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>County
-Palatine</i> of Burgundy often passed from one dynasty
-to another, and it is remarkable for the number of
-times that it was held as a separate state by several
-of the great princes of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Held by the
-Emperor
-Frederick,
-1156-1189;<br />
-by Philip of
-France,
-1315-1330.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was held by the
-Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in right of his wife; the
-marriage of one of his female descendants carried it to
-Philip the Fifth of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>United with
-the French
-Duchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then it became united
-with the French duchy of Burgundy under the dukes
-of the House of Valois.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1477.<br />
-Held by the
-House of
-Austria,
-Charles the
-Fifth Count
-of Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Saving a momentary French
-occupation after the death of Charles the Bold, it
-remained with them and their Austrian and Spanish
-representatives.
-Among these it had a second Imperial
-Count in the person of Charles the Fifth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexed to
-France,
-1674.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But,
-through all these changes of dynasty, it remained an
-acknowledged fief of the Empire, till its annexation to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></span>
-France under Lewis the Fourteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dole the
-capital of
-the county.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The capital of
-this county, it must be remembered, was <i>Dole</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Besançon a
-Free Imperial
-city.
-1189-1651.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-ecclesiastical metropolis of <i>Besançon</i>, though surrounded
-by the county, remained a free city of the
-Empire from the days of Frederick Barbarossa to those
-of Ferdinand the Third.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>United to
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was then merged in the
-county, and along with the county it passed to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Montbeilliard.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And it should be noticed that a small Burgundian land
-in this quarter, the county of <i>Montbeilliard</i> or <i>Mümpelgard</i>,
-first as a separate state, then in union with
-the duchy of Württemberg, kept its allegiance to the
-Empire till the wars of the French Revolution, when it
-was annexed to France and was never restored.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Lesser
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While the Burgundian Palatinate thus kept its history
-as an unit in European geography, the <i>Lesser Burgundy</i>
-to the south-west of it had a different history. The
-geography here gets somewhat confused through the fact
-that this Lesser Burgundy, which in the twelfth century
-passed under the power of the <i>Dukes of Zähringen</i> in
-Swabia as <i>Rectors</i>, took in some districts which were
-not parts of the Burgundian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The eastern
-part German.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The eastern
-part of the kingdom itself was of German speech,
-and its frontier towards the German duchy of Alemannia
-or Swabia was somewhat fluctuating. The Aar
-may be taken as the boundary of the kingdom, while
-the Lesser Burgundy, as an administrative division,
-stretched somewhat further to the East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cities of the
-Lesser Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus Basel, as
-well the foundations of the House of Zähringen at Bern
-and Freiburg, stood on strictly Burgundian ground,
-while the city of Luzern and the land of Unterwalden
-come under the head of the Lesser Burgundy, without
-forming part of the Burgundian kingdom. These lands
-long kept up their connexion with the Empire, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
-the Lesser Burgundy did not long remain as a separate
-unit.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dukes of
-Zähringen.<br />
-End of their
-house, 1218.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When the House of Zähringen came to an end,
-the country began to split up into small principalities
-and free cities which gradually grew into independent
-commonwealths.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up of
-the duchy.<br />
-Savoyard
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The counts of Savoy, of
-whom more presently, acquired a large territory on
-both sides of the Lake of Geneva.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bishops,
-Counts, and
-Free Cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Other considerable
-princes were the bishops of <i>Basel</i>, <i>Lausanne</i>, <i>Geneva</i>,
-and <i>Sitten</i>, the counts of <i>Geneva</i>, <i>Kyburg</i>, <i>Gruyères</i>,
-and <i>Neufchâtel</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Free
-Lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Basel</i>, <i>Solothurn</i>, and <i>Bern</i> were Imperial
-cities. The complicated relations between the
-Bishops and the city of Geneva hindered that city from
-having a strict right to that title. In Unterwalden and
-in <i>Wallis</i>, notwithstanding the possessions and claims of
-various spiritual and temporal lords, the most marked
-feature was the retention of the old rural independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Old
-League of
-High Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the cities in this region, Luzern, Bern, Freiburg,
-Solothurn, and Basel, all gradually became members of
-the <i>Old League of High Germany</i>, the ground-work of
-the modern Swiss Confederation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Bern and
-Freiburg
-from Savoy,
-1536.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Savoyard lands
-north of the lake were conquered by Bern and Freiburg
-in the sixteenth century, a conquest which also
-secured the independence of Geneva.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Burgundian
-cantons of
-Switzerland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these lands,
-after going through the intermediate stage of allies or
-subjects of some or other of the confederate cantons,
-have in modern times become independent cantons
-themselves. This process of annexation and liberation
-will be traced more fully when we come to the history
-of the Swiss Confederation.</p>
-
-<p>To the south of this group of states, and partly
-intermingled with them, lay another group, lying partly
-within the Cisjurane and partly within the Transjurane
-kingdom, which gradually grew into a great power.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were the states which were united step by step
-under the Counts of <i>Maurienne</i>, afterwards Counts of
-<i>Savoy</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundian
-possession
-of its
-county.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When their dominions were at their greatest
-extent, they held south of the Lake of Geneva, besides
-Maurienne and Savoy strictly so called, the districts
-of <i>Aosta</i>, <i>Tarantaise</i>, the <i>Genevois</i>, <i>Chablais</i>, and <i>Faucigny</i>,
-together with <i>Vaud</i> and <i>Gex</i> north of the lake.
-Thus grew up the power of Savoy, which has already
-been noticed in its purely Italian aspect, but which
-must receive fuller separate treatment in a section
-of its own.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>States between
-the
-Palatinate
-and the Mediterranean.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The remainder of the Burgundian Kingdom consisted
-of a number of small states stretching from the
-southern boundary of the Burgundian county to the
-Mediterranean.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bresse and
-Bugey
-become
-Savoyard.
-Bugey,
-1137-1344;
-Bresse,
-1272-1402.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-North of the Rhone lay the districts
-of <i>Bresse</i> and <i>Bugey</i>, which passed at various times to
-the House of Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lyons,
-Vienne,
-Orange, &amp;c.<br />
-Provence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Southwards on the Rhone lay a
-number of small states, among which the most important
-in history are the archbishopric, the county, and the
-free city of <i>Lyons</i>, the county or <i>Dauphiny</i> of <i>Vienne</i>
-and the city of <i>Vienne</i>, the county or principality <i>of
-Orange</i>, the city of <i>Avignon</i>, the county of <i>Venaissin</i>,
-the free city of <i>Arles</i>, the capital of the kingdom, the free
-city of <i>Massalia</i> or <i>Marseilles</i>, the county of <i>Nizza</i> or
-<i>Nice</i>, and the great county or marquisate of <i>Provence</i>.
-In this last power lay the first element of danger, especially
-to the republican independence of the free cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes of
-dynasty.<br />
-The Angevins,
-1246.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After being held by separate princes of its own, as well
-as by the Aragonese kings, it passed by marriage into
-the hands of a French prince, Charles of Anjou, the
-conqueror of Sicily, and also the destroyer of the second
-freedom of Massalia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growing
-French
-connexion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The possession of the greatest
-member of the kingdom by a French ruler, though it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">{264}</a></span>
-made no immediate change in the formal state of things,
-gave fresh strength to every tendency which tended to
-withdraw the Burgundian lands from their allegiance
-to the Empire and to bring them, first into connexion
-with France, and then into actual incorporation with
-the French kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Process of
-French annexation.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Step by step, though by a process which was spread
-over many centuries, all the principalities and commonwealths
-of the Burgundian kingdom, save the lands
-which have been Swiss and the single valley which
-is now Italian, have come into the hands of France.
-The tendency shows itself early.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Avignon
-first seized,
-1226.<br />
-Annexation
-of Lyons,
-1310.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Avignon</i> was seized
-for a moment during the Albigensian wars;
-but the
-permanent process of French annexation began when
-Philip the Fair took advantage of the disputes between
-the archbishops and the citizens of <i>Lyons</i>, to join that
-Imperial city to his dominions. The head of all the
-Gauls, the seat of the Primate of all the Gauls, thus
-passed into the hands of the new monarchy of Paris,
-the first-fruits of French aggrandizement at the cost of
-the Middle Kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Purchase of
-the Dauphiny
-of
-Vienne,
-1343.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the same century, the
-Dauphiny of <i>Vienne</i> was acquired by a bargain with its
-last independent prince. This land also passed, through
-the intermediate stage of an Imperial fief held by the
-heir-apparent of the French crown, into a mere province
-of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The city of
-Vienne
-annexed,
-1448.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the acquisition of the Dauphiny did not
-carry with it that of the city of <i>Vienne</i>, which escaped
-for more than a century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Valence,
-1446.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Between the acquisition
-of the Dauphiny and the acquisition of the city, the
-county of <i>Valence</i> was annexed to the Dauphiny.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Provence,
-1481.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later
-in the same century followed the great annexation of
-<i>Provence</i> itself. The rule of French princes in that
-county for two centuries had doubtless paved the way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></span>
-for this annexation. And the acquisition of Provence
-carried with it the acquisition of the cities of <i>Arles</i> and
-<i>Marseilles</i>, which the counts of Provence had deprived
-of their freedom. By this time the whole of the
-land between the Rhone and the sea had been swallowed
-up, save one state at the extreme south-east
-corner of the kingdom, and a group of small states
-which were now quite hemmed in by French territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nizza
-passes to
-Savoy, 1388.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first was the county of <i>Nizza</i> or Nice, which had
-passed away from Provence to Savoy before the French
-annexation of Provence. But by this time Savoy had
-become an Italian power, and Nizza was from henceforth
-looked on as Italian rather than Burgundian.
-Between Provence and the Dauphiny lay the city of
-<i>Avignon</i>, the county of <i>Venaissin</i>, and the principality
-of <i>Orange</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Avignon
-and Venaissin
-become
-Papal, 1348.<br />
-Annexed to
-France,
-1791.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Avignon and Venaissin became papal possessions
-by purchase from the sovereign of Provence; and,
-though they were at last quite surrounded by French
-territory, they remained papal possessions till they were
-annexed in the course of the great Revolution. These
-outlying possessions of the Popes perhaps did somewhat
-towards preserving the independence of a more interesting
-fragment of the ancient kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Orange.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was
-the Principality of <i>Orange</i>, which the neighbourhood
-of the Pope hindered from being altogether surrounded
-by French territory. This little state, whose name has
-become so much more famous than itself, passed
-through several dynasties, and for a long time it was
-regularly seized by France in the course of every war.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its annexation
-to
-France,
-1714-1771.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was as regularly restored to independence at
-every peace, and its final annexation did not happen till
-the eighteenth century. The acquisition of Orange,
-Avignon, and Venaissin, completed the process of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span>
-French aggrandizement in the lands between the
-Rhone and the Var. The stages of the same process
-as applied to the Savoyard lands will be best told in
-another section.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern
-states which
-have split
-off from the
-three kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have thus traced the geographical history of
-the three Imperial kingdoms themselves. It now follows
-to trace in the like sort the origin and growth of
-certain of the modern powers of Europe which have
-grown out of one or more of those kingdoms. Certain
-parts of the German, Italian, and Burgundian kingdoms
-have split off from these kingdoms, so as to form
-new political units, distinct from any of them. Five
-states of no small importance in later European history
-have thus been formed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their character
-as
-middle
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Most of them partake more
-or less of the character of middle states, interposed
-between France and one or more of the Imperial
-kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Switzerland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First, there is the Confederation of <i>Switzerland</i>,
-which arose by certain German districts and
-cities forming so close an union among themselves that
-their common allegiance to the Empire gradually died
-out. The Confederation grew into its present form by
-the addition to these German districts of certain Italian
-and Burgundian districts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Secondly, there are, or
-rather were, the dominions of the Dukes of <i>Savoy</i>,
-formed by the union of various Italian and Burgundian
-districts. This however, as a middle power, has
-ceased to exist; nearly all its Burgundian possessions
-have been joined to France, while its Italian possessions
-have grown into a new Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Dukes
-of Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thirdly, there were the
-dominions of the Dukes of <i>Burgundy</i>, forming a middle
-power between France and Germany, and made up
-by the union of French and Imperial fiefs.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Represented
-by the
-kingdoms
-of the Low
-Countries.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
-represented on the modern maps by the kingdoms of
-the <i>Netherlands</i> and <i>Belgium</i>, the greater part of both
-of which belonged to the Burgundian dukes. Of these
-kingdoms much the greater part had split off from the
-old kingdom of Germany. Certain parts were once
-French fiefs, but had ceased to be so.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recognized
-neutrality
-of Belgium,
-Switzerland,
-and
-once of part
-of Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The position of
-three out of these four states as middle powers, and their
-importance in that character, has been acknowledged
-even by modern diplomacy in the neutrality which is
-still guaranteed to Belgium and Switzerland, and which
-was formerly extended to certain districts of Savoy.</p>
-
-<p>Of these four states, Switzerland, Savoy, and the
-duchy of Burgundy as represented by the two kingdoms
-of the Low Countries, some have been merged
-in other powers, and those which still remain count
-only among the secondary states of Europe. But a
-fifth power has also broken off from Germany which
-still ranks among the greatest in Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Austrian
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is the
-power which, starting from a small German mark on
-the Danube, has, by the gradual union of various lands,
-German and non-German, grown into something distinct
-from Germany, first under the name of the <i>Austrian ‘Empire’</i>
-and more latterly under that of the <i>Austro-Hungarian
-Monarchy</i>. This power differs from the other states
-of which we have been just speaking, not only in its
-vastly greater extent, but also in its position.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-the Austrian
-dominion
-as a
-marchland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is
-a marchland, a middle kingdom, but in a different
-sense from Burgundy, Switzerland, Savoy, or Belgium.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-with the
-western
-marchlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these were marchlands between Christian states,
-between states all of which had formed part of the
-Carolingian Empire. All lie on the western side
-of the German and Italian kingdoms. Austria, on
-the other hand, as its name implies, arose on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">{268}</a></span>
-eastern side of the German kingdom, as a mark against
-Turanian and heathen invaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria as
-the march
-against the
-Magyar.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first mission of
-Austria was to guard Germany against the Magyar.
-When the Magyar was admitted into the fellowship of
-Europe and Christendom—when, after a while, his realm
-was united under a single sovereign with Austria—the
-same duty was continued in another form.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria and
-Hungary
-the mark of
-Christendom
-against
-the Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The power
-formed by the union of Hungary and Austria was one of
-the chief among those which had to guard Christendom
-against the Turk. Its history therefore forms one of
-the connecting links between Eastern and Western Europe.
-In this chapter it will be dealt with chiefly on its
-Western side, with regard to its relations towards Germany
-and Italy. The Eastern aspect of the Austro-Hungarian
-power has more to do with the states which
-arose out of the break up of the Eastern Empire.</p>
-
-<p>These states then, Switzerland, Savoy, the Duchy
-of Burgundy, the Netherlands, and Austria, form a
-proper addition to the sections given to the three
-Imperial kingdoms. I will now go on to deal with
-them in order.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>The Swiss Confederation.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The original
-Confederation
-practically
-German,<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>I have just spoken of the Swiss Confederation as
-being in its origin purely German. This statement is
-practically correct, as all the original cantons were German
-in speech and feeling, and the formal style of their
-union was <i>the Old League of High Germany</i>. But in strict
-geographical accuracy there was, as we have seen in the
-last section, a small Burgundian element in the Confederation,
-if not from the beginning, at least from its aggrandizement
-in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>though part
-of it geographically
-Burgundian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That is to say, part of the territory of the states which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span>
-formed the old Confederation lay geographically within
-the kingdom of Burgundy, and a further part lay within
-the Lesser Burgundy of the Dukes of Zähringen. But, by
-the time when the history of the Confederation begins,
-the kingdom of Burgundy was pretty well forgotten,
-and the small German-speaking territory which it took
-in at its extreme north-east corner may be looked on
-as practically German ground.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>All the old
-Cantons
-German in
-speech.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A more practical division
-than the old boundaries of the kingdoms is the
-boundary of the Teutonic and Romance speech; in
-this sense all the cantons of the old Confederation, except
-part of Freiburg, are German.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The later
-Romance
-Cantons.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Romance cantons
-are those which were formed in modern times out of
-the allied and subject states.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Many
-popular
-errors.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is specially needful to
-bear in mind, first, that, till the last years of the thirteenth
-century, not even the germ of modern Switzerland
-had appeared on the map of Europe; secondly,
-that the Confederation did not formally become an
-independent power till the seventeenth century; lastly,
-that, though the <i>Swiss</i> name had been in common use
-for ages, it did not become the formal style of the
-Confederation till the nineteenth century. Nothing in
-the whole study of historical geography is more necessary
-than to root out the notion that there has always
-been a country of Switzerland, as there has always been
-a country of Germany, Gaul, or Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Swiss
-do not represent
-the
-Helvetii.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And it is no
-less needful to root out the notion that the Swiss of
-the original cantons in any way represent the Helvetii
-of Cæsar.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Summary
-of Swiss
-history.<br />
-A German
-League
-having become
-more
-united and
-independent
-than
-others,
-annexes Romance
-allies
-and subjects.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The points to be borne in mind are that
-the Swiss Confederation is simply one of many German
-Leagues, which was more lasting and became more
-closely united than other German Leagues—that it
-gradually split off from the German Kingdom—that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>
-in the course of this process, the League and its members
-obtained a large body of Italian and Burgundian
-allies and subjects—lastly, that these allies and subjects
-have in modern times been joined into one Federal
-body with the original German Confederates.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Three
-Lands on
-the boundary
-of the
-three kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The three Swabian lands which formed the kernel
-of the Old League lay at the point of union of the
-three Imperial kingdoms, parts of all of which were to
-become members of the Confederation in its later form.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First known
-document of
-union, 1291.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first known document of confederation between the
-three lands dates from the last years of the thirteenth
-century. But that document is likely to have been
-rather the confirmation than the actual beginning of
-their union. They had for their neighbours several
-ecclesiastical and temporal lords, some other Imperial
-lands and towns, and far greater than all, the Counts
-of the house of <i>Kyburg</i> and <i>Habsburg</i>, who had
-lately grown into the more dangerous character of
-Dukes of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the League.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Confederation grew for a while
-by the admission of neighbouring lands and cities
-as members of a free German Confederation, owning
-no superior but the Emperor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Luzern,
-1332.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First of all, the city
-of <i>Luzern</i> joined the League.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Zürich,
-1351.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came the Imperial
-city of <i>Zürich</i>, which had already begun to form
-a little dominion in the adjoining lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Glarus and
-Zug, 1352.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came
-the land of <i>Glarus</i> and the town of <i>Zug</i> with its small
-territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bern, 1353.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And lastly came the great city of <i>Bern</i>,
-which had already won a dominion over a considerable
-body of detached and outlying allies and subjects.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eight
-Ancient
-Cantons.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These confederate lands and towns formed the <i>Eight
-Ancient Cantons</i>. Their close alliance with each other
-helped the growth of each canton separately, as well as
-that of the League as a whole.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their
-growth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Those cantons whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span>
-geographical position allowed them to do so, were
-thus able to extend their power, in the form of various
-shades of dominion and alliance, over the smaller
-lands and towns in their neighbourhood. These lesser
-changes and annexations cannot all be recorded here;
-but it must be carefully borne in mind that the process
-was constantly going on.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion
-of Zürich
-and Bern.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Zürich, and yet more
-Bern, each formed, after the manner of an ancient
-Greek city, what in ancient Greece would have passed
-for an empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-from Austria,
-1415-1460.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the fifteenth century, large conquests
-were made at the expense of the House of
-Austria, of which the earlier ones were made by
-direct Imperial sanction. The Confederation, or some
-or other of its members, had now extended its territory
-to the Rhine and the Lake of Constanz.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aargau,
-Thurgau,
-&amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-lands thus won, <i>Aargau</i>, <i>Thurgau</i>, and some other
-districts, were held as subject territories in the hands
-of some or other of the Confederate states.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>No new canton
-formed
-for a long
-time.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It is a fact to be specially noticed in the history of
-the Confederation, that, for nearly a hundred and thirty
-years, though the territory and the power of the Confederation
-were constantly increasing, no new states were
-admitted to the rank of confederate cantons. Before
-the next group of cantons was admitted, the general
-state of the Confederation and its European position
-had greatly changed. It had ceased to be a purely
-German power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of Italian
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first extension beyond the original
-German lands and those Burgundian lands which were
-practically German began in the direction of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Uri obtains
-Val Levantina,
-1441.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Uri
-had, by the annexation of Urseren, become the neighbour
-of the Duchy of Milan, and in the middle of the
-fifteenth century, this canton acquired some rights in
-the <i>Val Levantina</i> on the Italian side of the Alps. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">{272}</a></span>
-was the beginning of the extension of the Confederation
-on Italian ground. But far more important than this was
-the advance of the Confederates over the Burgundian
-lands to the west.<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-Savoyard
-conquest of
-Bern.<br />
-1475.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The war with Charles of Burgundy
-enabled Bern to win several detached possessions in the
-Savoyard lands north and east of the lake, and even on
-the lower course of the Rhone.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Savoyard
-conquests
-of Freiburg
-and Wallis.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, while Bern advanced,
-some points in the same direction were gained
-by her allies who are not yet members of the Confederation,
-by the city of <i>Freiburg</i> and the League of <i>Wallis</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Wallis.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last confederation had grown up on the upper
-course of the Rhone, where the small free lands had
-gradually displaced the territorial lords.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Freiburg
-and Solothurn
-become
-Cantons,
-1481.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Soon after this
-came the next admission of new cantons, those of the
-cities of <i>Freiburg</i> and <i>Solothurn</i>, each of them bringing
-with it its small following of allied and subject territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Basel and
-Schaffhausen,
-1501.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Twenty years later, <i>Basel</i> and <i>Schaffhausen</i>, the latter
-being the only canton north of the Rhine, were admitted
-with their following of the like kind.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Appenzell,
-1513.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Twelve years later,
-<i>Appenzell</i>, a little land which had set itself free from
-the rule of the abbots of <i>Saint Gallen</i>, after having
-long been in alliance with the Confederates, was admitted
-to the rank of a canton.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Thirteen
-Cantons,
-1513-1798.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus was made up
-the full number of Thirteen Cantons, which remained
-unchanged down to the wars of the French Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>But the time when the Confederation was finally
-settled as regards the number of cantons was also a
-time of great extension of territory on the part both
-of the Confederation and of several of its members.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Graubünden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the south-east corner of the Confederate territory,
-on the borders of the duchy of Milan and the county
-of Tyrol, the League of <i>Graubünden</i> or the <i>Grey
-Leagues</i> had gradually arisen. A number of communities,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
-as in Wallis, had got rid of the neighbouring
-lords, and had formed themselves into three leagues,
-the <i>Grey League</i> proper, the <i>Gotteshausbund</i>, and the
-League of <i>Ten Jurisdictions</i>, which three were again
-united by a further federal tie.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their alliance
-with
-the Confederates.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the
-fifteenth century, the Leagues so formed entered into
-an alliance with the Confederates.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1495-1567.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then began a great
-accession of territory towards the south on the part
-both of the Confederates and of their new allies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italian dominion
-of
-the Confederation,
-1512;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Confederates received a considerable territory within
-the duchy of Milan, including <i>Bellinzona</i>, <i>Locarno</i>, and
-<i>Lugano</i>, as the reward of services done to the House
-of Sforza.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the Grey
-Leagues,
-1513.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next year their new allies of the Grey
-Leagues also won some Italian territory, the <i>Valtellina</i>
-and the districts of <i>Chiavenna</i> and <i>Bormio</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Early
-Savoyard
-conquests of
-Bern, Freiburg,
-and
-Wallis,
-1536.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Next came
-the conquest of a large part of the Savoyard lands, of
-all north of the Lake and a good deal to the south, by
-the arms of Bern, Freiburg, and Wallis.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vaud.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Bern and
-Freiburg divided <i>Vaud</i> in very unequal proportions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lausanne.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Bern and Wallis divided <i>Chablais</i> on the south side of
-the lake, and Bern annexed the bishopric of <i>Lausanne</i>
-on the north.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geneva in
-alliance
-with Bern
-and Freiburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Geneva</i>, the ally of Bern and Freiburg,
-with her little territory of detached scraps, was now
-surrounded by the dominion of her most powerful
-allies at Bern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territory
-restored to
-Savoy, 1567.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But by a later treaty Bern and Wallis
-gave back to Savoy all that they had won south of the
-Lake, with the territory of <i>Gex</i> to the west of it.
-Geneva thus again had Savoy for a neighbour, a neighbour
-at whose expense she even made some conquests—Gex
-among them—conquests which the French ally
-of the free city would not allow her to keep. Later
-changes gave her a neighbour yet more dangerous
-than Savoy in the shape of France itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gruyères
-divided between
-Bern
-and Freiburg,
-1554.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></span>
-changes, Bern and Freiburg divided the county of <i>Gruyères</i>
-between them, the last important instance of that
-kind of process.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Allies.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Confederation was thus fully formed, with its
-Thirteen Cantons and their allied states.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saint
-Gallen.<br />
-Bienne.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these the
-<i>Abbot of Saint Gallen</i>, the <i>town of Saint Gallen</i>, and
-the town of <i>Biel</i> or <i>Bienne</i>, were so closely allied with
-the Confederates as to have a place in their Diets.
-Besides relations of less close alliance which the Confederates
-had with various Alsatian cities, several other
-states had a connexion so close and lasting with the
-Confederation or with some of its members, as to form
-part of the same political system.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><i>Bischofbasel.</i><br />
-Mühlhausen
-and
-Rottweil.<br />
-Neufchâtel
-passes to
-Prussia,
-1707.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such were the
-Leagues of Wallis and Graubünden, the Bishop of
-<i>Basel</i>, the outlying town of <i>Mühlhausen</i> in Elsass, and
-for a while that of <i>Rottweil</i>. Bern too, and sometimes
-other cantons, had relations both with the town and
-with the princes of <i>Neufchâtel</i>, which, after passing
-through several dynasties, was at last inherited by the
-Kings of Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Constanz.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Constanz</i>, at the other end of the
-Confederate land, was refused admission as a canton, but
-for a while it was in alliance with some of the cantons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Passes to
-Austria,
-1548.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this connexion was severed when Constanz, instead
-of a free Imperial city, became a possession of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Confederation
-released
-from the
-allegiance
-to the Empire,
-1658.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The power thus formed, a power in which a
-body of German Confederates was surrounded by a
-body of allies and subjects, German, Italian, and Burgundian,
-all of them originally members of the Empire,
-was by the Peace of Westfalia formally released from
-all allegiance to the Empire and its chief.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Date of the
-practical
-separation,
-1495.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Their practical
-separation may be dated much earlier, from the
-time when the Confederates refused to accept the
-legislation of Maximilian.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-position
-of the
-League.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The growth of the League into an independent
-power was doubtless greatly promoted by its geographical
-position, as occupying the natural citadel of
-Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its anomalous
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the piecemeal way in which it grew up
-was marked by the anomalous nature of its frontier on
-several points. On the north the Rhine would seem
-to be a natural boundary, but Schaffhausen beyond
-the Rhine formed part of the Confederation, while
-Constanz and other points within it did not. To the
-south the possession of territory on the Italian side
-of the Alps seems an anomaly, an anomaly which is
-brought out more strongly by a singularly irregular
-and arbitrary frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Confederation
-as
-a middle
-state.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But looking on the Confederation
-as the middle state, arising at the point of junction
-of the three Imperial kingdoms, it was in a manner
-fitting that it should spread itself into all three.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars of the
-French Revolution.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The form which the Confederation thus took in the
-sixteenth century remained untouched till the wars of
-the French Revolution.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dismemberment
-of the
-Grey
-Leagues,
-1797.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The beginning of change was
-when the Italian districts subject to the Grey Leagues
-were transferred to the newly formed <i>Cisalpine Republic</i>.
-In the next year the whole existing system
-was destroyed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Abolition of
-the Federal
-system,
-1798.<br />
-The Helvetic
-Republic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Federal system was abolished;
-instead of the Old League of High Germany, there
-arose, after the new fashion of nomenclature, a <i>Helvetic
-Republic</i>, in which the word <i>canton</i> meant no more
-than <i>department</i>. Yet even by such a revolution as
-this some good was done.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Freedom of
-the subject
-districts.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The subject districts were
-freed from the yoke of their masters, whether those
-masters were the whole Confederation or one or more
-of its several cantons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Freedom of
-Vaud.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus, above all, the Romance
-land of <i>Vaud</i> was freed from subjection to its German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">{276}</a></span>
-masters at Bern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of <i>Bischofbasel</i>
-and
-Geneva to
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Some of the allied districts, as the
-bishopric of Basel and the city of Geneva, were annexed
-to France. But the Leagues of Wallis and Graubünden
-were incorporated with the Helvetic Republic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Act of
-Mediation,
-1803.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In 1803 the Federal system was restored by Buonaparte’s
-<i>Act of Mediation</i>, which formed a Federal republic
-of nineteen cantons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The nineteen
-cantons.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were the original
-thirteen, with the addition of <i>Aargau</i>, <i>Graubünden</i>,
-<i>St. Gallen</i>, <i>Ticino</i>, <i>Thurgau</i>, and <i>Vaud</i>, which were
-formed out of the formerly allied and subject lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wallis incorporated
-with
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Wallis</i> was separated from the Confederation, and
-became, first a nominally distinct republic, and afterwards
-a French department.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Neufchâtel.<br />
-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Neufchâtel</i> was, in the
-course of Buonaparte’s wars with Prussia, detached
-from that power, to form a principality under his
-General Berthier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Swiss
-Confederation
-of
-twenty-two
-cantons.
-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last, in 1815, the present <i>Swiss
-Confederation</i> was established, consisting of twenty-two
-cantons, the number being made up by the addition
-of <i>Neufchâtel</i>, <i>Wallis</i>, and <i>Geneva</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><i>Bischofbasel</i>
-added
-to Bern.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The bishopric of
-Basel was also again detached from France, and added
-to the canton of Bern, a canton differing in language
-and religion, and cut off by a mountain range.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Neufchâtel
-separated
-from Prussia,
-1848.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-great constitutional changes which have been made
-since that time have not affected geography, unless we
-count the division of the city and district of Basel,
-<i>Baselstadt</i> and <i>Baselland</i>, into distinct half-cantons, and
-the surrender of all rights over Neufchâtel by the
-King of Prussia. But this last was not strictly a geographical
-change; it was rather a change from a <i>quasi</i>
-monarchic to a purely republican government in that
-particular canton.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">{277}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 7. <i>The State of Savoy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position
-and growth
-of Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The growth of the power of Savoy, the border state
-of Burgundy and Italy, has necessarily been spoken of
-more than once in earlier sections; but it seems needful
-to give a short connected account of its progress, and to
-mark the way in which a power originally Burgundian
-gradually lost on the side of Burgundy and grew on
-the side of Italy, till it has in the end itself grown
-into a new Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-position
-of the
-Savoyard
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The lands which have at different
-times passed under the rule of the House of Savoy
-lie continuously, though with an irregular frontier, and
-though divided by the great barrier of the Alps.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their three
-divisions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They
-fall however into three main geographical divisions,
-which at one time became also political divisions,
-being held by different branches of the Savoyard
-House.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There are the Italian possessions of that House,
-which have grown into the modern Italian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundian
-south
-of the lake.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There are the more strictly Savoyard lands south of the
-Lake of Geneva, and the other lands south of the
-Rhone after it issues from that lake, all of which have
-passed away under the power of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundian
-north
-of the lake.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And there
-are the lands north of the Lake and of the Rhone, part
-of which have also become French, while others have
-become part of the Swiss Confederation. Both these
-last lay within the kingdom of Burgundy, and stretched
-into both its divisions, Transjurane and Cisjurane. In
-no part of our story is it more necessary to avoid
-language which forestalls the arrangements of later
-times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Popular
-confusions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A wholly false impression is given by the use
-of language such as commonly is used. We often
-hear of the princes of Savoy holding lands ‘in France’
-and ‘in Switzerland. They held lands which by virtue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></span>
-of later changes have severally become French and
-Swiss; but those lands became French and Swiss only
-by ceasing to be Savoyard. On the other hand, to
-speak of them from the beginning as holding lands in
-Italy is perfectly accurate. The Savoyard states were
-a large and fluctuating assemblage of lands on both
-sides of the Alps, lying partly within the Italian and
-partly within the Burgundian kingdom. These last
-have shared the fate of the other fiefs of that crown.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Savoyard
-state
-originally
-Burgundian.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The cradle of the Savoyard power lay in the Burgundian
-lands immediately bordering upon Italy and
-stretching on both sides of the Alps. It was to their
-geographical position, as holding several great mountain
-passes, that the Savoyard princes owed their first importance,
-succeeding therein in some measure to the
-Burgundian kings themselves.<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> The early stages of
-the growth of the house are very obscure; and its
-power does not seem to have formed itself till after
-the union of Burgundy with the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possessions
-of the
-Counts of
-Maurienne.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it seems
-plain that, at the end of the eleventh century, the
-Counts of <i>Maurienne</i>, which was their earliest title,
-held rights of sovereignty in the Burgundian districts
-of <i>Maurienne</i>, <i>Savoy</i> strictly so called, <i>Tarantaise</i>,
-and <i>Aosta</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aosta; its
-special
-position.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last valley and city, though
-on the Italian side of the Alps, had hitherto been
-rather Burgundian than Italian.<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> Its allegiance had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span>
-fluctuated several times between the two kingdoms; but,
-from the time that Savoy held lands in both, the question
-became of no practical importance. And, without
-entering into minute questions of tenure, it may be
-said that the early Savoyard possessions reached to the
-Lake of Geneva, and spread on both sides of the inland
-mouth of the Rhone. The power of the Savoyard princes
-in this region was largely due to their ecclesiastical position
-as advocates of the abbey of Saint Maurice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-character
-of the
-Burgundian
-territories.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus
-their possessions had a most irregular outline, nearly surrounding
-the lands of <i>Genevois</i> and <i>Faucigny</i>. A state
-of this shape, like Prussia in a later age and on a greater
-scale, was, as it were, predestined to make further
-advances. But for some centuries those advances were
-made much more largely in Burgundy than in Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their early
-Italian possessions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The original Italian possessions of the House bordered
-on their Burgundian counties of Maurienne and Aosta,
-taking in <i>Susa</i> and <i>Turin</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Marquesses
-in Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This small marchland gave
-its princes the sounding title of <i>Marquesses in Italy</i>.
-The endless shiftings of territory in this quarter could
-be dealt with only at extreme length, and they are
-matters of purely local concern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-of
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In truth, they are
-not always fluctuations of territory in any strict sense
-at all, but rather fluctuations of rights between the
-feudal princes, the cities, and their bishops.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their position
-in the
-twelfth and thirteenth
-centuries.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the
-twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the princes of Savoy
-were still hemmed in in their own corner of Italy by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
-princes of equal or greater power, at <i>Montferrat</i>, at
-<i>Saluzzo</i>, at <i>Iverea</i>, and at <i>Biandrate</i>. And it must be
-remembered that their position as princes at once
-Burgundian and Italian was not peculiar to them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Other
-princes at
-once Italian
-and
-Burgundian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Dauphins of the Viennois and the Counts of Provence
-both held at different times territories on the Italian
-side of the Alps. The Italian dominions of the family
-remained for a long while quite secondary to its Burgundian
-possessions, and the latter may therefore be
-traced out first.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Savoy in
-Burgundy.<br />
-Faucigny
-and the
-Genevois.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The main object of Savoyard policy in this region
-was necessarily the acquisition of the lands of <i>Faucigny</i>
-and the <i>Genevois</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First advance
-north
-of the lake.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the final incorporation of those
-lands did not take place till they were still more completely
-hemmed in by the Savoyard dominions through
-the extension of the Savoyard power to the north of the
-Lake.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grant of
-Moudon.
-1207.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This began early in the thirteenth century by
-a royal grant of <i>Moudon</i> to Count Thomas of Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Romont the
-northern
-capital.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Romont</i> was next won, and became the centre of the
-Savoyard power north of the Lake.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peter,
-Count of
-Savoy.
-1263-1268.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Soon after, through
-the conquests of Peter of Savoy, who was known as the
-Little Charlemagne and who plays a part in English as
-well as in Burgundian history, these possessions grew
-into a large dominion, stretching along a great part of
-the shores of the Lake of Neufchâtel and reaching as
-far north as <i>Murten</i> or <i>Morat</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1239-1268.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was a straggling,
-and in some parts fragmentary, dominion, the continuity
-of which was broken by the scattered possessions of the
-Bishops of Lausanne and other ecclesiastical and temporal
-lords. This extension of dominion brought Peter
-into close connexion with the lands and cities which
-were afterwards to form the Old League of High Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>His relations with
-Bern.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Bern especially, the power to which his conquests<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></span>
-were afterwards to be transferred, looked on him
-as a protector.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Barons of
-Vaud.
-Union of
-Vaud with
-the elder
-branch.
-1349.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This new dominion north of the Lake
-was, after Peter’s reign, held for a short time by a
-separate branch of the Savoyard princes as <i>Barons of
-Vaud</i>; but in the middle of the fourteenth century,
-their barony came into the direct possession of the elder
-branch of the house. The lands of Faucigny and the
-Genevois were thus altogether surrounded by the Savoyard
-territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Faucigny
-held by the
-Dauphins
-of the Viennois.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Faucigny had passed to the Dauphins of
-the Viennois, who were the constant rivals of the Savoyard
-counts, down to the time of the practical transfer of
-their dauphiny to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Savoy acquires
-Faucigny
-and
-Gex.
-1355.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Soon after that annexation,
-Savoy obtained <i>Faucigny</i>, with <i>Gex</i> and some other
-districts beyond the Rhone, in exchange for some small
-Savoyard possessions within the Dauphiny.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Genevois.
-1401.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The long
-struggle for the Genevois, the <i>county</i> of Geneva, was
-ended by its purchase in the beginning of the fifteenth
-century. This left the <i>city</i> of Geneva altogether surrounded
-by Savoyard territory, a position which before
-long altogether changed the relations between the
-Savoyard counts and the city.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changed
-relations to
-city of
-Geneva.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hitherto, in the endless
-struggles between the Genevese counts, bishops, and
-citizens, the Savoyard counts, the enemies of the immediate
-enemy, had often been looked on by the citizens
-as friends and protectors. Now that they had
-become immediate neighbours of the city, they began
-before long to be its most dangerous enemies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Amadeus
-the Eighth,
-Count
-1391;<br />
-Duke 1417;<br />
-Antipope
-1440;<br />
-died 1451.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-acquisition of the Genevois took place in the reign of
-the famous Amadeus the Eighth, the first Duke of
-Savoy, who received that rank by grant of King Siegmund,
-and who was afterwards the Antipope Felix.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatest
-extent of
-the dominions of
-Savoy in
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In his reign the dominions of Savoy, as a power ruling
-on both sides of the Alps, reached their greatest extent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">{282}</a></span>
-But the Savoyard power was still pre-eminently
-Burgundian, and Chambery was its capital. The continuous
-Burgundian dominion of the house now reached
-from the Alps to the Saône, surrounding the lake of
-Geneva and spreading on both sides of the lake of
-Neufchâtel.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of Nizza.
-1388.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides this continuous Burgundian dominion,
-the House of Savoy had already become possessed
-of <i>Nizza</i>, by which their dominions reached to the sea.
-This last territory had however, though technically Burgundian,
-geographically more to do with the Italian
-possessions of the house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Savoy
-brought
-into the
-neighbourhood
-of
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this great extension of
-territory brought Savoy on its western side into closer
-connexion with the most dangerous of neighbours.
-Her frontier for a certain distance joined the actual
-kingdom of France. The rest joined the Dauphiny,
-which was now practically French, and the county
-of Provence, which was ruled by French princes and
-which before the end of the century became an actual
-French possession.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New relations
-towards
-Bern
-and the
-Confederates.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the North again the change
-in the relations between the House of Savoy and the
-city of Geneva led in course of time to equally changed
-relations towards Bern and her Confederates.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-Burgundian
-dominion
-of
-Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Through
-the working of these two causes, all that the House
-of Savoy now keeps of this great Burgundian territory
-is the single city and valley of Aosta. After
-the fifteenth century, the Burgundian history of that
-house consists of the steps spread over more than
-three hundred years by which this great dominion was
-lost.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Savoy in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The real importance of the house of Savoy in Italy
-dates from much the same time as the great extension
-of its power in Burgundy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The largest
-dominions
-cut short in
-the twelfth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the eleventh and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
-twelfth centuries, partly through the growth of the cities,
-partly through the enmity of the Emperor Henry
-the Sixth, the dominions of the Savoyard princes as
-marquesses of Susa had been cut short, so as hardly
-to reach beyond their immediate Alpine valleys.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grants to
-Count
-Thomas.
-1207.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-the beginning of the thirteenth century, when Count
-Thomas obtained his first royal grant north of the
-lake, he also obtained grants of <i>Chieri</i> and other
-places in the neighbourhood of Turin. These grants
-were merely nominal; but they were none the less
-the beginning of the Italian advance of the house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-homage of
-Saluzzo.
-1216.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the same reign <i>Saluzzo</i> for the first time paid a
-precarious homage to Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italian dominion
-of
-Charles of
-Anjou.
-1259.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the thirteenth
-century, Charles of Anjou, now Count of Provence
-and King of Sicily, made his way into Northern Italy
-also, and thus brought the house of Savoy into a
-dangerous neighbourhood with French princes on its
-Italian as well as on its Burgundian side. Through
-the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the Savoyard
-border went on extending itself. But the Italian possessions
-of the house, like its possessions north of the
-lake, were separated from the main body of Savoyard
-territory to form a fief for one of the younger
-branches.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Counts of
-Achaia in
-Piedmont.
-1301-1418.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This branch bore by marriage the empty
-title of Counts of <i>Achaia</i> and <i>Morea</i>—memories of
-Frank dominion within the Eastern Empire—while, as
-if to keep matters straight, a branch of the house of
-Palaiologos reigned at Montferrat.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-the fourteenth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the fourteenth
-century, among many struggles with the marquesses
-of Montferrat and Saluzzo, the Angevin counts
-of Provence, and the lords of Milan, the Savoyard
-power in Italy generally increased.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reunion of
-Piedmont.
-1418.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Amadeus
-the Eighth, the lands held by the princes of Achaia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
-were united to the possessions of the head of the house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of Biella,
-&amp;c.
-1435.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before the end of the reign of Amadeus, the dominions
-of Savoy stretched as far as the Sesia, taking in <i>Biella</i>,
-<i>Santhia</i> and <i>Vercelli</i>. Counting Nizza and Aosta as
-Italian, which they now practically were, the Italian
-dominions of the House reached from the Alps of
-Wallis to the sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-with Montferrat.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But they were nearly cut in two by
-the dominions of the Marquesses of <i>Montferrat</i>, from
-whom however the Dukes of Savoy now claimed
-homage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Claims on
-Saluzzo;
-its doubtful
-homage.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Saluzzo</i>, lying between the old inheritance
-of Susa and the new possession of Nizza, also passed
-under Savoyard supremacy. But it lay open to a very
-dangerous French claim on the ground of a former
-homage done to the Viennese Dauphins. Amadeus, the
-first Duke of Savoy, took the title of <i>Count of Piedmont</i>,
-and afterwards that of <i>Prince</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Establishment
-of
-Savoy as a
-middle
-state.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His possessions were
-now fairly established as a middle state, Italian and
-Burgundian, in nearly equal proportions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the Italian
-wars.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the course of the next century and a half the
-Savoyard state altogether changed its character in
-many ways. The changes which affected all Europe,
-especially the great Italian wars, could not fail greatly
-to affect the border state of Italy and Gaul. And there
-is no part of our story which gives us more instructive
-lessons with regard to the proper limits of our subject.
-During this time the Savoyard power was brought
-under a number of influences, all of which deeply
-affected its history, but which did not all alike affect its
-geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French influence
-and
-occupation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We have a period of French influence, a
-period of French occupation, and more than one actual
-fresh settlement of the frontier. Mere influence does not
-concern us at all. Occupation concerns us only when
-it takes the form of permanent conquest. An occupation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></span>
-of nearly forty years comes very near to permanent
-conquest; still when, as in this case, it comes to an end
-without having effected any formal annexation, it is
-hardly to be looked on as actually working a change
-on the map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occupation
-by France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France occupied Piedmont for nearly
-as long a time as Bern occupied the lands south of the
-lake. Yet we look on the one occupation as simply
-part of the military history, while in the other we see
-a real, though only temporary, geographical change.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Increased
-Italian
-character
-of Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the result alike of influence, of occupation, and of
-actual change of boundaries, all tended the same way.
-They all tended to strengthen the Italian character of
-the House of Savoy, to cut short its Burgundian
-possessions, and, if not greatly to increase its Italian
-possessions, at least to put it in the way of greatly
-increasing them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline of
-Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>During the second half of the fifteenth century, the
-power of the House of Savoy greatly declined, partly
-through the growing influence of France, partly through
-the division, in the form of appanages, of the lands
-which had been so lately formed together into a
-compact state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Italian
-wars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came the Italian wars, in which
-the Savoyard dominions became the highway for the
-kings of France in their invasions of Italy. The strictly
-territorial changes of this period chiefly concern the
-marquisate of Saluzzo on the Italian side and the
-northern frontier on the Burgundian side. In the end
-these two points of controversy were merged in a single
-settlement.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First loss of
-lands north
-of the lake.
-1475.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first loss of territory on the northern
-frontier, the first sign that the Savoyard power in
-Burgundy was gradually to fall back, was the loss of
-part of the lands north of the lake in the war between
-Charles of Burgundy and the Confederates. <i>Granson</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">{286}</a></span>
-on the lake of Neufchâtel, <i>Murten</i> or <i>Morat</i> on its own
-lake, <i>Aigle</i> at the south-east end of the great lake,
-<i>Échallens</i> lying detached in the heart of Vaud, all
-passed away from Savoy and became for ever Confederate
-ground. Sixty years later, the affairs of Geneva
-led to the great intervention of Bern, Freiburg and
-Wallis, by which Savoy was for ever shorn of her
-possessions north of the lake.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-lands on
-both sides
-of the lake.
-1536.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a while indeed
-she was cut off from the lake altogether; Chablais
-passed away as well as Vaud. Geneva, with her detached
-scraps of territory, was now wholly surrounded
-by her own allies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reunion of
-the lands
-south of the
-lake.
-1567.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thirty years later, Bern restored
-all her conquests south of the lake, together with Gex
-to the west, leaving Geneva again surrounded by the
-dominions of Savoy. Wallis too gave up part of her
-share, keeping only the narrow strip on the left bank
-of the Rhone.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Charles the
-Good.
-1504-1553.<br />
-Emanuel
-Filibert.
-1553-1580.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The loss and the recovery mark the
-difference between the reigns of Duke Charles the
-Third, called the Good, and Duke Emmanuel Filibert
-with the Iron Head. The difference of the two reigns
-is equally marked with regard to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of French
-occupation
-1536.<br />
-Its end.
-1574.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Almost at
-the same moment as the conquests made by Bern, began
-that occupation, whole or partial, of Savoyard territory
-by the French arms which did not come wholly to an
-end for thirty-eight years. Savoy then appeared again
-as a power whose main strength lay in Italy, whose
-capital, instead of Burgundian Chambery, was Italian
-Turin. And all later changes of frontier and the
-changes of frontier in her more southern dominions
-also tended the same way to increase the Italian character
-of the Savoyard power, and to lessen its extent
-in the lands which we may distinguish as Transalpine,
-for the Burgundian name has now altogether passed
-away from them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pb2">The first formal exchange of Burgundian for Italian
-ground happened under Emmanuel Filibert, shortly after
-the emancipation of his dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of Tenda.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The small county
-of <i>Tenda</i> was acquired in exchange for the marquisate
-of <i>Villars</i> in Bresse. This extended the Italian frontier,
-without formally narrowing the Burgundian frontier;
-still it was a step in the direction of more important
-changes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Disputes
-about the
-homage of
-Saluzzo.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first of these was caused by the endless
-disputes which arose out of the disputed homage
-of Saluzzo.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Saluzzo by
-France.
-1548.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Marquesses of Saluzzo preferred the
-French claimant of their homage to the Savoyard, a
-preference which led in the end to definite annexation
-by France. This was the first acquisition of Italian
-soil by France as such, as distinguished from the claims
-of French princes over Milan, Naples, and Asti. France
-thus threw a continuous piece of French territory into
-the heart of the states of Savoy. When the French
-occupation ceased, Saluzzo still remained to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Saluzzo.
-1588.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently it was conquered by Duke Charles Emmanuel.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Charles
-Emanuel.
-1580-1630.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The reign of this prince marks the final change
-in the destiny of the house of Savoy. He himself had
-dreamed of wider conquests on the Gaulish side of the
-Alps than had ever presented himself to any prince of
-his house. He was to be Count of Provence, King
-of Burgundy, perhaps King of France. The real
-results of his reign told in exactly the opposite way.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bresse, &amp;c.
-exchanged
-for Saluzzo.
-1601.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the treaty which ended his war with France,
-Saluzzo was ceded to Savoy in exchange for <i>Bresse</i>,
-<i>Bugey</i>, <i>Valromey</i>, and <i>Gex</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of position
-beyond
-the Alps.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A powerful neighbour
-was thus shut out from a possession which cut the
-Savoyard states in twain; but the price at which this
-advantage was gained amounted to a final surrender
-of the old position of the Savoyard House beyond the
-Alps. The Rhone and not the Saône became the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span>
-boundary, while the surrender of Gex brought France
-to the shores of the Lake. Geneva, her city and her
-scattered scraps of territory, had now, besides Bern,
-two other neighbours in France and Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Attempts
-on Geneva.
-1602-1609.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The two attempts
-of Charles Emmanuel to seize upon the city were
-fruitless. Savoy now became distinctly an Italian power,
-keeping indeed the lands between the Alps and the
-Lake, the proper Duchy of Savoy, but having her main
-possessions and her main interests in Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later
-history of
-Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We may
-here therefore finish the history of the Transalpine possessions
-of the Savoyard House.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexed to
-France.
-1792-1796.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Duchy of Savoy
-remained in the hands of its own Dukes till their continental
-dominion was swept away in the storm of the
-French Revolution.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Restored.
-1814-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was restored after the first fall
-of Buonaparte, but with a narrowed frontier, which
-left its capital <i>Chambery</i> to France. This was set
-right by the treaties of the next year.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Savoy and
-Nizza annexed
-to
-France.
-1860.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, as all
-the world knows, Savoy itself, including the guaranteed
-neutral lands on the Lake, passed, along with Nizza, to
-France. Savoy itself was so far favoured as to be
-allowed to keep its ancient name, and to form the departments
-of <i>High</i> and <i>Low Savoy</i>, instead of being
-condemned, as in the former temporary annexation, to
-bear the names of <i>Leman</i> and <i>Mont Blanc</i>. The Burgundian
-Counts who have grown into Italian Kings
-have thus lost the land under whose name their House
-grew famous.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aosta
-spared.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Aosta alone remains as the last relic of
-the times when the Savoyard Dukes, the greatest lords
-of the Middle Kingdom, still kept their place as the
-truest representatives of the Middle Kingdom itself.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italian history
-of the
-House of Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The purely Italian history of the house now begins,
-a history which has been already sketched in dealing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
-with the geography of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its character.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Savoy now takes part
-in every European struggle, and, though its position
-led to constant foreign occupation, some addition of
-territory was commonly gained at every peace.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French occupation.
-1629.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus,
-before the reign of Charles Emmanuel was over, Piedmont
-was again overrun by French troops.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of part
-of Montferrat.
-1631.<br />
-French occupation
-of
-Pinerolo.
-1630-1696.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Though
-the Savoyard possessions in Italy were presently increased
-by a part of the Duchy of <i>Montferrat</i>, this was
-a poor compensation for the French occupation of
-<i>Pinerolo</i> and other points in the heart of Piedmont,
-which lasted till nearly the end of the century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later
-Italian
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-gradual acquisition of territory at the expense of the
-Milanese duchy, the acquisition and exchange of the
-two island kingdoms, the last annexation by France,
-the acquisition of the Genoese seaboard, the growth of
-the Kingdom of Sardinia into the Kingdom of Italy,
-have been already told. Our present business has been
-with Savoy as a middle power, a character which
-practically passed from it with the loss of Vaud and
-Bresse, and all traces of which are now sunk in the
-higher but less interesting character of one of the great
-powers of Europe. From Savoy in its character of a
-middle power, as one of the representatives of ancient
-Burgundy, we naturally pass to another middle power
-which prolonged the existence of the Burgundian
-name, and on part of which, though not on a part
-lying within its Burgundian possessions, some trace of
-the ancient functions of the middle kingdom is still
-laid by the needs of modern European policy.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 8. <i>The Duchy of Burgundy and the Low Countries.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-the Valois
-Dukes of Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among all the powers which we have marked as
-having for their special characteristic that of being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
-middle states, the one which came most nearly to an
-actual revival of the middle states of earlier days was
-the Duchy of Burgundy under the Valois Dukes. A
-great power was formed whose princes held no part of
-their dominions in wholly independent sovereignty.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their twofold
-vassalage.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-practical power they were the peers of their Imperial and
-royal neighbours; but their formal character throughout
-every rood of their possessions was that of vassals of one
-or other of those neighbours.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its effects.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such a twofold vassalage
-naturally suggested, even more strongly than vassalage
-to a single lord could have done, the thought of emancipation
-from all vassalage, and of the gathering together
-of endless separate fiefs into a single kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Schemes
-for a Burgundian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The gradual acquisitions of earlier princes, especially
-those of Philip the Good, naturally led up to the design,
-avowed by his son Charles the Bold, of exchanging the
-title of Duke for that of King. The memories of the older
-Burgundian and Lotharingian kingdoms had no doubt a
-share in shaping the schemes of a prince who possessed
-so large a share of the provinces which had formed
-those kingdoms. The schemes of Charles, one can
-hardly doubt, reached to the formation of a realm like
-that of the first Lothar, a realm stretching from the
-Ocean to the Mediterranean. His actual possessions, at
-their greatest extent, formed a power to which Burgundy
-gave its name, but which was historically at least
-as much Lotharingian as Burgundian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Historical
-importance
-of the Burgundian
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And though
-this actual dominion was only momentary, no power
-ever arose which fills a wider and more œcumenical
-place in history than the line of the Valois Dukes.
-Their power connects the earliest settlement of the
-European states with the latest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1870.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It spans a thousand
-years, and connects the division of Verdun with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span>
-last treaty that guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium.
-The growth of their power was directly influenced by
-memories of the early Carolingian partitions; and, even
-in its fall, it has itself influenced the geography and
-politics of Europe ever since. As a Burgundian power,
-it was as ephemeral as all other Burgundian powers have
-ever been. As a Lotharingian power, it abides still
-in its effects.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-the Low
-Countries.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of the greater part of the Low
-Countries under a single prince, and that a prince who
-was on the whole foreign to the Empire, strengthened
-that tendency to split off from the Empire which was
-already at work in some of those lands. Later events
-caused them to split off in two bodies instead of one. This
-last tendency became so strong that a modern attempt
-to unite them broke down, and their place in the modern
-polity of Europe is that of two distinct kingdoms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final result
-of the
-Burgundian
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-existence of those two kingdoms is the final result of the
-growth of the Burgundian power in the fifteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its effect
-on language.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And by leading to the separation of the northern
-Netherlands from the Empire, it has led to one result
-which could never have been reckoned on, the preservation
-of one branch of the Low-Dutch tongue as the
-acknowledged and literary speech of an independent
-nation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Netherlands
-and
-Belgium.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its political results were the creation, in the
-shape of the northern Netherlands, of a power which
-once held a great place in the affairs of Europe and of
-the world, and the slower growth, in the shape of
-the southern Netherlands, of a state in which modern
-European policy still acknowledges the character of a
-middle kingdom. As the neutral confederation of
-Switzerland represents the middle kingdom of Burgundy,
-so the neutral kingdom of Belgium represents
-the middle kingdom of Lotharingia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ducal Burgundy
-a fief
-of the
-Western
-Kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Duchy of Burgundy which gave its name to
-the Burgundian power of the fifteenth century was that
-one among the many lands bearing the Burgundian
-name which lay wholly outside the Burgundian kingdom
-of the Emperors. This Burgundy, the only one
-which has kept the name to our own time, the duchy
-of which Dijon is the capital, never was a fief of the
-Eastern Kingdom or of the Empire, after the final
-separation. It always acknowledged the supremacy of
-the kings of Laon and Paris.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two lines
-of Dukes.
-1032.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By these last the duchy
-was twice granted in fief to princes of their own house,
-once in the eleventh century and once in the fourteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Valois.
-1363.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last grant was the beginning of the Dukes of the
-House of Valois, with the growth of whose power we
-have now to deal.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Flanders
-and Burgundy.
-1369.<br />
-The county
-of Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Philip the Hardy, the first Duke of
-this line, obtained, by his marriage with Margaret of
-Flanders, the counties of <i>Flanders</i>, <i>Artois</i>, <i>Rhetel</i>, and
-<i>Nevers</i>, all fiefs of the crown of France, together with
-the <i>County Palatine of Burgundy</i> as a fief of the Empire.
-The peculiar position of the Dukes of Burgundy of this
-line was at once established by this marriage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two masses
-of territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Duke
-Philip held of two lords, and his dominions lay in two
-distinct masses. The two Burgundies, duchy and county,
-and the county of Nevers, lay geographically together;
-Flanders and Artois lay together at a great distance;
-the small possession of Rhetel lay again detached
-between the two. Any princes who held such a territory
-as this could hardly fail to devote their main
-policy to the work of bringing about the geographical
-union of their scattered possessions. Nor was this all.
-The possession of the two Burgundies made their
-common sovereign a vassal at once of France and of
-the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-the Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The possession of Flanders, Artois, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
-Rhetel further brought him into connexion with those
-border lands of the Empire and of the French kingdom
-where the authority of either over-lord was weakest,
-and which had long been tending to form themselves
-into a separate political system distinct from both. The
-results of this complicated position, as worked out,
-whether by the prudence of Philip the Good or by the
-daring of Charles the Bold, form the history of the
-Dukes of Burgundy of the House of Valois.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Imperial
-and French
-fiefs in the
-Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The lands which we are accustomed to group
-together under the name of the <i>Netherlands</i> or <i>Low
-Countries</i> lay chiefly within the bounds of the Empire;
-but the county of Flanders had always been a fief of
-France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fief of the
-Counts of
-Flanders
-within the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Part however of the dominions of its counts,
-the north-eastern corner of their dominions, the lands
-of <i>Alost</i> and <i>Waas</i>, were held of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Zealand.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These
-lands, together with the neighbouring islands of <i>Zealand</i>,
-formed a ground of endless disputes between the
-Counts of Flanders and their northern neighbours the
-Counts of <i>Holland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Holland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last county gradually disentangles
-itself from the general mass of the Frisian lands
-which lie along the whole coast from the mouth of the
-Scheld to the mouth of the Weser.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Inroads of
-the sea.
-1219, 1282.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And those great inroads
-of the sea in the thirteenth century which gave the
-Zuyder-Zee its present extent helped to give the country
-a natural boundary, and to part it off from the Frisian
-lands to the north-east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Disputes
-with the
-free Frisians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Towards the end of the thirteenth
-century Friesland west of the Zuyder-Zee had
-become part of the dominions of the Counts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-West Friesland.
-1417-1447.<br />
-County of
-East Friesland.
-1454.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The land
-immediately east of the gulf established its freedom,
-while <i>East Friesland</i> passed to a line of counts, under
-whom its fortunes parted off from those of the Netherlands.
-Part of its later history has been already given<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
-in the character of a more purely German state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Bishops of
-Utrecht.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both
-the counts and the free Frisians had also dangerous
-neighbours in the Bishops of <i>Utrecht</i>, the great ecclesiastical
-princes of this region, who held a large temporal
-sovereignty lying apart from their city on the eastern
-side of the gulf. These disputes went on, as also
-disputes with the Dukes of Geldern, without any final
-settlement, almost to the time when all these lands
-began to be united under the Burgundian power. But
-before this time, the Counts of Holland had become
-closely connected with lands much further to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Brabant.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among a number of states in this region, the most
-powerful was the Duchy of <i>Brabant</i>, which represented
-the Duchy of the Lower Lotharingia, and whose princes
-held the mark of <i>Antwerp</i> and the cities of <i>Brussels</i>,
-<i>Löwen</i> or <i>Louvain</i>, and <i>Mechlin</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Hennegau
-or Hainault
-united with
-Holland.
-1299.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the South of them
-lay the county of <i>Hennegau</i> or <i>Hainault</i>. At the end
-of the thirteenth century, this county was joined by
-marriage with that of Holland. Holland and Hainault
-were thus detached possessions of a common prince, with
-Brabant lying between them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mark of
-Namur.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-South of Brabant lay
-the small mark or county of <i>Namur</i>, which, without
-being united to Flanders, was held by a branch of the
-princes of that house.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Common
-character of
-these states.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>All these states, though their princes held of two
-separate over-lords, had much in common, and were
-well fitted to be worked together into a single political
-system. They had much in common in the physical
-character of the country, and in the unusual number
-of great and flourishing cities which these countries
-contained.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Importance
-of the cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-None of these cities indeed actually reached
-the position of free cities of the Empire; but their
-wealth, and the degree of practical independence which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></span>
-they possessed, forms a main feature in the history of
-the Low Countries. In point of language, the northern
-part of these states spoke various dialects of Low-Dutch,
-from Flemish to Frisian; in the southern lands
-of Hainault, Artois, and Namur, the language, though not
-French, was not Teutonic, but an independent Romance
-speech, the Walloon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>South-western
-group of
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the west of these states lay
-another group of small principalities connected with the
-former greater group in many ways, but not so closely as
-those which we have just gone through.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bishopric
-of Lüttich.<br />
-Duchies of
-Luxemburg
-and Limburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great ecclesiastical
-principality of <i>Lüttich</i> or <i>Liège</i>, lying in two
-detached parts, divided the lands of which we have
-been speaking from the counties, afterwards duchies, of
-<i>Lüzelburg</i> or <i>Luxemburg</i> and of <i>Limburg</i>. Of these the
-more distant Limburg passed in the fourteenth century
-to the Dukes of Brabant.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Luxemburg
-a Duchy.
-1353.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Luxemburg is famous as
-having given a series of princes to the kingdom of
-Bohemia and to the Empire, and in their hands it rose to
-the rank of a duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geldern.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, to the north of Lüttich,
-forming a connecting link between this group of states
-and the more purely Frisian powers, lay the duchy of
-<i>Geldern</i>, of whose quarters the most northern portion
-stretched to the Zuyder Zee. These eastern states,
-though not so closely connected with one another as
-those to the west, were easily led into the same political
-system.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Middle
-position of
-all these
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Without drawing any hard and fast line,
-we may say that all the states of this region formed, if not
-yet a middle state, yet a middle system, apart alike from
-France and the Empire, though in various ways connected
-with both. Mainly Imperial, mainly Teutonic,
-they were not wholly so.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French
-influence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides the homage lawfully
-due to France from Flanders and Artois, French influence
-in various ways, in politics, in manners, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>
-language, had made great inroads in the southern
-Netherlands. Brabant and Hainault had practically
-quite as much to do with France as with the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Walloon
-language.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And this French influence was of course helped by
-the fact that a considerable region in the south was,
-though not of French, yet not of Teutonic speech.
-Altogether,
-with much to unite them to the great powers on
-either side, with much to keep them apart from either of
-them, with much more to unite them to one another,
-the states of the Netherlands might almost seem to be
-designed by nature to be united under a single political
-head.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the Netherlands
-under
-the Dukes
-of Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such a head was supplied by the Dukes of Burgundy
-and Counts of Flanders, by whom, in the course
-of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, nearly the whole
-of the Netherlands was united into a single power which
-was to be presently broken into two by the results of
-religious divisions.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Leaving then for the present the growth and fall of
-the Burgundian power in the lands more to the south,
-we will go on to trace the steps by which the provinces
-of the Low Countries were united under the Valois
-Dukes and their Austrian descendants.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Philip the
-Good.
-1419-1467.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great
-increase of territory in this region was made during the
-long reign of Philip the Good.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Namur.
-1421-1429.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His first acquisition was
-the county of <i>Namur</i>, a small and outlying district,
-but one which, as small and outlying, would still more
-strongly suggest the rounding off of the scattered territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1429-1433.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A series of marriages and disputes next enabled
-Philip to make a much more important extension
-of his dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1405.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Brabant and Limburg had
-passed to a younger branch of the Burgundian House.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1418.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-John, Duke of Brabant, the cousin of Philip by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></span>
-marriage with Jacqueline, Countess of Holland and Hainault,
-united those states for a moment. The disputes
-and confusions which followed on her marriages and
-divorces led to the annexation of her territories by the
-Duke of Burgundy, a process which was finally concluded
-by the formal cession of her dominions by Jacqueline.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Brabant
-and Limburg.
-1430.<br />
-Holland
-and Hainault.
-1433.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile Philip had succeeded to Brabant
-and Limburg, and the union of Flanders, Brabant, Hainault,
-Zealand, and Holland, together made a dominion
-which took in all the greatest Netherland states, and
-formed a compact mass of territory. On this presently
-followed a great acquisition of territory which was more
-strictly French than the fiefs which Philip already held
-of the French crown in Flanders and Artois. The
-Treaty of Arras, by which Philip, hitherto the ally of
-England against France, made peace with his western
-overlord, gave him, under the form of mortgage, the
-lands on the Somme.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The towns
-on the
-Somme.
-1435-1483.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The acquisition of these lands,
-<i>Ponthieu</i>, <i>Vermandois</i>, <i>Amiens</i>, and <i>Boulogne</i>, advanced
-the Burgundian frontier to a dangerous neighbourhood
-to Paris on this side as well as on the other.
-It had the further effect of keeping the small continental
-possessions which England still kept at Calais
-and Guisnes apart from the French territory. During
-the reigns of Philip and Charles the Bold, the continental
-neighbour of England was not France but Burgundy.
-But this great southern dominion was not
-lasting. The towns on the Somme, redeemed and again
-recovered, passed on the fall of Charles the Bold once
-more into French hands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovered
-by France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So did Artois itself, and,
-though Artois was won back, Amiens and the rest
-were not. Yet, if the towns on the Somme had
-stayed under the rule of the successive masters of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
-the Low Countries, it might by this time have seemed
-as natural for Amiens to be Belgian as it now seems
-natural for Cambray and Valenciennes to be French.
-The Treaty of Madrid drew a definite boundary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>France resigns
-the
-homage of
-Flanders
-and Artois.
-1526.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France gave up all claim to homage from Flanders and
-Artois, and Charles the Fifth, in his Burgundian, or
-rather in his Flemish, character, finally gave up all claim
-to the lands on the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>The south-western frontier was thus fixed; but
-meanwhile the new state had advanced in other directions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Luxemburg.
-1443.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Philip’s last great acquisition was the duchy
-of <i>Luxemburg</i>. He now possessed the greater part of
-the Netherlands; but his dominions were still intersected
-by the bishoprics of Utrecht and Lüttich and the duchy
-of Geldern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geldern
-and Zutphen.
-1472.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy of Geldern and county of Zutphen
-were added by Charles the Bold.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final annexation.
-1543.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But they formed
-a precarious possession, lost and won more than once,
-down to their final annexation under Charles the
-Fifth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bishopric
-of Lüttich
-never annexed.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the two great ecclesiastical principalities by
-which the Burgundian possessions in the Netherlands
-were cut asunder, the bishopric of <i>Lüttich</i>, though its
-history is much mixed up with that of the Burgundian
-Dukes, and though it came largely under their influence,
-was never formally annexed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of the
-bishopric
-of Utrecht,
-1531; and
-Friesland,
-1515.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the temporal principality
-of the Bishop of <i>Utrecht</i> was secularized under
-Charles the Fifth. <i>Friesland</i>, the Friesland immediately
-east of the Zuyder Zee, was already reincorporated with
-the dominions of the prince who represented the ancient
-counts of Holland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominions
-of Charles
-the Fifth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The whole Netherlands were
-thus consolidated under the rule of Charles the Fifth.
-They were united with the far distant county of Burgundy,
-and with it they formed the Burgundian circle
-in the new division of the Empire. The bishopric of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
-Lüttich, which intersected the whole southern part of
-the country, remained in the circle of Westfalia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The seventeen
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Seventeen
-provinces, each keeping much of separate being,
-were united under a single prince, and, since the
-treaty of Madrid, they were free from any pretensions
-on the part of foreign powers. The Netherlands
-formed one of the most compact and important
-parts of the scattered dominions of the Emperor who
-was also lord of Burgundy and Castile.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their separation
-from
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the final
-union of these lands under the direct dominion of an
-Emperor at once led to their practical separation from
-the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The possessions
-of
-Philip of
-Spain.
-1555.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They passed, with all the remaining possessions
-and claims of the Burgundian House, to Philip
-of Spain, and they were reckoned among the crowd of
-distant dependencies which had come under the rule of
-the crowns of Castile and Aragon. In Spanish hands
-they acted less as a middle state than as a power which
-helped to hem in France on both sides. Had the great
-revolt of the Netherlands ended in the final liberation
-of the whole seventeen provinces, the middle state would
-have been formed in its full strength.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The War of
-Independence.
-1568-1609.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As it was, the
-work of the War of Independence was imperfect. The
-northern provinces won their freedom in the form of
-a federal commonwealth. The southern provinces remained
-dependencies of Spain, to become the chosen
-fighting ground of European armies, the chosen plaything
-of European diplomacy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Seven
-United
-Provinces.
-1578.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The end of the long war of independence waged by
-the northern provinces was the establishment of the
-famous federal commonwealth of the <i>Seven United Provinces</i>,
-<i>Holland</i>, <i>Zealand</i>, <i>Utrecht</i>, <i>Gelderland</i>, <i>Over-Yssel</i>,
-<i>Friesland</i>, and <i>Groningen</i>. These answered
-nearly to the dominions of the Counts of Holland and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
-Bishops of Utrecht in earlier times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gelderland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But besides
-these, part of the duchy of <i>Geldern</i> formed one of the
-United Provinces, while its southern part shared the
-fate of the southern provinces. But, besides the
-United Seven, the Confederation also kept parts of
-Brabant, Geldern, and Flanders as common possessions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formal independence
-of the Empire.
-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The power thus formed, one which so long
-held an European importance quite disproportioned to
-its geographical extent, had under Burgundian rule become
-practically independent of the Empire, but it was
-only by the Peace of Westfalia that its independence
-was formally acknowledged. The maritime strength of
-the Confederation made it more than an European power.
-It became a colonizing power in three parts of the world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies of
-the Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
-the Seven Provinces extended their dominion
-over many points on the continent of India and over
-the neighbouring island of <i>Ceylon</i>, over the great equatorial
-islands of <i>Java</i>, <i>Sumatra</i>, and the <i>Moluccas</i>, over
-many points in <i>Guinea</i> and southern Africa, and over
-part of <i>Guiana</i> in South America.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New
-Netherland
-passes to
-England.
-1664.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the great
-North American settlement of <i>New Netherland</i> passed
-to England, and <i>New Amsterdam</i> became <i>New York</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No real
-name for
-the county.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Singularly enough, this great power never had any
-strict geographical name. <i>Netherlands</i> was too large, as
-it took in the whole of the Low Countries and not the
-emancipated provinces only. <i>Holland</i> was too small,
-as being the name of one province only, though the
-greatest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name
-<i>Dutch</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, by one of the oddest cases of caprice
-of language, in common English usage the name of the
-whole Teutonic race settled down on this one small
-part of it, and the men of the Seven Provinces came to
-be exclusively spoken of as <i>Dutch</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Spanish
-Netherlands.
-1578-1706.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the southern provinces, the greater part
-of Brabant and Flanders, with Artois, Hennegau or
-Hainault, Namur, Limburg, Luxemburg, and the
-southern part of Geldern,—taking in Antwerp at
-one end and Cambray at the other—remained under
-the sovereignty of the representatives of the Burgundian
-Dukes. That is, they remained an outlying dependency
-of the Spanish monarchy. But their southern
-frontier was open to constant aggressions on the part of
-France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dunkirk
-held by
-England.
-1658-1662.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Dunkirk</i> indeed was for a moment held by England,
-as Calais and Boulogne had been in earlier times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession of
-parts of Artois
-and of
-Gravelines,
-1659;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the Peace of the Pyrenees France obtained Arras
-and the greater part of Artois, leaving Saint Omer to
-Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dunkirk,
-1662;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France also began to work her way up along
-the coast of Flanders, taking <i>Gravelines</i> by virtue of
-the treaty, and presently adding Dunkirk by purchase
-from England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Philippeville,
-Marienburg,
-Thionville.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The treaty also added to France
-several points along the frontiers of Hainault, Liège,
-and Luxemburg, including the detached fortresses of
-<i>Philippeville</i> and <i>Marienburg</i>, and <i>Thionville</i> famous
-in far earlier days. During the endless wars of Lewis’
-reign, the boundary fluctuated with each treaty.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1668.<br />
-1677.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Acquisitions were made by France at the Treaty of
-Aix-la-Chapelle, some of which were surrendered, and
-others gained, by the Peace of Nimwegen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundary
-fixed by the
-Peace of
-Utrecht.
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last the
-boundary was finally fixed by the Peace of Utrecht in
-the last days of Lewis. Parts of Flanders and Hainault
-were finally confirmed to France, which thus kept
-<i>Lille</i>, <i>Cambray</i>, and <i>Valenciennes</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Spanish
-Netherlands
-pass to
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The provinces which
-had hitherto been Spanish now passed to the only
-surviving branch of the House of Austria, that which
-reigned in the archduchy and supplied the hereditary
-candidates for the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexed
-by France.
-1792.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first wars of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">{302}</a></span>
-French Revolution added the Austrian Netherlands to
-France, and with them the bishopric of Lüttich which
-still so oddly divided them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Holland.
-1806-1810.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A later stage of the days
-of confusion changed the Seven United Provinces,
-enlarged by the addition of East Friesland, into a
-<i>Kingdom of Holland</i>, one of the states which the new
-conqueror carved out for the benefit of his kinsfolk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holland
-annexed by
-France.
-1810-1813.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently the new kingdom was incorporated with the
-new ‘Empire,’ along with the German lands to the
-north-east of it. The Corsican had at last carried out
-the schemes of the Valois kings, and the whole Burgundian
-heritage formed for a moment part of France.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pb2">At the general settlement of Europe, after the long
-wars with France, the restoration of the Low Countries
-as a middle state was a main object.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of the
-Netherlands.
-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was brought
-about by the union of the whole Netherlands into a single
-kingdom bearing that name. The southern boundary
-did not differ very greatly from that fixed by the
-Peace of Utrecht.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The boundaries.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As in the case of the Savoyard frontier,
-France kept a little more by the arrangements of 1814
-than she finally kept by those of 1815. To the east,
-East-Friesland passed to Hannover, leaving the boundary
-of the new kingdom not very different from that of
-the two earlier powers which it represented, gaining
-only a small territory on the banks of the Maes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of Lüttich.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-the bishopric of Lüttich was incorporated with the lands
-which it had once parted asunder, and so ceased altogether
-to be German ground.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grand
-Duchy of
-Luxemburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The new king, as we have
-already seen, entered the German confederation in his
-character of Grand Duke of <i>Luxemburg</i>, the duchy being
-somewhat shortened to the east in favour of Prussia.
-Lastly, after fifteen years of union, the new kingdom again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>
-split asunder.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Belgium.
-1830-1831.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was now divided into the kingdom
-of the Netherlands, answering to the old United Provinces,
-and the kingdom of Belgium, answering to the
-old Spanish or Austrian Netherlands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Luxemburg
-divided.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But part of Limburg
-remained to the northern kingdom, and its sovereign
-also kept part of Luxemburg, as a district state, forming
-part of the German confederation. The western part
-of the duchy formed part of the kingdom of Belgium.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1867.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later events, as has been already recorded, have severed
-the last tie between Germany and the Netherlands; they
-have wiped out the last survival of the days when the
-Counts of Holland and of Luxemburg were alike princes
-of the German kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-Burgundian
-rule.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The above may pass as a sketch of the fluctuations
-along the borderland in their European aspect. It is
-needless to go through every small shifting of frontier,
-or to recount in detail the history of small border principalities
-like <i>Saint Pol</i> and <i>Bouillon</i>. The main historical
-aspect of these countries is their tendency, in
-all ages, to form somewhat of a middle system between
-two greater powers on either side of them. The guaranteed
-neutrality of Belgium and the guaranteed neutrality
-of Switzerland are alike survivals or revivals—it
-is hard to say which they should be called—of
-the instinctive feeling which, in the ninth century, called
-the Lotharingian kingdom into being. The modern
-form of this thousand-year old idea was made possible
-through the growth of the power of the Burgundian
-Dukes of the House of Valois.</p>
-
-<p>The real historical work of those dukes was thus
-done in those parts of their dominions from which
-they did not take their name, but which took their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">{304}</a></span>
-name from them. The history of their other dominions
-may be told in a few words; indeed a great part
-of it has been told already.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Schemes of
-Charles the
-Bold.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The schemes of Charles
-the Bold for uniting his scattered dominions by the conquest
-of the duchy of Lorraine, for extending the
-power thus formed to the sea-board of the royal Burgundy,
-for forming in short a middle kingdom stretching
-from the Ocean to the Mediterranean, acting as a
-barrier alike between France and Germany and between
-France and Italy, remained mere schemes. They are
-important only as showing how deeply the idea or the
-memory of a middle state was still fixed in men’s minds.
-The conquests of Charles in Lorraine, his purchases
-in Elsass, were momentary possessions which hardly
-touch geography. But the fall of Charles, by causing
-the break-up of the southern dominion of his house,
-helped to give greater importance to its northern
-dominion. While the Netherlands grew together, the
-Burgundies split asunder. After the fall of Charles the
-fate of the two Burgundies was much the same as the
-fate of Flanders and Artois. Both were for a while
-seized by France; but the county, like Artois, was afterwards
-recovered for a season. The duchy of Burgundy
-was lost for ever; the county, along with the outlying
-county of Charolois, remained to those who by
-female succession represented the Burgundian Dukes,
-that is to Charles the Fifth and his Spanish son. The
-annexation of the Burgundian county, and with it of
-the city of Besançon, by Lewis the Fourteenth has
-been recorded in an earlier section.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 9. <i>The Dominions of Austria.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="pb2">We now come to one among these German states
-which have parted off from the kingdom of Germany
-whose course has been widely different from the
-rest, and whose modern European importance stands
-on a widely different level. As the Lotharingian and
-Frisian lands parted off on the north-west of the
-kingdom, as a large part of the Swabian lands parted
-off to the south-west of the kingdom, so the <i>Eastern
-Mark</i>, the mark of <i>Austria</i>, parted off no less, but
-with widely different consequences.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-the name
-<i>Oesterreich</i>,
-<i>Austria</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The name of
-<i>Austria</i>, <i>Oesterreich</i>—<i>Ostrich</i> as our forefathers wrote
-it—is, naturally enough, a common name for the
-eastern part of any kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Other lands
-so called.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Frankish kingdom
-of the Merwings had its <i>Austria</i>; the Italian kingdom
-of the Lombards had its <i>Austria</i> also. We are half
-inclined to wonder that the name was never given in
-our own island either to Essex or to East-Anglia. But,
-while the other Austrias have passed away, the <i>Oesterreich</i>,
-the <i>Austria</i>, the Eastern mark, of the German
-kingdom, its defence against the Magyar invader, has
-lived on to our own times. It has not only lived on,
-but it has become one of the chief European powers.
-And it has become so by a process to which it would
-be hard to find a parallel.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Special
-position of
-the Austrian
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Austrian duchy supplied
-Germany with so many Kings, and Rome with
-so many Emperors, that something of Imperial character
-came to cleave to the duchy itself. Its Dukes, in
-resigning, first, the crown of Germany, and then all
-connexion with Germany, have carried with them into
-their new position the titles and bearings of the German
-Cæsars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union with
-Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The power which began as a mark against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">{306}</a></span>
-the Magyar came to have a common sovereign with
-the Magyar kingdom; and the Austrian duchy and
-Magyar kingdom, each drawing with it a crowd of
-smaller states of endless nationalities, have figured
-together in the face of modern Europe as the <i>Austrian
-Empire</i> or the <i>Austro-Hungarian Monarchy</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The so-called
-‘Empire’
-of
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is
-not easy, in drawing a map, to find a place for the
-‘Empire’ of Austria. The Archduchy is there, and its
-sovereign has not dropped his archiducal title. A crowd
-of kingdoms, duchies, counties, and lordships, all acknowledging
-the sovereignty of the same prince, are there
-also. But it is not easy to find the geographical place of
-an ‘Empire’ of Austria, as distinct from the Archduchy.
-Nor is it easy to understand on what principle an
-‘Empire’ of Austria can be understood as taking in all
-the states which happen to own the Hungarian King
-and Austrian Archduke as their sovereign. The matter
-is made more difficult when we remember that the
-title of ‘Hereditary Emperor of Austria’ was first taken
-while its bearer was still King of Germany and Roman
-Emperor-elect.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-separate
-states
-under the
-Austrian
-House.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, putting questions like these aside,
-the gradual union of a great number of states, German
-and non-German, under the common rule of the archiducal
-house of Austria, by whatever name we call the
-power so formed, is a great fact both of history and of
-geography. A number of states, originally independent
-of one another, differing in origin and language and
-everything that makes states differ from one another,
-some of them members of the former Empire, some not,
-have, as a matter of fact, come together to form a power
-which fills a large space in modern history and on the
-modern map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lack of
-national
-unity.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it is a power which is altogether
-lacking in national unity. It is a power which is not coextensive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></span>
-with any nation, but which takes in parts of many
-nations. It cannot even be said that there is a dominant
-nation surrounded by subject nations.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German,
-Magyar,
-and other
-races.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Magyar
-nation in its unity, and a fragment of the German
-nation, stand side by side on equal terms, while Italians,
-Roumans, and Slaves of almost every branch of the
-Slavonic race, are grouped around those two.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>No strictly
-federal tie.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There
-is no federal tie; it is a stretch of language to apply
-the federal name to the present relation between the
-two chief powers of Hungary and Austria. Nor
-can any strictly federal tie be said to unite Bohemia,
-Dalmatia, Croatia, and Galicia. And yet these other
-members of the general body are not mere subject
-provinces, like the dominions of Old Rome. The same
-prince is sovereign of a crowd of separate states, two
-of which stand out prominently as centres among the
-rest. There is neither national unity, nor federation, nor
-mere subjection of one land or nation to another. All
-this has come by the gradual union by various means of
-many crowns upon the same brow.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Anomalous
-nature of
-the Austrian
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The result is an
-anomalous power which has nothing else exactly like
-it, past or present. But the very anomaly makes the
-growth of such a power a more curious study.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Mark.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The beginnings of the Austrian state are to be
-found in the small <i>Mark</i> on the Danube, lying between
-Bohemia, Moravia, and the Duchy of Kärnthen or Carinthia.
-It appears in its first form as an appendage
-to Bavaria.<a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> This mark Frederick Barbarossa raised
-into a duchy, under its first duke Henry the Second,
-and it was enlarged to the westward at the expense of
-Bavaria by the addition of the lands above the Enns.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Austria,
-1156.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus was formed the original <i>Duchy of Austria</i>, the
-duchy of the Dukes of the House of Babenberg. It had
-not long risen to ducal rank before it began to extend
-itself at the expense of states which had hitherto been
-of greater moment than itself. Itself primarily a mark
-against the Magyar, Austria had to the south of it
-the lands where the German Kingdom marched at
-once upon the Magyar, the Slave, and the Kingdom
-of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Carinthia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here lay the great Duchy of Carinthia, a
-land where the population was mainly Slave, though
-on this frontier the Slavonic population had been
-brought into much earlier and more thorough subjection
-to the German Kings than the Slaves on the north-eastern
-frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Styria,
-1180;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the time of the foundation of the
-duchy of Austria, the Carinthian duchy had begun to
-split in pieces, and its northern part, hitherto the
-<i>Upper Carinthian Mark</i>, grew into the Duchy of <i>Steyermark</i>
-or <i>Styria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>united to
-Austria,
-1192.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Twelve years later, Leopold the
-Fifth of Austria inherited the duchy of Styria, a duchy
-greater than his own, by the will of its duke Ottokar.
-Carinthia itself went on as a separate duchy; but it
-now took in only a narrow territory in the south-western
-part of the old duchy, and that broken up by
-outlying possessions of the archbishops of Salzburg
-and other ecclesiastical lords.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The county
-of Görz.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south grew up a
-considerable power in the hands of the counts of <i>Görz</i>
-or <i>Gorizia</i> on the Italian border.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ecclesiastical
-position
-of its
-Counts.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The possessions of
-these counts stretched, though not continuously, from
-Tyrol to Istria, and their influence was further enlarged
-by their position as advocates of the bishoprics of <i>Trent</i>
-and <i>Brixen</i> and of the more famous patriarchate of
-<i>Aquileia</i>. These are the lands, the marchlands of
-Germany towards its eastern and south-eastern neighbours,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
-which came by gradual annexations to form the
-German possessions of the Austrian power. But the
-further growth of that power did not begin till the
-duchy itself had passed away to the hands of a wholly
-new line of princes.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Momentary
-union of
-Austria and
-Bohemia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The first change was one which brought about for a
-moment from one side an union which was afterwards
-to be brought about in a more lasting shape from the
-other side. This was the annexation of Austria by the
-kingdom of <i>Bohemia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia a
-kingdom,
-1158.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That duchy had been raised to
-the rank of a kingdom, though of course without ceasing
-to be a fief of the Empire, a few years after the mark of
-Austria had become a duchy. The death of the last
-duke of Austria of the Babenberg line led to a disputed
-succession and a series of wars, in which the princes of
-Bavaria, Bohemia, and Hungary all had their share.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ottokar of
-Bohemia
-annexes
-Austria
-and Styria,
-1252-1262.
-Carinthia,
-1269.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the end, between marriage, conquest, and royal grant,
-Ottokar king of Bohemia obtained the duchies of
-Austria and Styria, and a few years later he further
-added Carinthia by the bequest of its Duke. Thus a
-new power was formed, by which several German
-states came into the power of a Slavonic king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great
-power of
-Ottokar.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-power of that king for a moment reached the Baltic as
-well as the Hadriatic; for Ottokar carried his arms
-into Prussia, and became the founder of Königsberg.
-But this great power was but momentary. Bohemia
-and Austria were again separated, and Austria, with
-its indefinite mission of extension over so many lands,
-including Bohemia itself, passed to a house sprung from
-a distant part of Germany.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>House of
-Habsburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have now come to the European beginnings of
-the second House of Austria, the house whose name<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
-seems to have become inseparably connected with the
-name of Austria, though the spot from which that house
-drew its name has long ceased to be an Austrian possession.
-This is the house of the Counts of <i>Habsburg</i>.
-They took this name from their castle on the lower
-course of the Aar, in the north-west corner of the
-Aargau, in that southern Swabian land where the Old
-League of High Germany was presently to arise, and
-so greatly to extend itself at the cost of the power of
-Habsburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Habsburg,
-Kyburg,
-and Lenzburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By an union of the lands of Habsburg
-with those of the Counts of <i>Kyburg</i> and <i>Lenzburg</i>, a
-considerable, though straggling, dominion was formed.
-It stretched in and out among the mountains and lakes,
-taking in Luzern, and forming a dangerous neighbour
-to the free city of Zürich.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their possession
-in
-Elsass.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides these lands, the same
-house also held <i>Upper Elsass</i> with the title of Landgrave,
-a dominion separated from the other Swabian
-lands of the House by the territory of the free city of
-Basel.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rudolf
-king, 1273.<br />
-His victories
-over
-Ottokar,
-1276-1278.<br />
-Albert of
-Habsburg
-Duke of
-Austria
-and Styria,
-1282.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The lord of this great Swabian dominion, the
-famous Rudolf, being chosen to the German crown,
-and having broken the power of Ottokar, bestowed the
-duchies of Austria and Styria on his son Albert, afterwards
-King.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Meinhard
-Duke of
-Carinthia
-and Count
-of Tyrol,
-1286.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Carinthia at first formed part of the same
-grant; but it was presently granted to Meinhard Count
-of Görz and Tyrol. Görz passed to another branch of
-the house of its own Counts. Three powers were thus
-formed in these regions, the duchies of <i>Austria</i> and
-<i>Styria</i>, the duchy of <i>Carinthia</i> with the county of
-<i>Tyrol</i>, and the county of <i>Görz</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scattered
-territories
-of the
-House of
-Habsburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus under Albert the possessions of the House of
-Habsburg were large, but widely scattered. The two
-newly acquired eastern duchies not only gave its princes
-their highest titles, but they formed a compact territory,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
-well suited for extension northward and southward.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Falling off
-of the
-Swabian
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But among the outlying Swabian territories,
-though some parts remained to the Austrian House
-down to the end of the German Kingdom, the tendency
-was to diminish and gradually to part off altogether
-from Germany. In the lands south of the Rhine this
-happened through union with the Confederates; in the
-Alsatian lands it happened at a later stage through
-French annexation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Connexion
-of Austria
-with the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It is to be hoped that it is no longer needful to
-explain that the hereditary lands of the House of Habsburg
-or Austria had no inherent connexion with the
-German Kingdom and Roman Empire of which they
-were fiefs, beyond the fact that they were among its
-fiefs. They were further connected with it only by the
-accident that, from Rudolf onwards, many princes of
-that house were chosen Kings, and that, from the middle
-of the fifteenth century, onwards, all the Kings were
-chosen from that house and from the house into which
-it merged by female succession. It is to be hoped that
-there is no longer any need to explain that every Emperor
-was not Duke of Austria, and that every Duke of
-Austria was not Emperor. But it may be needful to
-explain that every Duke of Austria was not master of
-the whole dominions of the House of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Divisions
-of the
-Austrian
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The divisions,
-the reunions, the joint reigns, which are common
-to the House of Austria with other German princely
-houses, become at once more important and more puzzling
-in the case of a house which gradually came to
-stand above all the others in European rank. The
-caution is specially needful in the case of the Swabian
-lands, as the history of the Confederates is liable to be
-greatly misunderstood, if every Duke of Austria who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span>
-appears there is taken for the sole sovereign of the
-Austrian dominions. It is needless to go here through
-all these shiftings between princes of the same house.
-Through all changes the unity of the house and its possessions
-was maintained, even while they were parted out
-or held in common by different members of the house.
-But it is important to bear in mind that some of the
-Dukes of Austria who figure in the history of Switzerland
-were rather Landgraves of Elsass or Counts of
-Tyrol than Dukes of Austria in any practical sense.</p>
-
-<p>The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries may be
-defined as a time during which the Austrian House on
-the whole steadily advanced in the Eastern part of its
-dominions and steadily fell back in the Western. But
-in the course of the fourteenth century an acquisition
-was made which, without making them absolutely continuous,
-brought them into something more like geographical
-connexion with one another.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of
-Carinthia
-and Tyrol,
-1335.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was the
-acquisition of the Duchy of Carinthia and County of
-<i>Tyrol</i>, the latter of which lands lay conveniently
-between the Eastern and Western dominions of the house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Austrian
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These now stretched continuously from the Bohemian
-frontier to Istria, and they threw out, in the form of
-Tyrol and the Swabian lands, a scattered, but nearly
-continuous, territory stretching to the borders of Lorraine
-and the county of Burgundy. The Austrian
-possessions now touched the eastern gulf of the Hadriatic
-and came into the neighbourhood of the Dalmatian
-Archipelago.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Commendation
-of
-Trieste,
-1382.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Somewhat later they reached
-the main Hadriatic itself, when the city of <i>Trieste</i>,
-hitherto disputed between the commonwealth of Venice
-and the patriarchs of Aquileia, commended itself to
-the Austrian Duke Leopold as its lord. This is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></span>
-same Leopold who four years later fell at Sempach.
-By this time the Swabian possessions had been increased
-north of the Rhine, while south of the Rhine the
-Austrian dominion was steadily giving way.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Thurgau,
-1460.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Confederates
-and their several cantons advanced in every
-way, by purchase and conquest, till, after the loss of
-Thurgau, the House of Austria kept nothing south
-of the Rhine except the towns known as the <i>Waldstädte</i>.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the division of the estates of the house
-had taken a more lasting shape. One branch reigned
-in Austria, another in Carinthia and Styria, a third in
-Tyrol and the other western lands. At this time begins
-the unbroken series of Austrian elections to the German
-and Imperial crowns.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Albert the
-Second,
-king, 1437-1440.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first was Albert the Second,
-Duke of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frederick
-the Third,
-king, 1440;
-Emperor,
-1452.<br />
-Archduke
-of Austria,
-1453.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then Frederick the Third, the first
-Emperor of the House, united the Austrian and Carinthian
-duchies, and raised Austria to the unique rank of
-an Archduchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Siegmund,
-Count of
-Tyrol, &amp;c.,
-1429-1496.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, Siegmund Count of Tyrol
-held the western lands, and appears as Duke of Austria
-in Confederate and Burgundian history. He there
-figures as the prince who lost Thurgau to the Confederates
-and who mortgaged his Alsatian lands to Charles
-the Bold.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Maximilian,
-King of the
-Romans,
-1486;
-Archduke,
-1493;
-Count of
-Tyrol, 1496;
-Emperor-elect,
-1508.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Maximilian the whole possessions of the
-house of Austria were united.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of union
-with lands
-beyond the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But by this time the
-affairs of the purely German lands which had hitherto
-formed the possessions of the Austrian house had begun
-to be mixed up with the succession to lands and kingdoms
-beyond the Empire, and with lands which, though
-technically within the Empire, had a distinct being of
-their own. In the course of the fifteenth century the
-house of Austria, hitherto simply one of the chief
-German princely houses, put on two special characters.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Succession
-of
-Austrian
-Kings and
-Emperors.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It became, as we have already seen, the house which
-exclusively supplied kings and Emperors to Germany
-and the Empire. And it became, by virtue of its hereditary
-possessions rather than of its Imperial position,
-one of the chief European powers. For a while the
-greatest of European powers, it has remained a great
-European power down to our own time.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union with
-Bohemia
-and Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The special feature in the history of the house of
-Austria from the fifteenth century onwards is its connexion—a
-connexion more or less broken, but still constantly
-recurring till in the end it becomes fully permanent—with
-the kingdom of Bohemia within the Empire
-and with the kingdom of Hungary beyond its bounds.
-These possessions have given the Austrian power its
-special character, that of a power formed by the union
-under one prince of several wholly distinct nations
-or parts of nations which have no tie beyond that
-union. The Austrian princes, originally purely German,
-equally in their Swabian and in their Austrian
-possessions, had already, by the extension of their
-power to the south, obtained some Slavonic and some
-Italian-speaking subjects. Still, as a power, they were
-purely German.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Various acquisitions
-of Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in the period which begins in
-the fifteenth and goes on into the nineteenth century,
-we shall see them gradually gathering together, sometimes
-gaining, sometimes losing—gaining and losing by
-every process, warlike and peaceful, by which territory
-can be gained or lost—a crowd of kingdoms, duchies,
-and counties, scattered over all parts of Europe from
-Flanders to Transsilvania. But it is the acquisition of
-the two crowns of Bohemia and Hungary which, above
-all others, gave the House of Austria its special position
-as a middle power, a power belonging at once to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
-system of Western and to the system of Eastern Europe.
-Among the endless shiftings of the states which have
-been massed together under the rule of the House of
-Habsburg, that house has more than once been at the
-same moment the neighbour of the Gaul and the neighbour
-of the Turk; and it has sometimes found Gaul and
-Turk arrayed together against it. Add to all this that,
-though the connexion between the house of Austria
-and the Empire was a purely personal one, renewed in
-each generation by a special election, still the fact that
-so many kings of Hungary and archdukes of Austria
-were chosen Emperors one after another, caused the
-house itself, after the Empire was abolished, to look
-in the eyes of many like a continuation of the power
-which had come to an end. The peculiar position of
-the Austrian house could hardly have been obtained
-by a mere union of Hungary, Austria, and the other states
-under princes none of whom were raised to Imperial
-rank. Nor could it have been obtained by a series of
-mere dukes of Austria, even though they had been chosen
-Emperors from generation to generation. It was through
-the accidental union under one sovereign of a crowd of
-states which had no natural connexion with each other,
-and through the further accident that the Empire
-itself seemed to become a possession of the House,
-that the House of Habsburg, and its representative the
-House of Lorraine, have won their unique position
-among European powers.</p>
-
-<p>The first hints, so to speak, of a coming union
-between the Hungarian and Bohemian kingdoms and
-the Austrian duchy began, as we have seen, in the days
-of Ottokar. A Bohemian king had then held the Austrian
-duchy, while a Hungarian king had for a moment occupied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
-part of Styria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-with Hungary
-and
-Bohemia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the later form which the union
-was to take was not that of the Bohemian or the Hungarian
-reigning over Austria, but that of the Austrian
-reigning over Hungary and Bohemia. The duchy was
-not to be added to either of the kingdoms; but both
-kingdoms were in course of time to be added to the
-duchy. The growth of both Hungary and Bohemia as
-kingdoms will be spoken of elsewhere. We have now
-to deal only with their relations to the Austrian House.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rudolf, son
-of Albert,
-King of
-Bohemia,
-1306.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a moment, early in the fourteenth century, an
-Austrian prince, son of the first Austrian King of Germany,
-was actually acknowledged as King of Bohemia.
-But this connexion was only momentary. The first
-beginnings of anything like a more permanent connexion
-begin a hundred and thirty years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Albert the
-Second,
-King of
-Hungary
-and Bohemia,
-1438.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-second Austrian King of Germany wore both the
-Hungarian and the Bohemian crowns by virtue of his
-marriage with the daughter of the Emperor and King
-Siegmund. The steps towards the union of the various
-crowns are now beginning.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Siegmund,
-King of
-Hungary,
-1386;
-King of the
-Romans,
-1414;
-King of
-Bohemia,
-1419;
-Emperor,
-1433.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Siegmund was the third
-King of Bohemia who had worn the crown of Germany,
-the second who had worn the crown of the Empire.
-Under his son-in-law, Hungary, Bohemia, and Austria
-were for a moment united with the German crown;
-in the next reign, as we have seen, begins the lasting
-connexion between Austria and the Empire. But the
-Hungarian and Bohemian kingdoms parted again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wladislaus
-Postumus,
-Duke of
-Austria,
-1440-1457;
-King of
-Hungary
-and Bohemia,
-1453-1457.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-One
-Austrian King, the son of Albert, reigned at least nominally
-over both kingdoms, as well as over the special
-Austrian duchy. But the final union did not come for
-another eighty years. The Turk was now threatening
-and conquering. At Mohacz Lewis, king of the two
-kingdoms, fell before the invaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ferdinand,
-Archduke
-of Austria,
-1519; King
-of Hungary
-and Bohemia,
-1527;
-King of the
-Romans,
-1531;
-Emperor-elect,
-1556.<br />
-Permanent
-union of
-Bohemia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His Bohemian
-kingdom passed to Ferdinand of Austria, and from that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span>
-day to this, unless we except the momentary choice of
-the Winter King, the Palatine Frederick, the Bohemian
-crown has always stayed in the House of Austria. And
-for many generations it has been worn by the actual
-sovereign of the Austrian archduchy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the union
-with Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The acquisition of the crown of Hungary was of
-greater importance. It at once put the Austrian House
-into a wholly new position; it gave it its new later
-character of a middle state between Eastern and Western
-Europe. The duchy had begun as a mark against
-the Turanian and heathen invaders of earlier times.
-Those Turanian and heathen invaders had long before
-settled down into a Christian kingdom; they had latterly
-become the foremost champions of Christendom
-against the Turanian and Mahometan invaders who had
-seized the throne of the Eastern Cæsars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mission
-against the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the
-crown of Hungary, the main duty of the Hungarian
-crown, the defence of Christendom against the Ottoman,
-passed to the Archdukes and Emperors of the Austrian
-House.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Austrian
-kings
-in Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But for a long time Hungary was a most
-imperfect and precarious possession of its Austrian
-Kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1526-1699.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For more than a century and a half after the
-election of Ferdinand, his rule and that of his successors
-was disputed and partial. They had from the very
-beginning to strive against rival kings, while the
-greater part of the kingdom and of the lands attached
-to the crown was either held by the Turk himself
-or by princes who acknowledged the Turk as their
-superior lord. These strictly Hungarian affairs, as well
-as the changes on the frontier towards the Turk, will
-be spoken of elsewhere.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Passarowitz,
-1718.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was not till the eighteenth
-century that the Austrian Kings were in full possession
-of the whole Hungarian kingdom and all its
-dependencies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">{318}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of Görz,
-1500.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Austrian power had been making
-advances in other quarters. At the end of the fifteenth
-century the Austrian possessions at the north-east of
-the Hadriatic were greatly enlarged by the addition of
-the county of <i>Görz</i>, which carried with it the fallen
-city of Aquileia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New position
-towards
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A more direct path towards Italian
-dominion was thus opened. The wars of the League
-of Cambray made no permanent addition to Austrian
-dominion in this quarter; but the master of Trieste and
-Aquileia, whose territory cut off Venice from her Istrian
-possessions, might already almost pass for an Italian
-sovereign.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominions
-of Charles
-the Fifth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Charles the Fifth the House of
-Austria became, as we have seen, possessed of a vast
-Italian dominion. But after him it passed away alike
-from the Empire and the German branch of the house,
-to become part of the heritage of the Austrian Kings of
-Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austrian
-rule in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was not, as we have already seen, till the beginning
-of the eighteenth century that either an Emperor
-or a reigning archduke again obtained any territory
-within the acknowledged bounds of Italy. The fluctuations
-of Austrian rule in Italy, from the acquisition of
-the Duchy of Milan down to our own day, have been
-already told in the Italian section. Lombardy and
-Venetia are now again Italian; but Austria still keeps
-the north-east corner of the great gulf. She still keeps
-Görz and Aquileia, Trieste and all Istria, to say nothing
-of the dangerous way which her frontier still stretches
-on Italian ground in the land of Trent and Roveredo.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundian
-possessions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>These last named possessions still abide as traces of the
-Austrian advance in these regions, and its fluctuations
-there have been among the most important facts of
-modern history. Another series of Austrian acquisitions
-in the West of Europe have altogether passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
-away. The great Burgundian inheritance passed to
-the House of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Maximilian
-and
-Philip.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was only for a short time,
-in the persons of Maximilian and Philip, that it was in any
-way united to the actual Austrian Archduchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Austrian
-Netherlands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After
-Charles the Fifth the Burgundian possessions passed, like
-those in Italy, to the Spanish branch of the House, and,
-just as in Italy, it was not till the eighteenth century that
-actual Emperors or archdukes again reigned over a part
-of the Netherlands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Elsass.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before this time the Alsatian dominion
-of Austria had passed away to France, and the
-remnant of her Swabian possessions passed away, as we
-have seen, in the days of general confusion. The
-changes of her territory in Germany during that period
-have been already spoken of. Her acquisitions in Eastern
-Europe will come more fully elsewhere; but a word must
-be given to them here.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Silesia,
-1740.<br />
-Final partition
-of
-Poland,
-1772.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Looking at the House of Austria
-simply as a power, without reference to the German
-or non-German character of its dominions, the loss of
-<i>Silesia</i> may be looked on as counterbalanced by the
-territory gained from Poland at the first and third partitions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Galicia and
-Lodomeria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first partition gave the Austrian House
-a territory of which the greater part was originally
-Russian rather than Polish, and in which the old Russian
-names of <i>Halicz</i> and <i>Vladimir</i> were strangely softened
-into a <i>Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Third partition,
-1795.<br />
-New-Galicia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The third
-partition added <i>Cracow</i> and a considerable amount of
-strictly Polish territory. These last passed away, first to
-the Duchy of Warsaw, and then to the restored Kingdom
-of Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Cracow,
-1846.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Galicia has been kept, and it has
-been increased in our day by the seizure of the republic
-of Cracow. These lands lie to the north of the
-Hungarian kingdom. Parted from them by the whole
-extent of that kingdom, and adjoining that kingdom at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span>
-its south-west corner lie the coast lands of Austria on
-the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dalmatia,
-1797.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the Peace of Campoformio, Austria
-took <i>Dalmatia</i> strictly so called, and the other Venetian
-possessions as far south as Budua.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovered,
-1814.<br />
-Ragusa,
-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These lands, lost in
-the wars with France, were won again at the Peace,
-with the addition of <i>Ragusa</i> and its territory.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">This account of the gains and losses of a power
-which has gained and lost in so many quarters is
-necessary somewhat piecemeal. It may be well then
-to end this section with a picture of the Austrian power
-as it stood at several points of the history of the last
-century and a half, leaving the fluctuating frontier
-towards the Turk to be dealt with in our survey of the
-more strictly Eastern lands.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Maria
-Theresa,
-1740-1780.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We will begin at a date when we come across a
-sovereign whose position is often strangely misunderstood,
-the Empress-Queen Maria Theresa—Queen in her
-own right of Hungary and Bohemia, Empress by the
-election of her husband to the Imperial Crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her hereditary
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Pragmatic Sanction of her father Charles the Sixth
-made her heiress of all his hereditary dominions. That
-is, it made her heiress, within the Empire, of the kingdom
-of Bohemia with its dependencies of Moravia and
-Silesia—of the Archduchy of Austria with the duchies,
-counties, and lordships of Styria, Carinthia, Carniola,
-Tyrol, Görz, and Trieste—of Constanz and a few other
-outlying Swabian points—as also of Milan, Mantua, and
-the Austrian Netherlands, lands which it needs some
-stretch, whether of memory or of legal fiction, to look
-on as being then in any sense lands of the Empire.
-Altogether beyond the Empire, it gave her the Kingdom
-of Hungary with its dependent lands of Croatia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></span>
-Slavonia, and Transsilvania or Siebenbürgen. These
-hereditary dominions, lessened by the loss of Silesia,
-increased by the addition of Galicia, she handed on to
-their later Kings and Archdukes. Her marriage transferred
-those hereditary dominions, it indirectly transferring
-the Empire itself, to a new family, the House
-of Lorraine. The husband of Maria Theresa, Francis,
-who had exchanged his duchy of Lorraine for that of
-Tuscany, was in truth the first Lotharingian Emperor.
-After him came three Emperors of his house, under
-the third of whom the succession of Augustus and
-Charles came to an end.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austrian
-dominions
-in 1811.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We may take another view of the Austrian territory
-at the moment when the French power in Germany was
-at its height. The Roman Empire and the German kingdom
-had now come to an end; but their last sovereign
-still, with whatever meaning, called himself Emperor of
-his archduchy, though without dropping his proper title
-of Archduke.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New use of
-the name
-<i>Austria</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From this time the word Austria was
-used, commonly but inaccurately, to take in all the
-possessions of the House of Austria. And, as all the
-possessions of the House of Austria were now geographically
-continuous, it became more natural to speak of
-them by a single name than it had been when the dominions
-of that house in Italy and the Netherlands lay apart
-from the great mass of Austrian territory. And at this
-moment, when the Empire had come to an end and when
-the German Confederation had not yet been formed,
-there was no distinction between German and non-German
-lands. The ‘Empire’ of Francis the Second
-or First, as it stood at the time of Buonaparte’s greatest
-power, had, as compared with the hereditary dominions
-of Maria Theresa, gone through these changes. Tyrol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></span>
-and the Swabian lands had passed to other German
-princes; Salzburg had been won and lost again. In
-Italy the Venetian possessions had been won and lost,
-and they, together with the older Italian possessions of
-Austria, had passed to the French kingdom of Italy.
-France in her own name had encroached on the Austrian
-dominions at two ends. She had absorbed the
-Austrian Netherlands at one corner, the newly won
-territory of Dalmatia at another. This last territory,
-with parts of Carinthia and Carniola, and with the
-Hungarian kingdom of Croatia, received, on passing
-to France, the name of the <i>Illyrian Provinces</i>.
-Illyrian they were in the widest and most purely
-geographical sense of that name. But this use of
-the Illyrian name was confusing and misleading, as
-tending to put out of sight that the true representatives
-of the old Illyrian race dwell to the south, not only of
-Carinthia and Carniola, but of Dalmatia itself. The
-loss of the Austrian possessions in this quarter brought
-back the new Austrian ‘Empire’ to the condition of the
-original Austrian duchy. It became a wholly inland
-dominion, without an inch of sea-coast anywhere.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austria at
-the peace.
-1814-5.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have already seen how Austria won back her
-lost Italian and Dalmatian territory, and so much of
-her lost German territory as was geographically continuous.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ragusa and
-Cattaro.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Released from her inland prison, provided
-again with a great sea-board on both sides of the
-Hadriatic, she now refused to Ragusa the restoration
-of her freedom, and filched from Montenegro her hard-won
-haven of Cattaro. The recovered lands formed,
-in the new nomenclature of the Austrian possessions,
-the kingdoms of Lombardy and Venice, of Illyria,
-and of Dalmatia. The last was an ancient title of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></span>
-Hungarian crown. The Kingdom of Illyria was a
-continuation of the affected nomenclature which had
-been bestowed on the lands which formed it under their
-French occupation. We have already traced the driving
-out of the Austrian power from Lombardy and Venetia,
-its momentary joint possession in Sleswick, Holstein, and
-Lauenburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cracow,
-1846.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The only other actual change of frontier
-has been the annexation of the inland commonwealth
-of Cracow, to match the annexation of the sea-faring
-commonwealth of Ragusa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of Hungary,
-1848.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The movement of 1848
-separated Hungary for a moment from the Austrian
-power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Hungary,
-1849.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Won back, partly by Russian help, partly by
-the arms of her own Slavonic subjects, the Magyar kingdom
-remained crushed till Austria was shut out alike
-from Germany and from Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austro-Hungarian
-Monarchy,
-1867.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then arose the present
-system, the so called <i>dualism</i>, the theory of which
-is that the ‘Austro-Hungarian Monarchy’ consists of
-two states under a common sovereign. By an odd
-turning about of meanings, Austria, once really the
-<i>Oesterreich</i>, the Eastern land, of Germany, has become
-in truth the Western land, the <i>Neustria</i>, of the
-new arrangement. With the Hungarian kingdom are
-grouped the principality of Transsilvania and the kingdoms
-of Slavonia and Croatia. The Austrian state is
-made up of <i>Austria</i> itself—the archduchy with the
-addition of <i>Salzburg</i>—the duchy of <i>Styria</i>, the county
-of <i>Tyrol</i>, the kingdoms of <i>Bohemia</i>, <i>Galicia</i> and <i>Lodomeria</i>,
-<i>Illyria</i>, and <i>Dalmatia</i> with <i>Ragusa</i> and <i>Cattaro</i>.
-These last lands are not continuous. Thus two states
-are formed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In one the dominant German duchy has
-Slavonic lands on each side of it, and an Italian fringe
-on its coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern
-Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the other state, the ruling Magyar
-holds also among the subjects of his crown the Slave,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
-the Rouman, and the outlying Saxon of Siebenbürgen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Herzegovina,
-Bosnia,
-and Spizza,
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Add to this that the latest arrangements of
-all have added to the Austrian dominions, under the
-diplomatic phrase of ‘administration,’ the Slavonic
-lands of <i>Herzegovina</i> and <i>Bosnia</i>, while the kingdom
-of Dalmatia is increased by the harbour of <i>Spizza</i>.
-A power like this, which rests on no national basis, but
-which has been simply patched together during a
-space of six hundred years by this and that grant, this
-and that marriage, this and that treaty, is surely an
-anachronism on the face of modern Europe. Germany
-and Italy are nations as well as powers. Austria,
-changed from the <i>Austria</i> of Germany into the
-<i>Neustria</i> of Hungary, is simply a name without a
-meaning.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">We have thus gone through the geographical
-changes of the three Imperial kingdoms, and of the
-states and powers which were formed by parts of those
-kingdoms falling away, and in some cases uniting themselves
-with lands beyond the Empire. They have all
-to some extent kept a common history down to our
-own time. We have now to turn to another land which
-parted off from the Empire in like manner, but which
-parted off so early as to become a wholly separate and
-rival land, with an altogether independent history of its
-own.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE KINGDOM OF FRANCE.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin and
-growth of
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> process by which a great power grew up to the
-west of the Western Empire has something in common
-with the process by which the powers spoken of in the
-later sections of the last Chapter split off from the
-Western Empire. As in the case of Switzerland and
-the United Provinces, so in the case of France, a land
-which had formed part of the dominions of Charles the
-Great became independent of his successors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-with
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As in the
-case of Austria to the east, so in the case of France to
-the west, a duchy of the old Empire grew into a
-power distinct from the Empire, and tried to attach
-to itself the old Imperial titles and traditions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-nature of
-the Austrian
-and
-the French
-territories.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-there is more than one point of difference between the
-two cases. As a matter of geography, the power of the
-Austrian house has for some centuries largely rested
-on the possession of dominions beyond the boundaries
-of the Carolingian Empire, while it has been only for
-a moment, and that chiefly by the annexation of
-territory from Austria itself, that France has ever
-held any European possessions beyond the Carolingian
-frontier.<a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Difference
-in the process
-of
-separation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the true difference lies in the date and
-circumstances of the separation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The other
-powers split
-off after the
-Empire has
-become
-German.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Swabian, Lotharingian,
-Frisian, and Austrian lands which gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>
-split off from the Empire to form distinct states split off
-after the Empire had been finally annexed to the crown
-of Germany, indeed after Germany and the Empire had
-come to mean nearly the same thing. But France can
-hardly be said to have split off from the German
-kingdom or from the Empire itself. The first prince
-of the Western <i>Francia</i> who bore the kingly title was
-indeed the man of the King of the East-Franks.<a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> But no
-lasting relation, such as afterwards bound the princes
-of the Empire to its head, sprang out of his homage.
-Again from 887 to 963 the Imperial dignity was not
-finally attached to any one kingdom. It fluctuated
-between Germany and Italy; it might have passed to
-Burgundy; it might have passed to Karolingia, as it
-had once already done in the person of Charles the
-Bald.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-divided
-into four
-kingdoms,
-of which
-three are
-again
-united,
-while one
-remains
-distinct.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The truer way of putting the matter is to say
-that in 887 the Empire split up into four kingdoms, of
-which three came together again, and formed the
-Empire in a new shape. The fourth kingdom remained
-separate; it can hardly be said to have split off from
-the Empire, but its separation hindered the full reconstruction
-of the Empire. It has had a distinct history,
-a history which made it the special rival of the
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Karolingia
-receives the
-name of
-<i>France</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was <i>Karolingia</i>, the kingdom of the
-West-Franks, to which, through the results of the
-change of dynasty in 987, the name of <i>France</i> gradually
-came to be applied.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>France a
-nation as
-well as a
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">But there is yet another distinction of greater
-practical importance. France was so early detached
-from the rest of the elder Frankish dominions that it
-was able to form from the first a nation as well as a
-power. Its separation happened at the time when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span>
-European nations were forming. The other powers
-did not split off till long after those nations were
-formed, and they did not in any strict sense form
-nations. But France is a nation in the fullest sense.
-Its history is therefore different from the history of
-Austria, of Burgundy, of Switzerland, or even of Italy.
-As a state which had become wholly distinct from the
-Empire, which was commonly the rival and enemy of
-the Empire, which largely grew at the expense of the
-Empire, above all, as a state which won for itself a
-most distinct national being, France fully deserves a
-chapter, and not a mere section. Still that chapter is
-in some sort an appendage to that which deals with the
-Imperial kingdoms of the West. It naturally follows
-on our survey of those kingdoms, before we go on
-further to deal with the European powers which arose
-out of the dismemberment of the Empire of the East.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the royal
-domain at
-the accession
-of the
-Parisian
-house.
-987.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We left Karolingia or the Western Kingdom at
-that point where the modern French state took its real
-beginning under the kings of the house of Paris.
-Their duchy of France had since its foundation been
-cut short by the great grant of Normandy, and by the
-practical independence which had been won by the
-counts of <i>Anjou</i>, <i>Maine</i>, and <i>Chartres</i>. By their election
-to the kingdom the Dukes of the French added to
-their duchy the small territory which up to that time
-had still been in the immediate possession of the West-Frankish
-Kings at Laon. And, with the crown and the
-immediate territory of those kings, the French kings
-at Paris also inherited their claim to superiority over
-all the states which had arisen within the bounds of the
-Western Kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Definition of the word
-<i>France</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the name <i>France</i>, as it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
-used in the times with which we are dealing, means
-only the immediate territory of the King.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two forms
-of growth;
-annexation
-of fiefs of
-the French
-crown and
-of lands altogether
-beyond the
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The use of
-the name spreads with every increase of that territory,
-whether that increase was made by the incorporation
-of a fief or by the annexation of territory wholly foreign
-to the kingdom. These two processes must be carefully
-distinguished. Both went on side by side for some
-centuries; but the incorporation of the vassal states
-naturally began before the annexation of altogether
-foreign territory.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Various
-feudal
-gradations.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among the fiefs which were gradually annexed
-a distinction must be drawn between the great princes
-who were really national chiefs owing an external
-homage to the French crown, and the lesser counts
-whose dominions had been cut off from the original
-duchy of France. And a distinction must be
-again drawn between these last and the immediate
-tenants of the Crown within its own domains, vassals
-of the Duke as well as of the King.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The great
-vassals.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the first class
-belong the Dukes and Counts of <i>Burgundy</i>, <i>Aquitaine</i>,
-<i>Toulouse</i>, and <i>Flanders</i>; to the second the Counts of
-<i>Anjou</i>, <i>Chartres</i>, and <i>Champagne</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Special character
-of
-Normandy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Historically, <i>Normandy</i>
-belongs to the second class, as the original
-grant to Rolf was undoubtedly cut off from the French
-duchy. But the whole circumstances of the Norman
-duchy made it a truly national state, owing to the
-French crown the merest external homage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Britanny.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Britanny</i>,
-yet more distinct in every way, was held to owe its
-immediate homage to the Duke of the Normans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Twelve
-Peers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-so-called Twelve Peers of France seem to have been
-devised by Philip Augustus out of the romances of
-Charlemagne; but the selection shows who were looked
-on as the greatest vassals of the crown in his day. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
-six lay peers were the Dukes of Burgundy, Normandy,
-and Aquitaine, the Counts of Flanders, Toulouse, and
-Champagne.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Champagne.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last was the only one of the six who
-could not be looked upon as a national sovereign. His
-dominions were <i>French</i> in a sense in which Normandy
-or Aquitaine could not be called French.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-position of
-the Bishops
-in the Eastern
-and
-Western
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The six
-ecclesiastical peers offer a marked contrast to the
-ecclesiastical electors of the Empire. The German
-bishops became princes, holding directly of the Empire.
-But the bishops within the dominions of the great
-vassals of the French crown were the subjects of
-their immediate sovereigns. The Archbishop of Rouen
-or the Archbishop of Bourdeaux stood in no relation
-to the King of the French. The ecclesiastical peerage
-of France consisted only of certain bishops who were
-immediate vassals of the King in his character of King,
-among whom was only one prelate of the first rank,
-the Archbishop and Duke of <i>Rheims</i>. The others were
-the Bishops and Dukes of <i>Langres</i> and <i>Laon</i>, and the
-Bishops and Counts of <i>Beauvais</i>, <i>Noyon</i>, and <i>Châlons</i>.
-As the bishops within the dominions of the great feudatories
-had no claim to rank as peers of the kingdom,
-neither had those prelates who were actually within
-the King’s immediate territory, vassals therefore of the
-Duke of the French as well as of the King. Thus the
-Bishop of <i>Paris</i> and his metropolitan the Archbishop
-of <i>Sens</i> had no place among the twelve peers.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>Incorporation of the Vassal States.</i></h3>
-
-<p>At the accession of the Parisian dynasty, the royal
-domain took in the greater part of the later <i>Isle of
-France</i>, the territory to which the old name specially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">{330}</a></span>
-clung, the greater part of the later government of <i>Orleans</i>,
-besides some outlying fiefs holding immediately
-of the King.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chief vassals
-within
-the royal
-domain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within this territory the counties of
-<i>Clermont</i>, <i>Dreux</i>, <i>Moulins</i>, <i>Valois</i>, and <i>Gatinois</i>, are
-of the greatest historical importance. Two of the great
-rivers of Gaul, the Seine and the Loire, flowed through
-the royal dominions; but the King was wholly cut off
-from the sea by the great feudatories who commanded
-the lower course of the rivers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>States on
-the Channel
-and<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The coast of the channel
-was held by the princes of Britanny, Normandy,
-and Flanders, and the smaller county of <i>Ponthieu</i>,
-which lay between Normandy and Flanders and fluctuated
-in its homage between the two.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>on the
-Ocean;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ocean
-coast was held by the rulers of Britanny, of <i>Poitou</i>
-and <i>Aquitaine</i> united under a single sovereign, and
-of <i>Gascony</i> to the south of them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>on the
-Mediterranean
-coast.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That small part of
-the Mediterranean coast which nominally belonged
-to the Western Kingdom was held by the counts of
-<i>Toulouse</i> and <i>Barcelona</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Neighbours
-of the royal
-domain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these great feudatories, the
-princes of Flanders, Burgundy, Normandy, and Champagne,
-were all immediate neighbours of the King. To
-the west of the royal domain lay several states of the
-second rank which played a great part in the history
-of France and Normandy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chartres
-and Blois.
-1125-1152.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were the counties
-of <i>Chartres</i> and <i>Blois</i>, which were for a while
-united with <i>Champagne</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Anjou and
-Touraine
-united.
-1044.<br />
-Maine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Beyond these, besides some
-smaller counties, were <i>Anjou</i> and <i>Touraine</i>, and <i>Maine</i>,
-the great borderland of Normandy and France. Thus
-surrounded by their own vassals, the early Kings of
-the house of Paris had far less dealings with powers
-beyond their own kingdom than their Karolingian
-predecessors. They were thus able to make themselves
-the great power of Gaul before they stood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></span>
-forth on a wider field as one of the great powers of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The kingdom
-smaller
-than the
-old duchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>As regards their extent of territory, the Kings of
-the French at the beginning of the eleventh century
-had altogether fallen away from the commanding
-position which had been held by the Dukes of the
-French in the middle of the tenth. But this seeming
-loss of power was fully outweighed by the fact that
-there were now Kings and not merely Dukes, lords
-and no longer vassals.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advantage
-of the
-kingly
-position.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As feudal principles grew,
-opportunities were constantly found for annexing the
-lands of the vassal to the lands of his lord.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-advances of
-the Kings.<br />
-Gatinois.
-1068.<br />
-Viscounty
-of Bourges.
-1100.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Towards
-the end of the eleventh century the royal domain had
-already begun to increase by the acquisition of the
-<i>Gatinois</i> and of the viscounty of <i>Bourges</i>, a small part
-only of the later province of Berry, but an addition
-which made France and Aquitaine more clearly neighbours
-than before. Towards the end of the twelfth
-century began a more important advance to the north-east.
-The first aggrandizement of France at the expense
-of Flanders was the beginning of an important
-chain of events in European history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Amiens
-and Vermandois.
-1183.<br />
-Valois.
-1185.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the early
-years of Philip Augustus the counties of <i>Amiens</i> and
-<i>Vermandois</i> were united to the crown, as was the
-county of <i>Valois</i> two years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Artois.
-1180-1187.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So for a while was
-the more important land of <i>Artois</i>. Later in the reign
-of the same prince came an annexation on a far
-greater scale, which did not happen till the first years
-of the thirteenth century, but which was the result of
-causes which had been going on ever since the
-eleventh.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the House
-of Anjou.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the course of the twelfth century a power
-grew up within the bounds of the Western Kingdom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">{332}</a></span>
-which in extent of territory threw the dominions of
-the French King into insignificance. The two great
-powers of northern and southern Gaul, Normandy and
-Aquitaine, each carrying with it a crowd of smaller
-states, were united in the hands of a single prince, and
-that a prince who was also the king of a powerful
-foreign kingdom. The Aquitanian duchy contained,
-besides the county of <i>Poitou</i>, a number of fiefs, of
-which the most important were those of <i>Perigueux</i>,
-<i>Limoges</i>, the dauphiny of <i>Auvergne</i>, and the county of
-<i>Marche</i> which gave kings to Jerusalem and Cyprus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Aquitaine
-and Gascony.
-1052.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To these, in the eleventh century, the duchy of <i>Gascony</i>,
-with its subordinate fiefs, was added, and the dominions
-of the lord of Poitiers stretched to the Pyrenees.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests of
-William of
-Normandy.
-Ponthieu.
-1056.<br />
-Domfront.
-1049.<br />
-Maine.
-1063.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile
-Duke William of Normandy, before his conquest
-of England, had increased his continental dominions,
-by acquiring the superiority of <i>Ponthieu</i> and the immediate
-dominion, first of the small district of <i>Domfront</i>
-and then of the whole of <i>Maine</i>. Maine was presently
-lost by his successor, and passed in the end to the
-house of Anjou.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Maine and
-Anjou.
-1110.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the union of several lines in
-descent in the same person united England, Normandy,
-Anjou, and Maine in the person of Henry the Second.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominions
-of Henry
-the Second.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>For a moment it seemed as if, instead of the
-northern and southern powers being united in opposition
-to the crown, one of them was to be itself
-incorporated with the crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Momentary
-union of
-France and
-Aquitaine.
-1137.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The marriage of Lewis
-the Seventh with Eleanor of Aquitaine united his
-kingdom and her duchy. A king of Paris for the
-first time reigned on the Garonne and at the foot
-of the Pyrenees.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their
-separation.
-1152.<br />
-Union of
-Aquitaine,
-Normandy,
-and Anjou.
-1152-1154.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the divorce of Lewis and
-Eleanor and her immediate re-marriage with the Duke
-of Normandy and Count of Anjou again severed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
-southern duchy from the kingdom, and united the
-great powers of northern and southern Gaul. Then
-their common lord won a crown beyond the sea and
-became the first Angevin king of England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Britanny.
-1169.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another
-marriage brought Britanny, long the nominal fief of
-Normandy, under the practical dominion of its Duke.
-The House of Anjou thus suddenly rose to a dominion
-on Gaulish soil equal to that of the French king and
-his other vassals put together, a dominion which held
-the mouths of the three great rivers, and which was
-further strengthened by the possession of the English
-kingdom. But a favourable moment soon came which
-enabled the King to add to his own dominions the
-greater part of the estates of his dangerous vassal.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Claims of
-Arthur of
-Britanny.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the death of Richard, first of England and fourth
-of Normandy, Normandy and England passed to his
-brother John, while in the other continental dominions
-of the Angevin princes the claims of his nephew Arthur,
-the heir of Britanny, were asserted.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possible
-effects of
-his success.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The success of
-Arthur would have given the geography of Gaul altogether
-a new shape. The Angevin possessions on the
-continent, instead of being held by a king of England,
-would have been held by a Duke of Britanny, the
-prince of a state which, though not geographically cut
-off like England, was even more foreign to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Normandy,
-Anjou, &amp;c.
-1202-1205.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the fall of Arthur, Philip, by the help of a jurisprudence
-devised for the purpose, was able to declare
-all the fiefs which John held of the French crown to
-be forfeited to that crown, a sentence which did not
-apply to the fiefs of his mother Eleanor. In the
-space of two years Philip was able to carry that
-sentence into effect everywhere on the mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1258.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Continental Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and Touraine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
-were joined to the dominions of the French crown, and
-by a later treaty they were formally surrendered by
-John’s son Henry. Poitou went with them, and all
-these lands may from this time be looked on as forming
-part of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-and effects
-of the annexation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus far the process of annexation
-was little more than the restoration of an earlier state
-of things. For all these lands, except Poitou, had
-formed part of the old French duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territories
-kept by the
-English
-kings.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Kings of
-England still kept the duchy of Aquitaine with Gascony.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Norman
-Islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They kept also the insular Normandy, the Norman
-islands which have ever since remained distinct states
-attached to the English crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aquitaine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Aquitaine was now no
-longer part of the continental dominions of a prince
-who was equally at home on both sides of the Channel.
-It was now a remote dependency of the insular kingdom,
-a dependency whose great cities clave to the
-English connexion, while its geographical position and
-the feelings of its feudal nobility tended to draw it
-towards France.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sudden
-greatness
-of France.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The result of this great and sudden acquisition of
-territory was to make the King of the French incomparably
-greater on Gaulish ground than any of his
-own vassals. France had now a large sea-board on
-the Channel and a small sea-board on the Ocean. And
-now another chain of events incorporated a large territory
-with which the crown had hitherto stood in no
-practical relation, and which gave the kingdom a third
-sea-board on the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fiefs of
-Aragon in
-Southern
-Gaul.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While north-western and south-western Gaul were
-united in the hands of an insular king, the king of
-a peninsular kingdom became only less powerful in
-south-eastern Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Counts of
-Toulouse.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hitherto the greatest princes in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span>
-this region had been the counts of <i>Toulouse</i>, who,
-besides their fiefs of the French crown, had also possessions
-in the Burgundian kingdom beyond the Rhone.
-But during the latter part of the eleventh century and
-the beginning of the twelfth, the Counts of <i>Barcelona</i>,
-and the kings of Aragon who succeeded them, acquired
-by various means a number of Tolosan fiefs,
-both French and Imperial. <i>Carcassonne</i>, <i>Albi</i>, and
-<i>Nîmes</i> were all under the lordship of the Aragonese
-crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Albigensian
-War.
-1207-1229.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Albigensian war seemed at first likely
-to lead to the establishment of the house of Montfort
-as the chief power of Southern Gaul.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Simon of
-Montfort at
-Toulouse.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the
-struggle ended in a vast increase of the power of the
-French crown, at the expense alike of the house of
-Toulouse and of the house of Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-of Meaux.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominions
-of the Count of Toulouse were divided.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of Narbonne,
-1229;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A number of
-fiefs, <i>Beziers</i>, <i>Narbonne</i>, <i>Nîmes</i>, <i>Albi</i>, and some other
-districts, were at once annexed to the crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Toulouse,
-1270.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-capital itself and its county passed to the crown fifty
-years later. By a settlement with Aragon, the domains
-of the French king were increased, while the French
-kingdom itself was nominally cut short.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roussillon
-and Barcelona
-released
-from
-homage.
-1258.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Two of the
-Aragonese fiefs, the counties of <i>Roussillon</i> and <i>Barcelona</i>,
-were relieved from even nominal homage. The
-name of Toulouse, except as the name of the city
-itself, now passed away, and the new acquisitions of
-France came in the end to be known by the name of
-the tongue which was common to them with Aquitaine
-and Imperial Burgundy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Province of
-Languedoc.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under the name of <i>Languedoc</i>
-they became one of the greatest and most valuable
-provinces of the French kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">The great growth of the crown during the reign of
-Saint Lewis was thus in the south; but he also extended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span>
-his borders nearer home.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Purchase of
-Blois and
-Chartres.
-1234.<br />
-Escheat of
-Perche.
-1257.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-He won back part
-of the old French duchy when he purchased the
-superiority of <i>Blois</i> and <i>Chartres</i>, to which <i>Perche</i> was
-afterwards added by escheat.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Macon,
-1239.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Further off, he added
-<i>Macon</i> to the crown, a possession which afterwards
-passed away to the House of Burgundy.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Southern
-advance of
-the Crown.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Thus, during the reigns of Philip Augustus and his
-grandson, the royal possessions had been enlarged by
-the annexations of two of the chief vassal states, two of
-the lay peerages, annexations which gave the French
-King a sea-board on two seas and which brought him
-into immediate connexion with the affairs of the Spanish
-peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Marriage of
-Philip the
-Fair, 1284,
-with the
-heiress of
-Champagne
-and Navarre.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the thirteenth century, the
-marriage of Philip the Fair with the heiress of <i>Champagne</i>
-not only extinguished another peerage, but
-made the French kings for awhile actually Spanish
-sovereigns, and made France an immediate neighbour
-of the German kingdom. The county of <i>Champagne</i>
-had for two generations been united with the kingdom
-of Navarre. These dominions were held in right of
-their wives by three kings of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of Navarre.
-1328.<br />
-Union of
-Champagne,
-1335; incorporation,
-1361.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then Navarre,
-though it passed to a French prince, was wholly
-separated from France, while Champagne was incorporated
-with the kingdom. This last annexation gave
-France a considerable frontier towards Germany, and
-especially brought the kingdom into the immediate
-neighbourhood of the Lotharingian bishoprics. These
-acquisitions, of Normandy and the states connected
-with it, of Toulouse and the rest of Languedoc, and
-now of Champagne, were the chief cases of incorporation
-of vassal states with the royal domain up to
-the middle of the fourteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Appanages.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The mere grants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></span>
-and recoveries of appanages hardly concern geography.
-We now turn to two great struggles which, in the
-course of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the
-Kings of France had to wage with two of their chief
-vassals who were also powerful foreign princes. In
-both cases, events which seemed likely to bring about
-the utter humiliation of France did in the end bring
-to it a large increase of territory.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Hundred
-Years’
-War with
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The former of these struggles was the great war
-between England and France, called by French writers
-the <i>Hundred Years’ War</i>. This war might be called
-either a war for the annexation of France to England
-or a war for the annexation of Aquitaine to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Designs of
-the French
-kings on
-Aquitaine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the peace between Henry the Third and Saint
-Lewis, Aquitaine became a land held by the king
-of England as a vassal of the French crown. From
-that time it was one main object of the French kings
-to change their feudal superiority over this great
-duchy into an actual possession. This object had been
-once obtained for a moment by the marriage of
-Eleanor and Lewis the Seventh.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Momentary
-occupation
-by Philip
-the Fair.
-1294.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was again obtained
-for a moment by the negotiations between Edward the
-First and Philip the Fair. The Hundred Years’ war
-began through the attempts of Philip of Valois on the
-Aquitanian dominions of Edward the Third.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1337.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-the King of England found it politic to assume the title
-of King of France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1339.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the real nature of the controversy
-was shown by the first great settlement.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Bretigny.
-1360.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At
-the Peace of <i>Bretigny</i> Edward gave up all claim
-to the crown of France, in exchange for the independent
-sovereignty of his old fiefs and of some of his recent
-conquests. <i>Aquitaine</i> and <i>Gascony</i>, including <i>Poitou</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
-but not including <i>Auvergne</i>, together with the districts
-on the Channel, <i>Calais</i> with <i>Guines</i> and the county of
-<i>Ponthieu</i>, were made over to the King of England without
-the reservation of any homage or superiority of any
-kind. These lands became a territory as foreign to
-the French kingdom as the territory of her German
-and Spanish neighbours.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Renewal of
-the war.
-1370-1374.<br />
-Losses of
-the English.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in a few years the treaty
-was broken on the French side, and the actual possessions
-of England beyond the sea were cut down to
-Calais and Guines, with some small parts of Aquitaine
-adjoining the cities of Bourdeaux and Bayonne.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Henry
-the Fifth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-the tide turned at the invasion of Henry the Fifth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Troyes.
-1420.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Treaty of Troyes united the crowns of England and
-France. <span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1431.<span class="sne">♦</span></span> Aquitaine and Normandy were won back;
-Paris saw the crowning of an English king, and only
-the central part of the country obeyed the heir of
-the Parisian kingdom, no longer king of Paris but
-only of Bourges.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Aquitaine.
-1451-1453.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the final result of the war
-was the driving out of the English from all Aquitaine
-and France, except the single district of Calais. The
-geographical aspect of the change is that Aquitaine,
-which had been wholly cut off from the kingdom by
-the Peace of Bretigny, was finally incorporated with
-the kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final union
-of Aquitaine
-with
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The French conquest of Aquitaine, the
-result of the Hundred Years’ War, was in form the
-conquest of a land which had ceased to stand in any
-relation to the French crown. Practically it was the
-incorporation with the French crown of its greatest
-fief, balanced by the loss of a small territory the value
-of which was certainly out of all proportion to its geographical
-extent. In its historical aspect the annexation
-of Aquitaine was something yet more. The first foreshadowing
-of the modern French kingdom was made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span>
-by the addition of Aquitaine to Neustria, of southern
-to northern Gaul.<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Now, after so many strivings,
-the two were united for ever. Aquitaine was merged
-in France. The grant to Charles the Bald took effect
-after six hundred years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of the
-modern
-Kingdom of
-France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France, in the sense which
-the word bears in modern use, may date its complete
-existence from the addition of Bourdeaux to the
-dominions of Charles the Seventh.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-the Dukes
-of Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus, in the course of somewhat less than four
-hundred years, the conquest of England by a vassal of
-France, followed by the union of a crowd of other French
-fiefs in the hands of a common sovereign of England
-and Normandy, had led to the union with France of all
-the continental possessions of the prince who thus
-reigned on both sides of the sea. Meanwhile, on the
-eastern side of the kingdom, the holder of a great French
-fief swelled into an European power, the special rival of
-his French overlord.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Escheat of
-the duchy
-of Burgundy.
-1361.<br />
-Grant to
-Philip the
-Hardy.
-1364.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy of Burgundy, granted
-to a branch of the royal house in the earliest days of
-the Parisian kingdom, escheated to the crown in the
-fourteenth century, and was again granted out to a son
-of the reigning king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Valois
-Dukes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A series of marriages, purchases,
-conquests, transactions of every kind, gathered
-together, in the hands of the Burgundian dukes, a
-crowd of fiefs both of France and of the Empire.<a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
-The duchy of <i>Burgundy</i> with the county of <i>Charolois</i>,
-and the counties of <i>Flanders</i> and <i>Artois</i>, were joined
-under a common ruler with endless Imperial fiefs
-in the Low Countries and with the Imperial <i>County
-of Burgundy</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance to
-the Somme.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-More than this, under Philip the Good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span>
-and Charles the Bold, the Burgundian frontier was
-more than once advanced to the Somme, and Amiens
-was separated from the crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexations
-at the
-death of
-Charles the
-Bold.
-1479.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The fall of Charles
-the Bold laid his dominions open to French annexation
-both on the Burgundian and on the Flemish
-frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Momentary
-annexation
-of Artois
-and the
-County of
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the first moments of his success, Lewis
-the Eleventh possessed himself of a large part of the
-Imperial as well as the French fiefs of the fallen Duke.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Arras.
-1435.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But in the end Flanders and Artois remained French
-fiefs held by the House of Burgundy, which also kept
-the county of Burgundy and the isolated county of
-Charolois.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of the
-duchy of
-Burgundy.
-1479.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But France not only finally recovered the
-towns on the Somme, but incorporated the Burgundian
-duchy, one of the greatest fiefs of the crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French advance
-to
-the east.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was the addition of a territory which the kings of
-France had never before ruled, and it marks an important
-stage in the advance of the French power
-towards the Imperial lands on its eastern border. By
-the marriage of Mary of Burgundy and Maximilian of
-Austria, the remains of the Burgundian dominions
-passed to the House of Austria, and thereby in the
-end to Spain. The result was that a French king had
-for a moment an Emperor for his vassal in his character
-of Count of Flanders and Artois.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Flanders
-and Artois
-relieved
-from
-homage.
-1525.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But by the treaty of
-Madrid Flanders and Artois were relieved from all
-homage to France, exactly as Aquitaine had been by
-the Peace of Bretigny. They now became lands wholly
-foreign to France, and, as foreign lands, large parts of
-them were afterwards conquered by France, just as
-Aquitaine was. But the history of their acquisition
-belongs to the story of the advance of France at the
-expense of the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>All the
-great fiefs
-annexed
-except
-Britanny.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus, by the end of the reign of Lewis the Eleventh,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></span>
-all the fiefs of the French crown which could make
-any claim to the character of separate sovereignties
-had, with a single exception, been added to the dominions
-of the crown. The one which had escaped was
-that one which, more than any other, represented a
-nationality altogether distinct from that of France.
-<i>Britanny</i> still remained distinct under its own Dukes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1491-1499;
-incorporated
-1532.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The marriages of its Duchess Anne with two successive
-French kings, Charles the Eighth and Lewis the
-Twelfth, added Britanny to France, and so completed
-the work. The whole of the Western Kingdom,
-except those parts which had become foreign ground—that
-is to say, insular Normandy and Calais, Barcelona,
-Flanders, and Artois—was now united under the
-kings of Paris. Their duchy of <i>France</i> had spread its
-power and its name over the whole kingdom. We
-have now to see how it also spread itself over lands
-which had never formed part of that kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>Foreign Annexations of France.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Foreign
-neighbours
-of Karolingia.<br />
-Imperial
-and
-Spanish
-neighbours.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>When the Western Kingdom finally parted off from
-the body of the Empire, its only immediate neighbours
-were the Imperial kingdoms to the east, and the Spanish
-kingdoms to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of Normandy and
-England in some sort made England and France immediate
-neighbours. And the long retention of Aquitaine
-by England, the English possession of Calais for more
-than two hundred years and of the insular Normandy
-down to our own day, have all tended to keep them
-so.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Small acquisitions
-of France
-from England
-and
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the acquisitions of France from England, and
-from Spain, in its character as Spain, have been comparatively
-small. Indeed the separation of the Spanish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">{342}</a></span>
-March and the insular Normandy may be thought
-to turn the balance the other way. From England
-France has won Aquitaine and Calais, territories which
-had once been under the homage of the French King.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>English
-conquest of
-Boulogne.
-1544-1550.
-<br />
-1663.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-So in the sixteenth century <i>Boulogne</i> was lost to
-England and won back again; so in the seventeenth
-century <i>Dunkirk</i>, which had become an English possession,
-was made over to France. Since the final loss
-of Aquitaine, the wars between England and France
-have made most important changes in the English and
-French possessions in distant parts of the world, but
-they have had no effect on the geography of England,
-and very little on that of France.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundary
-of the
-Pyrenees.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Nearly the same may be said of the geographical
-relations between France and Spain. The long wars
-between those countries have added to France a large
-part of the outlying dominions of Spain; but they
-have not greatly affected the boundaries of the two
-countries themselves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roussillon,
-its shiftings.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The only important exception
-is the county of <i>Roussillon</i>, the land which Aragon
-kept on the north side of the mountain range.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Finally
-becomes
-French.
-1659.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-United
-to France by Lewis the Eleventh, given back by
-Charles the Eighth, it was finally annexed to France
-by the Peace of the Pyrenees. Towards the other end
-of the mountain frontier, a small portion of Spanish
-territory has been annexed to France, perhaps quite
-unconsciously.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Navarre
-north of the
-Pyrenees.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The old kingdom of <i>Navarre</i>, though
-it lay chiefly south of the Pyrenees, contained a small
-territory to the north.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-France and
-Navarre.
-1589.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The accidents of female succession
-had given Navarre to more than one King of
-France, and in the person of Henry the Fourth the
-crown of France passed to a King of Navarre who
-held only the part of his kingdom north of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
-Pyrenees. This little piece of Spain within the borders
-of Gaul was thus united with France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Protectorate
-of
-Andorra.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the other
-hand, the Kings of France, as successors of the Counts
-of Foix, and the other rulers of France after them,
-have held, not any dominion but certain rights as
-advocates or protectors, over the small commonwealth
-of <i>Andorra</i> on the Spanish side of the mountains.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance at
-the expense
-of the
-Imperial
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of far greater importance is the steady acquisition
-of territory by France at the expense of the Imperial
-kingdoms, and of the modern states by which those
-kingdoms are represented.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Burgundy.<br />
-1310-1860.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the case of Burgundy,
-French annexation has taken the form of a gradual
-swallowing up of nearly the whole kingdom, a process
-which has been spread over more than five hundred
-years, from the annexation of Lyons by Philip the Fair
-to the last annexation of Savoy in our own day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexations
-from
-Germany.
-1552-1811.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-advance at the expense of the German kingdom did
-not begin till the greater part of the Burgundian
-kingdom was already swallowed up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Late beginning
-of
-annexations
-from
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The north-eastern
-frontier of the Western Kingdom changed but
-little from the accession of the Parisian house in the
-tenth century till the growth of the Dukes of Burgundy
-in the fifteenth. After Lotharingia finally
-became a part of the Eastern Kingdom, there was no
-doubt that the homage of Flanders was due to France,
-no doubt that the homage of the states which had
-formed the Lower Lotharingia was due to the Empire.
-The frontier towards the Upper Lotharingia and the
-Burgundian county also remained untouched. The
-Saône remained a boundary stream long after the
-Rhone had ceased to be one.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-the Burgundian
-acquisitions
-of France;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was on this latter
-river that the great Burgundian annexations of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span>
-France began, annexations which gave France a wholly
-new European position.<a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the
-Dauphiny;<br />
-of Provence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The acquisition of the Dauphiny
-of Viennois made France the immediate neighbour
-of Italy; the acquisition of Provence at once strengthened
-this last position and more than doubled her
-Mediterranean coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-with the
-Swiss.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Add to this that, though France
-and the Confederate territory did not yet actually touch,
-yet the Burgundian wars and many other events in the
-latter half of the fifteenth century enabled France to
-establish a close connexion with the power which
-had grown up north of Lake Leman. France had
-thus become a great Mediterranean and Alpine power,
-ready to threaten Italy in the next generation. Later
-acquisitions within the old border of the Burgundian
-kingdom had a somewhat different character.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexations
-at the
-expense of
-Savoy;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Annexations
-at the expense of Savoy, even when geographically
-Burgundian, were annexations at the cost
-of a power which was beginning to be Italian rather
-than Burgundian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the
-County of
-Burgundy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The annexation of the County of
-Burgundy goes rather with the Alsatian annexations.
-It was territory won at the cost of the Empire and of
-the House of Austria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Middle character
-of
-the Burgundian
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the lands between the
-Rhone, the Alps, and the sea, still kept, negatively at
-least, their middle character. They were lands which
-at least were neither German, French, nor Italian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>They
-become
-French.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The events of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
-ruled that this intermediate region should become
-French. And none of the acquisitions of France ever
-helped more towards the real growth of her power.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">It was while the later stages of this process were
-going on that the French kings added to their dominions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></span>
-the Aquitanian lands on one side and the Burgundian
-duchy on the other. The acquisition of
-Aquitaine has, besides its other characters, a third
-aspect which closely connects it with the annexations
-between the Rhone and the Alps.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-French annexations
-on the
-<i>Langue
-d’oc</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The strife between
-Northern and Southern Gaul, between the tongue
-of <i>oil</i> and the tongue of <i>oc</i>, now came to an end.
-Had the chief power in Gaul settled somewhere in
-Burgundy or Aquitaine, the tongue of <i>oil</i> might now
-pass for a <i>patois</i> of the tongue of <i>oc</i>. Had French
-dominion in Italy begun as soon and lasted as permanently
-as French dominion in Burgundy and
-Aquitaine, the tongue of <i>si</i>, as well as the tongue of <i>oc</i>,
-might now pass for a <i>patois</i> of the tongue of <i>oil</i>. But
-now it was settled that French, not Provençal, was to
-be the ruling speech of Gaul. The lands of the
-Southern speech which escaped were almost wholly
-portions of the dominions of other powers. There
-was no longer any separate state wholly of that
-speech, except the little principality of Orange.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extinction
-of the Provençal
-speech and
-nation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-work which the French kings had now ended amounted
-to little short of the extinction of an European nation.
-A tongue, once of at least equal dignity with the tongue
-of Paris and Tours, has sunk from the rank of a
-national language to the rank of a provincial dialect.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Italian
-conquests
-of France.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The next great conquests of France were made on
-Italian soil, but they are conquests which do not greatly
-concern geography. This distinguishes the relations
-of France towards Italy from her relations towards
-Burgundy. France has constantly interfered in Italian
-affairs; she has at various times held large Italian
-territories, and brought all Italy under French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">{346}</a></span>
-influence. But France has never permanently kept any
-large amount of Italian territory. The French possession
-of Naples and Milan was only temporary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Not strictly
-extensions
-of France.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And,
-if it had been lasting, the possession of these isolated
-territories by the French king could hardly have been
-looked on as an extension of the actual French
-frontier. Those lands could never have been incorporated
-with France in the same way in which other
-French conquests had been. Their retention would
-in truth have given the later history of France quite
-a different character, a character more like that which
-actually belonged to Spain. The long occupation of
-Savoyard territory on both sides of the Alps<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> would, if
-it had lasted, have been a real extension of the French
-kingdom. But down to our own day, while the lands
-won by France from the Burgundian kingdom form a
-large proportion of the whole French territory, French
-acquisitions from Italy hardly go beyond the island
-of Corsica and the insignificant district of <i>Mentone</i>.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexations
-at the
-expense of
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The great annexations of France at the expense of
-the German kingdom and the lands more closely connected
-with it begin in the middle of the sixteenth
-century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Metz, Toul,
-and Verdun.
-1552.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first great advance was the practical
-annexation of the three Lotharingian bishoprics, though
-their separation from the Empire was not formally
-acknowledged till the Peace of Westfalia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-isolated
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This kind
-of conquest can hardly fail to lead to other conquests.
-France now held certain patches of territory
-which lay detached from one another and from the
-main body of the kingdom. Yet the rounding off
-of the frontier was not the next step taken in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
-direction. The cause was most likely the close connexion
-which for somewhile existed between the ruling
-houses of France and Lorraine.</p>
-
-<p>Before the next French advance on German ground,
-the frontier had been extended in other directions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of Calais,
-1558;<br />
-of Boulogne,
-1550.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Almost at the same time as the acquisition of the Three
-Bishoprics, <i>Calais</i> was won back from England—the
-short English possession of <i>Boulogne</i> had already come
-to an end.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Surrender
-of Saluzzo
-and annexation
-of
-Bresse,
-Bugey, and
-Gex.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first year of the sixteenth century
-saw the surrender of <i>Saluzzo</i>, in exchange for <i>Bresse</i>,
-<i>Bugey</i>, and <i>Gex</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occupation
-of Pinerolo.
-1630-1696.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thirty years later came the renewed
-occupation of Italian territory at <i>Pinerolo</i> and other
-points in Piedmont, which lasted till nearly the end of
-the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p>The next great advance was the work of the Thirty
-Years’ War and of the war with Spain which went on
-for eleven years longer.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Bishoprics
-surrendered
-by the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Now came the legal cession
-of the Bishoprics and the further acquisition of the
-Alsatian dominions and rights of the House of Austria.
-The irregularities of the frontier, and the temptation
-to round off its angles, were increased tenfold.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French acquisitions
-in Elsass.
-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France
-received another and larger isolated territory lying to
-the east both of her earlier conquests and of the independent
-lands which surrounded them. A part of
-her dominion, itself sprinkled with isolated towns and
-districts which did not belong to her dominion, stretched
-out without any connexion into the middle of the
-Empire. The Duchy of Lorraine, dotted over by the
-French lands of Metz, Toul, and Verdun, lay between
-the old French land of Champagne and the new French
-land of <i>Elsass</i> or <i>Alsace</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Breisach.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And while France was allowed,
-by the possession of <i>Breisach</i>, to establish herself at one
-point on the right bank of the Rhine, her new territory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">{348}</a></span>
-on the left bank was broken up by the continued independence
-of <i>Strassburg</i> and the other Alsatian towns
-and districts which were still left to the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>France
-reaches the
-Rhine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such
-a frontier could hardly be lasting; now that France
-had reached and even crossed the Rhine, the annexation
-of the outlying Imperial lands to the west of that river
-was sure to follow.</p>
-
-<p>But, even after this further advance into the heart
-of Germany, the gap was not filled up at the next
-stage of annexation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of Bar.
-1659.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the Peace of the Pyrenees,
-France obtained the scattered lands of the duchy of
-Bar, which made the greater part of the Three
-Bishoprics continuous with her older possessions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bar restored.
-1661.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-Bar was presently restored, and, though Lorraine was
-constantly occupied by French armies, it was not incorporated
-with France for another century. Up to
-this last change the Three Bishoprics still remained
-isolated French possessions surrounded by lands of
-the Empire. But France advanced at the expense of
-the outlying possessions of Spain, lands only nominally
-Imperial, as well as of the Spanish lands on her own
-southern frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Roussillon.
-1659.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the Peace of the Pyrenees
-<i>Roussillon</i> finally became French. No Spanish kingdom
-any longer stretched north of the great natural
-barrier of the peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-in the
-Netherlands.
-1659.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The same Treaty gave
-France her first acquisitions in <i>Flanders</i> and <i>Artois</i>
-since they had become wholly foreign ground, as well
-as her first acquisitions from <i>Hainault</i>, <i>Liége</i>, and
-<i>Luxemburg</i>, lands which had never owed her homage.
-Here again the frontier was of the same kind as the
-frontier towards Germany.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Isolated
-points held
-by each
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Isolated points like <i>Philippeville</i>
-and <i>Marienburg</i> were held by France within
-Spanish or Imperial territory, and isolated points like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
-<i>Aire</i> and <i>St. Omer</i> were still held by Spain in what
-had now become French territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Further annexations.
-1668.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The furthest
-French advance that was recognized by any treaty
-was made by the earlier Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle,
-when, amongst other places, <i>Douay</i>, <i>Tournay</i>, <i>Lille</i>,
-<i>Oudenarde</i>, and <i>Courtray</i> became French.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes at
-the Peace of
-Nimwegen.
-1678.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the
-Peace of Nimwegen the frontier again fell back in
-eastern Flanders, and Courtray and Oudenarde were
-restored. But in the districts more to the south
-France again advanced, gaining the outlying Spanish
-towns in Artois, <i>Cambray</i> and its district, and <i>Valenciennes</i>
-in Hainault.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1697.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Peace of Ryswick left the
-frontier as it had been fixed by the Peace of Nimwegen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Utrecht
-and Barrier
-Treaty.
-1713-1715.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Finally, the Treaty of Utrecht and the Barrier Treaty
-left France in possession of a considerable part of
-Flanders, and of much land which had been Imperial.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Barrier
-Towns.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Netherlands, formerly Spanish and now Austrian,
-kept a frontier protected by the barrier towns of <i>Furnes</i>,
-<i>Ypres</i>, <i>Menin</i>, <i>Tournai</i>, <i>Mons</i>, <i>Charleroi</i>, <i>Namur</i>. The
-French frontier on the other side had its series of
-barrier towns stretching from <i>St. Omer</i> to <i>Charlemont</i>
-on the Maes. The arrangements now made have,
-with very slight changes, lasted ever since, except
-during the French annexation of the whole of the
-Netherlands during the revolutionary wars.</p>
-
-<p>The reign of Lewis the Fourteenth was also a time
-of at least equal advance on the part of France on
-her more strictly German frontier. The time was now
-come for serious attempts to consolidate the scattered
-possessions of France between Champagne and the
-Rhine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Franche
-Comté
-conquered.
-1668.<br />
-Conquered
-again.
-1674.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Franche Comté</i>, as the county of Burgundy was
-now more commonly called, with the city of <i>Besançon</i>,
-was twice seized by Lewis, and the second seizure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">{350}</a></span>
-was confirmed by the peace of Nimwegen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Freiburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By that
-peace also France kept <i>Freiburg-im-Breisgau</i> on the
-right bank of the Rhine. A number of small places
-in Elsass were annexed after the peace of Nimwegen
-by the process known as <i>Reunion</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Seizure of
-Strassburg
-1681.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last in
-1681 <i>Strassburg</i> itself was seized in time of peace,
-and its possession was finally secured to France by
-the peace of Ryswick.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Restoration
-of Freiburg
-and Breisach.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Freiburg and Breisach
-were restored, and Lorraine, held by France, though
-not formally ceded, was given back to its own
-Duke.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Rastadt.
-1714.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The arrangements of Ryswick were again
-confirmed by the peace of Rastadt.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Orange.
-1714.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the same
-year the principality of <i>Orange</i> was annexed to
-France, leaving the Papal possessions of Avignon
-and Venaissin surrounded by French territory, the
-last relic of the Burgundian realm between the Rhone
-and the Alps.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the reign of
-Lewis the
-Fourteenth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France had thus obtained a good
-physical boundary towards Spain and Italy, and a
-boundary clearly marked on the map towards the
-now Austrian Netherlands. Her eastern frontier was
-still broken in upon by the duchy of Lorraine, by
-the districts in Elsass which had still escaped, by
-the county of <i>Montbeliard</i>, and by the detached territories
-of the commonwealth of <i>Geneva</i>. But France
-could now in a certain part of her territory call
-the Rhine her frontier. It was an easy inference that
-the Rhine ought to be her frontier through the whole
-of its course.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The next reign, that of Lewis the Fifteenth,
-in a manner completed the work of Henry the
-Second and Lewis the Fourteenth. The gap which
-had so long yawned between Champagne and Elsass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></span>
-was now filled up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Arrangements
-as to
-Lorraine.
-1735.<br />
-Its incorporation.
-1766.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France obtained a reversionary
-right to the duchy of Lorraine, which was incorporated
-thirty-one years later. The lands of Metz, Toul, and
-Verdun were no longer isolated. Elsass, which, by the
-acquisition of Franche Comté, had ceased to be insular,
-now ceased to be even peninsular. Leaving out of
-sight a few spots of Imperial soil which were now
-wholly surrounded by France, the French territory
-now stretched as a solid and unbroken mass from the
-Ocean to the Rhine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Thorough
-incorporation
-of
-French
-Conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And it must be remembered that
-all the lands which the monarchy of Paris had gradually
-brought under its power were in the strictest
-sense incorporated with the kingdom. There were
-no dependencies, no separate kingdoms or duchies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-geographical
-continuity.<br />
-Contrast
-with Spain
-and Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The geographical continuity of the French territory
-enabled France really to incorporate her conquests
-in a way in which Spain and Austria never could.
-And the process was further helped by the fact that
-each annexation by itself was small compared with the
-general bulk of the French monarchy. Except in the
-case of the fragment of Navarre which was held by its
-Bourbon king, France never annexed a kingdom or
-made any permanent addition to the royal style of her
-kings.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Purchase of
-Corsica.
-1768.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The same reign saw another acquisition altogether
-unlike the rest in the form of the Italian island
-of <i>Corsica</i>. In itself the incorporation of this island
-with the French kingdom seems as unnatural as
-the Spanish or Austrian dominion in Sicily or Sardinia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its effects.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the result has been different. Corsica has
-been far more thoroughly incorporated with France
-than such outlying possessions commonly are. The
-truth is that the strong continuity of the continental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">{352}</a></span>
-dominions of France made the incorporation of the
-island easier. There were no traditions or precedents
-which could suggest the holding of it as a dependency
-or as a separate state in any form.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Birth of
-Buonaparte.
-1769.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Corsica again was
-more easily attached to France, because the man who
-did most to extend the dominion of France was a
-Frenchman only so far as Corsicans had become Frenchmen.
-Corsica has thus become French in a sense in
-which Sardinia and Sicily never became Spanish, partly
-because France had no other possession of the kind,
-partly because Napoleon Buonaparte was born at
-Ajaccio.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Colonial Dominion of France.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Early
-French colonization.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>France, like all the European powers which have
-an oceanic coast, entered early on the field of colonization
-and distant dominion. At one time indeed it
-seemed as if France was destined to become the chief
-European power both in India and in North America.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French
-colonies in
-North
-America.
-1506.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-French attempts at colonization in the latter country
-began early in the sixteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1540.<br />
-1603.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus <i>Cape
-Breton</i> at the mouth of the Saint Lawrence was
-reached early in the sixteenth century, the colonization
-of <i>Canada</i> began a generation later, and French dominion
-in America was confirmed by the foundation of
-<i>Quebec</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acadia
-ceded to
-England.
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The peninsula of <i>Acadie</i> or <i>Nova Scotia</i> was
-from this time a subject of dispute between France and
-Great Britain, till it was finally surrendered by France
-at the Peace of Utrecht.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Canada and
-Louisiana.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France now, under the
-names of <i>Canada</i> and <i>Louisiana</i>, or of <i>New France</i>,
-held or claimed a vast inland region stretching from
-the mouth of the Saint Lawrence to the mouth of the
-Mississippi, while the eastern coast was colonized by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">{353}</a></span>
-other powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonization
-at the
-mouth of
-the Mississippi.
-1699.<br />
-Foundation
-of New
-Orleans.
-1717.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the seventeenth century
-the first colonization began at the mouth of the
-Mississippi; and the city of New Orleans was founded
-eighteen years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry
-of English
-and French
-settlements.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France and England thus became
-distinctly rival powers in America as well as in
-Europe. The English settlers were pressing westward
-from the coast to the Ocean. The French strove to
-fix the Alleghany range as the eastern boundary of
-English advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Share of the
-Colonies in
-European
-Wars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In every European war between
-the two powers the American colonies played an important
-part.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>English
-conquest of
-Canada.
-1759.<br />
-1763.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Canada was wrested from France; and
-by the Treaty of Paris all the French possessions north
-of the present United States were finally surrendered
-to England, except a few small islands kept for fishing
-purposes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Mississippi
-boundary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Mississippi was now made the boundary
-of Louisiana, leaving nothing to France on its left
-bank except the city of New Orleans. These cessions
-ruled for ever that men of English blood, whether
-remaining subjects of the mother-country or forming
-independent states, should be the dominant power in
-the North American continent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The West
-India islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among the West India islands, France in the seventeenth
-century colonized several of the <i>Antilles</i>, some
-of which were afterwards lost to England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>St. Domingo.
-1697.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later
-in the century she acquired part of the great island
-called variously <i>Hispaniola</i>, <i>Saint Domingo</i>, and <i>Hayti</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French
-Guiana.
-1624.<br />
-Cayenne.
-1635.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the coast of South America lay the French settlements
-in <i>Guiana</i>, with <i>Cayenne</i> as their capital. This
-colony grew into more importance after the war of
-Canada.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The French
-in India.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Nearly the same course of things took place in the
-eastern world as in the western. In India neither
-English nor French colonized in any strict sense. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">{354}</a></span>
-commercial settlements grew into dominion, or what
-seemed likely to become dominion: and in India, as
-in America, the temporary greatness of France came
-before the more lasting greatness of England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1664.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-French East India Company began later than the English;
-but its steps towards dominion were for a long time
-faster.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bourbon.
-1657.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before this the French had occupied the <i>Isle
-of Bourbon</i>, an important point on the road to India.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Factory
-at Surat.
-1668.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first French factory on the mainland was at Surat.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pondicherry.
-1672.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the later years of the century various attempts
-at settlement were made; but no important or lasting
-acquisition was made, except that of <i>Pondicherry</i>. This
-has ever since remained a French possession, often lost
-in the course of warfare, but always restored at the next
-peace.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chandernagore.
-1676.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A little later France obtained <i>Chandernagore</i>
-in Bengal.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Isle of
-France.
-1720.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century the island of <i>Mauritius</i>,
-abandoned by the Dutch, became a French colony
-under the name of the <i>Isle of France</i>. Under Labourdonnais
-and Dupleix France gained for a moment
-a real Indian dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Taking of
-Madras.
-1746.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Madras was taken, and a large
-dominion was obtained on the eastern coast of India in
-the Carnatic and the Circars.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Restored.
-1748.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But all hope of French
-supremacy in India came to an end in the later years
-of the Seven Years’ War.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the Peace
-of Paris.
-1763.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-France was confined to a few
-points which have not seriously threatened the eastern
-dominion of England.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>Acquisitions of France during the Revolutionary Wars.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Thus the French monarchy grew from the original
-Parisian duchy into a kingdom which spread north,
-south, east, and west, taking in all the fiefs of the West-Frankish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">{355}</a></span>
-kings, together with much which had belonged
-to the other kingdoms of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisitions
-in the
-Revolutionary
-Wars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With
-the great French revolution began a series of acquisitions
-of territory on the part of France which are altogether
-unparalleled.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-classes of
-annexations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First of all, there were those
-small annexations of territory surrounded or nearly so
-by French territory, whose annexation was necessary
-if French territory was to be continuous.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Avignon.<br />
-Mülhausen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such were
-Avignon, Venaissin, the county of <i>Montbeliard</i>, the few
-points in Elsass which had escaped the reunions, with
-the Confederate city of <i>Mülhausen</i>. Avignon and Venaissin,
-and the surviving Alsatian fragments, were annexed
-to France before the time of warfare and conquest
-had begun. Mülhausen, as Confederate ground, was
-respected as long as Confederate ground was respected.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1796.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Montbeliard had been annexed already.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geneva and
-<i>Bischofbasel</i>.
-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And with
-these we might be inclined to place the annexations of
-Geneva and of the <i>Bishopric of Basel</i>, lands which lay
-hardly less temptingly when the work of annexation had
-once begun.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-zone;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And beyond these roundings off of the
-home estate lay a zone of territory which might easily
-be looked upon as being French soil wrongfully lost.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>traditions
-of Gaul and
-the Rhine
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When the Western <i>Francia</i> had made such great strides
-towards the dimensions of the Gaul of Cæsar, the inference
-was easily made that it ought to take in all that
-Gaul had once taken in. The conquest and incorporation
-of the Austrian Netherlands, of all Germany on
-the left bank of the Rhine, of Savoy and Nizza, thus
-became a matter of course.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Buonaparte’s
-feeling
-towards
-Switzerland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That the Gaul of Cæsar
-was not fully completed by the complete incorporation
-of Switzerland, seems to have been owing to a personal
-tenderness for the Confederation on the part of
-Napoleon Buonaparte, who never incorporated with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">{356}</a></span>
-dominions any part of the territory of the Thirteen
-Cantons. Otherwise, France under the Consulate might
-pass for a revival of the Transalpine Gaul of Roman
-geography. And there were other lands beyond the
-borders of Transalpine Gaul, which had formed part
-of Gaul in the earlier sense of the name, and whose
-annexation, when annexation had once begun, was
-hardly less wonderful than that of the lands within the
-Rhine and the Alps.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Piedmont,
-&amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The incorporation of Piedmont
-and Genoa was not wonderful after the incorporation of
-Savoy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Distinction
-between
-conquests
-under the
-Republic
-and under
-the ‘Empire.’<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In short, the annexations of republican France
-are at least intelligible. They have a meaning; we
-can follow their purpose and object. They stand
-distinct from the wild schemes of universal conquest
-which mark the period of the ‘Empire.’</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Example of
-Corsica.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Still the example of such schemes was given during
-the days of the old monarchy. There was nothing to
-suggest a French annexation of Corsica, any more than
-a French annexation of Cerigo.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of Buonaparte’s
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both were works of
-exactly the kind, works quite different from incorporating
-isolated scraps of Elsass or of the old Burgundy,
-from rounding off the frontier by Montbeliard, or even
-from advancing to the left bank of the Rhine. The
-shiftings of the map which took place during the ten
-years of the first French Empire, the divisions and the
-unions, the different relations of the conquered states,
-seem like several centuries of the onward march of
-the old Roman commonwealth crowded into a single
-day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dependent
-and incorporated
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In both cases we mark the distinction between
-lands which are merely dependent and lands which are
-fully incorporated. And in both cases the dependent
-relation is commonly a step towards full incorporation.
-All past history and tradition, all national feelings, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">{357}</a></span>
-distinctions of race and language, were despised in
-building up the vast fabric of French dominion. Such
-a power was sure to break in pieces, even without
-any foreign attack, before its parts could possibly have
-been fused together. As it was, Buonaparte never
-professed to incorporate either Spain or the whole of
-Italy and Germany with his Empire. He was satisfied
-with leaving large parts either in the formally
-dependent relation, in the hands of puppet princes,
-or even in the hands of powers which he deemed
-too much weakened for further resistance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Buonaparte’s
-treatment
-of Germany;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A large
-part of Germany was incorporated with France, another
-large part was under French protection or dependence,
-but a large part still remained in the hands of the
-native princes of Austria and Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Much of Italy
-was incorporated, and the rest was held, partly by
-the conqueror himself under another title, partly by
-a prince of his own house. This last was the case with
-Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-Europe between
-France and
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Till the final breach with Russia, the idea of
-Buonaparte’s dominion seems to have been that of
-a twofold division of Europe between Russia and himself,
-a kind of revival on a vaster scale of the Eastern
-and Western Empires. The western potentate was
-careful to keep everywhere a dominant influence within
-his own world; but whether the territory should be
-incorporated, made dependent, or granted out to his
-kinsfolk and favourites, depended in each case on the
-conqueror’s will.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Europe in
-1811.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>A glance at the map of Europe, as it stood at the
-beginning of 1811, will show how nearly this scheme
-was carried out. The kernel of the French Empire
-was France as it stood at the beginning of the Revolution,
-together with those conquests of the Republic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">{358}</a></span>
-which gave it the Rhine frontier from Basel to Nimwegen.
-Beyond these limits the former United Provinces,
-with the whole oceanic coast of Germany as
-far as the Elbe, and the cities of Bremen, Hamburg,
-and Lübeck, were incorporated with France. France
-now stretched to the Baltic, and, as Holstein was now
-incorporated with Denmark, France and Denmark had
-a common frontier. The Confederation of the Rhine
-was a protected state, and the Kingdom of Prussia and
-the self-styled ‘Empire’ of Austria could practically
-hardly claim a higher place. Of the former Austrian
-possessions, those parts which had passed to Bavaria
-and to the kingdom of Italy formally stood in the dependent
-relation, and the so-called Illyrian provinces
-were actually incorporated with France. So were the
-Ionian islands yet further on. In Italy, the whole
-western side of the ancient kingdom, with Rome itself,
-was incorporated with France. North-eastern Italy
-formed a separate kingdom held by the ruler of
-France. Naples, like Spain, was a dependent kingdom.
-In northern Europe, Denmark and Sweden, like Prussia
-and Austria, could practically claim no higher place.
-And the new duchy of Warsaw and the new republic
-of Danzig carried French influence beyond the ancient
-borders of Germany.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Arrangements
-of
-1814-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Such was the extent of the French dominion when
-the power of Buonaparte was at its highest. At his fall
-all the great and distant conquests were given up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The first
-class of annexations
-retained by
-France,
-the rest
-restored.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-those annexations which were necessary for the completion
-of France as she then stood were respected.
-The new Germanic body took back Köln, Trier, and
-Mainz, Worms and Speyer, but not Montbeliard or
-any part of Elsass. The new Swiss body received the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">{359}</a></span>
-Bishopric of Basel, Neufchâtel, Geneva, and Wallis.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Boundary
-of Savoy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Savoy and Nizza went back to their own prince. But
-here a different frontier was drawn after the first and
-the second fall of Buonaparte. The earlier arrangement
-left Chambéry to France. The Pope again received
-Rome and his Italian dominions, but not his outlying
-Burgundian city of Avignon and county of Venaissin.
-The frontier of the new kingdom of the Netherlands,
-though traced at slightly different points by the two
-arrangements, differed in either case but little from the
-frontier of the Barrier Treaty. In short the France of the
-restored Bourbons was the France of the old Bourbons,
-enlarged by those small isolated scraps of foreign soil
-which were needed to make it continuous.</p>
-
-<p>The geographical results of the rule of the second
-Buonaparte consist of the completion of the work which
-began under Philip the Fair, balanced by the utter undoing
-of the work of Richelieu, the partial undoing of
-the work of Henry the Second and Lewis the Fourteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Savoy and
-Nizza. 1860.<br />
-Loss of
-Elsass and
-Lorraine.
-1871.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Savoy</i>, <i>Nizza</i>, and <i>Mentone</i> were added;
-but
-Germany recovered nearly all <i>Elsass</i> and a part of
-<i>Lorraine</i>. The Rhine now neither crosses nor waters
-a single rood of French ground. As it was in the first
-beginnings of Northern European history, so it is now;
-Germany lies on both sides of the German river.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The time of the greatest power of France in Europe
-was by no means equally favourable to her advance in
-other parts of the world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-Hayti, 1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greatest West India colony
-of France, Saint Domingo, now known as <i>Hayti</i>,
-became an independent negro state whose chiefs imitated
-home example by taking the title of Emperor.
-About the same time the last remnant of French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">{360}</a></span>
-dominion on the North American continent was voluntarily
-given up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Louisiana
-ceded to
-Spain,
-1763;
-recovered,
-1800;
-sold to
-United
-States,
-1803.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Louisiana, ceded to Spain by the
-Peace of Paris and recovered under the Consulate,
-was sold to the United States. All the smaller French
-West India islands were conquered by England; but
-all were restored at the peace, except <i>Tobago</i> and <i>Saint
-Lucia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mauritius
-kept by
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The isles of <i>Bourbon</i> and <i>Mauritius</i> were also
-taken by England, and <i>Bourbon</i> alone was restored at
-the Peace.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pondicherry
-lost
-and restored.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In India <i>Pondicherry</i> was twice taken and
-twice restored.</p>
-
-<p>But since France was thus wholly beaten back
-from her great schemes of dominion in distant parts
-of the world, she has led the way in a kind of conquest
-and colonization which has no exact parallel in
-modern times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>French conquest
-of
-Algeria,
-1830;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the French occupation of <i>Algeria</i> we
-see something different alike from political conquests
-in Europe and from isolated conquests in distant parts
-of the world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Constantine,
-1837.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is conquest, not actually in Europe,
-but in a land on the shores of the great European sea,
-in a land which formed part of the Empire of Constantine,
-Justinian, and Heraclius.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of African
-conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is the winning
-back from Islam of a land which once was part of
-Latin-speaking Christendom, a conquest which, except
-in the necessary points of difference between continental
-and insular conquests, may be best paralleled with the
-Norman Conquest of Sicily. Sicily could be wholly
-recovered for Europe and Christendom; but the French
-settlement in Algeria can never be more than a mere
-fringe of Europe and its civilization on the edge of
-barbaric Africa. It is strictly the first colony of the
-kind. Portugal, Spain, England, had occupied this or
-that point on the northern coast of Africa; France was
-the first European power to spread her dominion over a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">{361}</a></span>
-long range of the southern Mediterranean shore, a land
-which in some sort answers alike to India and to Australia,
-but lying within two days’ sail of her own coast.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">We have thus finished our survey of the states
-which were formed out of the break-up of the later
-Western Empire. The rest of Western Europe must
-be postponed, as neither the Spanish, the British, nor
-the Scandinavian kingdoms rose out of the break-up
-of the Empire of Charles the Great. In our next
-Chapter we must trace the historical geography of the
-states which arose out of the gradual dismemberment
-of the dominion of the Eastern Rome, a survey which
-will lead us to the most stirring events and to the latest
-geographical changes of our own day.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">{362}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE EASTERN EMPIRE.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Contrast
-between the
-Eastern and
-Western
-Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> geographical, like the political, history of the
-Eastern Empire is wholly unlike that of the Western.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Western
-Empire fell
-to pieces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Western Empire, in the strictest sense, fell asunder.
-Some of its parts fell away formally, others practically.
-The tie that held the rest snapped at the first touch of
-a vigorous invader. But that invader was an European
-power whose territories had once formed part of the
-Empire itself. From the invasions of nations beyond
-the European pale the Western Empire, as such, suffered
-but little. The Western Empire again, long
-before its fall, had become, so far as it was a power
-at all, a national power, the <i>Roman Empire of the
-German nation</i>. Its fall was the half voluntary parting
-asunder of a nation as well as of an Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position
-of the
-Western
-Emperors;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Western Emperors again had, as Emperors, practically
-ceased to be territorial princes. No lands of any account
-directly obeyed the Emperor, as such, as their
-immediate sovereign. When the Empire fell, the
-Emperor withdrew to his hereditary states, taking the
-Imperial title with him. In the Eastern Empire all is
-different. It did to some extent fall asunder from
-within, but its overthrow was mainly owing to its being
-broken in pieces from without.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the
-Eastern.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, throughout its
-history, the Emperor remained the immediate sovereign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">{363}</a></span>
-of all that still clave to the Empire, and, when the
-Empire fell, the Emperor fell with it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Empire fell
-mainly
-through
-foreign
-invasion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The overthrow
-of the Empire was mainly owing to foreign invasion
-in the strictest sense. It was weakened and dismembered
-by the Christian powers of Europe, and at last
-swallowed up by the barbarians of Asia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tendencies
-to separation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the same
-time the tendency to break in pieces after the Western
-fashion did exist and must always be borne in mind.
-But it existed only in particular parts and under special
-conditions. It is found mainly in possessions of the
-Empire which had become isolated, in lands which had
-been lost and won again, and in lands which came
-under the influence of Western ideas. The importance
-of these tendencies is shown by the fact that three
-powers which had been cut off in various ways from
-the body of the Empire, Bulgaria, Venice, and Sicily,
-became three of its most dangerous enemies. But the
-actual destruction of the Empire came from those barbarian
-attacks from which the West suffered but little.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking generally then, the Western Empire fell
-asunder from within; the Eastern Empire was broken in
-pieces from without. Of the many causes of this difference,
-perhaps only one concerns geography. At
-the time of the separation of the Empires, the Western
-Empire was really only another name for the dominions
-of the King of the Franks, whether within or without
-the elder Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Closer connexion
-of
-the East
-with
-Roman
-political
-traditions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eastern Empire, on the other
-hand, kept the political tradition of the elder Empire
-unbroken.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Disuse of
-the Roman
-name in
-the West.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-No common geographical or national name
-took in the three Imperial kingdoms of the West and
-their inhabitants.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its retention
-in the
-East.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But all the inhabitants of the Eastern
-Empire, down to the end, knew themselves by no
-national name but that of <i>Romans</i>, and the land gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">{364}</a></span>
-received the geographical name of <i>Romania</i>. But
-the Western Empire was not <i>Romania</i>, nor were its
-people <i>Romans</i>. The only <i>Romania</i> in the West, the
-Italian land so called, took its name from its long
-adhesion to the Eastern Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Importance
-of distinctions
-of
-race in the
-East.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the East again differences of race are far more
-important than they ever were in the West. In the
-West nations have been formed by a certain commingling
-of elements; in the East the elements remain
-apart. All the nations of the south-eastern peninsula,
-whether older than the Roman conquest or settlers of
-later times, are there still as distinct nations.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-original
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>First among them come three nations whose settlement
-in the peninsula is older than the Roman conquest.
-One of these has kept its name and its language.
-One has kept its language, but has taken up
-its name afresh only in modern times. The third has
-for ages lost both its name and its language.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Albanians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The most
-unchanged people in the peninsula must be the <i>Albanians</i>,
-called by themselves <i>Skipetar</i>, the representatives
-of the old Illyrians.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greeks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Next come the Greeks, who
-keep their language, but whose name of <i>Hellênes</i> went out
-of ordinary use till its revival in modern times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vlachs.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly
-there are the <i>Vlachs</i>, representing those inhabitants of
-Thrace, Mœsia, and other parts of the peninsula, who, like
-the Western nations, exchanged their own speech for
-Latin. They must mainly represent the Thracian race in
-its widest sense.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-Roman
-name.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both Greeks and Vlachs kept on the
-Roman name in different forms, and the Vlachs, the
-<i>Roumans</i> of our own day, keep it still. Of the invading
-races, the Goths passed through the Empire without
-making any lasting settlements in it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-settlers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last Aryan
-settlers, setting aside mere colonists in later times, were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">{365}</a></span>
-the <i>Slaves</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turanian
-settlers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came the Turanian settlers, Finnish,
-Turkish, or any other. Of these the first wave, the <i>Bulgarians</i>,
-were presently assimilated by the Slaves, and
-the Bulgarian power must be looked at historically as
-Slavonic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turanian
-neighbours.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then come Avars, Chazars, Magyars, Patzinaks,
-Cumans, all settling on or near the borders
-of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Magyars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these the Magyars alone grew into
-a lasting European state, and alone established a lasting
-power over lands which had formed part of the Empire.
-All these invaders came by the way of the lands north of
-the Euxine. Lastly, there are the non-Aryan invaders
-who came by way of Asia Minor or of the Mediterranean
-sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Saracens.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Semitic Saracens, after their first conquests
-in Syria, Egypt, and Africa, made no lasting conquests.
-They occupied for a while several of the great islands;
-but on the mainland of the Empire, European and
-Asiatic, they were mere plunderers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Seljuk and
-Ottoman
-Turks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In their wake
-came the most terrible enemies of all, the Turks, first
-the Seljuk, then the Ottoman. Ethnologically they
-must be grouped with the nations which came in
-by the north of the Euxine. Historically, as Mahometans,
-coming in by the southern route, they rank
-with the Saracens, and they did the work which the
-Saracens tried to do. Most of these invading races have
-passed away from history; three still remain in three
-different stages.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-of
-Bulgarians,
-Magyars
-and Ottomans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bulgarian is lost among the Aryan
-people who have taken his name. The Magyar abides,
-keeping his non-Aryan language, but adopted into the
-European commonwealth by his acceptance of Christianity.
-The Ottoman Turk still abides on European
-soil, unchanged because Mahometan, still an alien alike
-to the creed and to the tongues of Europe.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Eastern
-Empire
-becomes
-Greek.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among all these nations one holds a special place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">{366}</a></span>
-in the history of the Eastern Empire. The loss of the
-Oriental and Latin provinces of the Empire brought
-into practical working, though not into any formal
-notice, the fact that, as the Western Empire was fast
-becoming German, so the Eastern Empire was fast
-becoming Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-Oriental
-provinces,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To a state which had both a Roman
-and a Greek side the loss of provinces which were
-neither Roman nor Greek was not a loss but a source
-of strength.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the
-Latin provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And if the loss of the Latin provinces
-was not a source of strength, it at least did much to
-bring the Greek element in the Empire into predominance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dying out
-of Roman
-ideas.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, within the lands which were left to
-the Empire, first the Latin language, and then Roman
-ideas and traditions generally, gradually died out.
-Before the end of the eleventh century, the Empire
-was far more Greek than anything else. Before the
-end of the twelfth century, it had become nearly conterminous
-with the Greek nation, as defined by the
-combined use of the Greek language and profession of
-the Orthodox faith. The name <i>Roman</i>, in its Greek
-form, was coming to mean <i>Greek</i>. And, about the
-same time, the other primitive nations of the peninsula,
-hitherto merged in the common mass of Roman
-subjects, began to show themselves more distinctly
-alongside of the Greeks.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Appearance
-of Albanians
-and
-Vlachs.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We now first hear of <i>Albanians</i>
-and <i>Vlachs</i> by those names, and the importance
-of the nations which have thus come again to
-light increases as we go on.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Latin
-Conquest,
-1204.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the Greek remnant
-of the Empire was broken in pieces by the great Latin
-invasion, and, instead of a single power, Roman or
-Greek, we see a crowd of separate states, Greek and
-Frank.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The revived
-Byzantine
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The reunion of some of these fragments
-formed the revived Empire of the Palaiologoi. But at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">{367}</a></span>
-no moment since the twelfth century has the whole
-Greek nation been united under a single power, native
-or foreign.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1461-1821.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And from the Ottoman conquest of Trebizond
-to the beginning of the Greek War of Independence,
-the whole of the Greek nation was under foreign
-masters.<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">We have now first to trace out the steps by which
-the Empire was broken in pieces, and then to trace out
-severally the geographical history of the states which
-rose out of its fragments. And with these last we may
-class certain powers which do not strictly come under
-that definition, but which come within the same geographical
-range and which absorbed parts of the Imperial
-territory. Beginning in the West, the territory which
-the Empire at the final separation still held west of the
-Hadriatic, was gradually lost through the attacks, first
-of the Saracens, then of the Normans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These lands
-grew into the kingdom of <i>Sicily</i>, which has its proper
-place here as an offshoot from the Eastern Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At
-the other end of the Italian peninsula, <i>Venice</i> gradually
-detached itself from the Empire, to become foremost in
-its partition: here then comes the place of Venice as a
-maritime power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slavonic
-powers.<br />
-Bulgaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then come the powers which arose
-on the north and north-west of the Empire, powers
-chiefly Slavonic, reckoning as Slavonic the great Bulgarian
-kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here too will come the kingdom of
-Hungary, which, as a non-Aryan power in the heart of
-Europe, has much both of likeness and of contrast with
-Bulgaria. The kingdom of Hungary itself lay beyond
-the bounds of the Empire, but a large part of its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">{368}</a></span>
-dependent territory had been Imperial soil.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Albanians.<br />
-Roumans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here also
-we must speak of the states which arose out of the
-new developement of the Albanian and Rouman
-races, and of the states, Greek and Frank, which arose
-just before and at the time of the Latin Conquest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Asiatic
-powers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then there are the powers, both Christian and Mahometan,
-which arose within the Imperial dominions in
-Asia. Here we have to speak alike of the states
-founded by the Crusaders and of the growth of the
-Ottoman Turks. Lastly, we come to the work of our
-own days, to the new European states which have been
-formed by the deliverance of old Imperial lands from
-Ottoman bondage.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>800-1204.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We will therefore first trace the geographical
-changes in the frontier of the Empire itself down to
-the Latin Conquest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1204-1453.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Latin Empire of <i>Romania</i>,
-the Greek Empire of <i>Nikaia</i>, the revived Greek Empire
-of Constantinople, will follow, as continuing, at least
-geographically, the true Eastern Roman Empire. Then
-will come the powers which have fallen off from the
-Empire or grown up within the Empire, from Sicily to
-free Bulgaria. But it must be remembered that it is
-not always easy to mark, either chronologically or on
-the map, when this or that territory was finally lost to
-the Empire. This is true both on the Slavonic border
-and also in southern Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Distinction
-between
-conquest
-and settlement.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the former above all
-it is often hard to distinguish between conquest at the
-cost of the Empire and settlement within the Empire.
-In either case the frontier within which the Emperors
-exercised direct authority was always falling back and
-advancing again. Beyond this there was a zone which
-could not be said to be under the Emperor’s direct
-rule, but in which his overlordship was more or less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">{369}</a></span>
-fully acknowledged, according to the relative strength
-of the Empire and of its real or nominal vassals.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>Changes in the Frontier of the Empire.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Power of
-revival in
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In tracing the fluctuations of the frontier of the
-Eastern Empire from the beginning of the ninth century,
-we are struck by the wonderful power of revival
-and reconquest which is shown throughout the whole
-history. Except the lands which were won by the
-first Saracens, hardly a province was finally lost till it
-had been once or twice won back. No one could
-have dreamed that the Empire of the seventh century,
-cut short by the Slavonic settlements to a mere fringe
-on its European coasts, could ever have become the
-Empire of the eleventh century, holding a solid mass of
-territory from Tainaros to the Danube. But before
-this great revival, the borders of the Empire had both
-advanced and fallen back in the farther West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sardinia,
-Sicily,
-Southern
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the
-time of the separation of the Empires, the New Rome
-still held Sardinia, Sicily, and a small part of southern
-Italy. The heel of the boot still formed the theme of
-<i>Lombardy</i>,<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> while the toe took the name of <i>Calabria</i>
-which had once belonged to the heel. <i>Naples</i>, <i>Gaeta</i>,
-and <i>Amalfi</i> were outlying Italian cities of the Empire;
-so was <i>Venice</i>, which can hardly be called an Italian
-city.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-islands.<br />
-Advance on
-the continent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course of the ninth century the power of
-the Empire was cut short in the islands, but advanced
-on the mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Sardinia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The history of Sardinia is utterly
-obscure; but it seems to have passed away from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">{370}</a></span>
-Empire by the beginning of the ninth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Sicily,
-827-965.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Sicily
-was now conquered bit by bit by the Saracens of Africa
-during a struggle of one hundred and forty years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Agrigentum,
-827;<br />
-of Palermo,
-831;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Agrigentum</i>,
-opposite to the African coast, fell first; <i>Palermo</i>,
-once the seat of Phœnician rule, became four years later
-the new Semitic capital.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Messina,
-842;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Messina</i> on the strait soon
-followed; but the eastern side of the island, its most
-thoroughly Greek side, held out much longer.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Malta, 869;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before
-the conquest of this region, <i>Malta</i>, the natural appendage
-to Sicily, passed into Saracen hands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Syracuse,
-878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Syracuse</i>, the
-Christian capital, did not fall till fifty years after the
-first invasion, and in the north-western corner of the
-island a remnant still held out for nearly ninety years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tauromenion,
-902-963.<br />
-Rametta,
-965.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Tauromenion</i> or <i>Taormina</i>, on its height, had to be
-twice taken in the course of the tenth century, and the
-single fort of <i>Rametta</i>, the last stronghold of Eastern
-Christendom in the West, held out longer still. By
-this time Eastern Christendom was fast advancing on
-Islam in Asia; but the greatest of Mediterranean
-islands passed from Christendom to Islam, from Europe
-to Africa, and a Greek-speaking people was cut off
-from the Empire which was fast becoming Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Partial
-recovery
-and final
-loss of
-Sicily,
-1038-1042.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-the complete and uninterrupted Mussulman dominion
-in Sicily was short. The Imperial claims were never
-forgotten, and in the eleventh century they were again
-enforced. By the arms of George Maniakês, Messina
-and Syracuse, with a part of the island which at the
-least took in the whole of its eastern side, was, if only
-for a few years, restored to the Imperial rule.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Empire
-in Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While Sicily was thus lost bit by bit, the power of
-the Empire was advancing in the neighbouring mainland
-of Italy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Taking of
-Bari, 871.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Bari</i> was won back for Christendom
-from the Saracen by the combined powers of both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">{371}</a></span>
-Empires; but the lasting possession of the prize fell to
-the Cæsar of the East. At the end of the ninth century,
-the Eastern Empire claimed either the direct possession
-or the superiority of all southern Italy from
-Gaeta downwards.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-of the
-Imperial
-power in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The extent of the Imperial
-dominion was always fluctuating; there was perhaps
-no moment when the power of the Emperors was really
-extended over this whole region; but there was perhaps
-no spot within it which did not at some time or other
-admit at least the Imperial overlordship. The eastern
-coast, with the heel and the toe in a wider sense than
-before, became a real and steady possession, while the
-allegiance of <i>Beneventum</i>, <i>Capua</i>, and <i>Salerno</i> was always
-very precarious.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Naples,
-Gaeta, and
-Amalfi.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But <i>Naples</i>, <i>Gaeta</i>, and <i>Amalfi</i>, however
-nominal their allegiance might be, never formally
-cast it aside.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, at the beginning of the ninth century, the
-Eastern Emperors held all Sicily, with some patches of
-territory on the neighbouring mainland. At the beginning
-of the eleventh century, the island had been wholly
-lost, while the dominion on the mainland had been
-greatly enlarged.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Normans
-in
-Italy and
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course of the eleventh century
-a new power, the Normans of Apulia, conquered the
-Italian possessions of the Empire, won Sicily from the
-Mussulman, and even made conquests from the Empire
-east of the Hadriatic. Thus arose the Sicilian kingdom,
-the growth of which will best be traced when we
-come to the powers which arose out of the breaking-up
-of the Empire.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The great islands of the Eastern Mediterranean also
-fluctuated between Byzantine and Saracen dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Crete, 823.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Crete</i> was won by a band of Mussulman adventurers from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">{372}</a></span>
-Spain nearly at the time when the conquest of Sicily
-began.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its recovery,
-963.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was won back in the great revival of the Imperial
-power one hundred and forty years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cyprus lost,
-708; recovered
-and
-lost again
-c. 881-888;
-recovered
-again, 965.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cyprus</i>
-was lost sooner; but it went through many fluctuations
-and divisions, a recovery and a second loss, before
-its final recovery at the same time as the recovery of
-Crete and the complete loss of Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss and
-gain
-among the
-great islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Looking at the
-Empire simply as a power, there can be no doubt that
-the loss of Sicily was altogether overbalanced by the
-recovery of Crete and Cyprus. Geographically Sicily
-was an outlying Greek island; Crete and Cyprus lay
-close to the body of the Empire, essential parts of a
-Greek state. But Crete and Cyprus, as lands which had
-been lost and won back, were among the lands where
-the tendency to fall away from within showed itself
-earliest. Crete never actually separated from the
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of Cyprus,
-1182-1185.<br />
-Conquered
-by Richard
-of Poitou,
-1191.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cyprus fell away under a rebel Emperor, to
-be presently conquered by Richard, Count of Poitou
-and King of England, and to pass away from the
-Empire for ever.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-in the
-possession
-of the great
-islands,
-801.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">We may thus sum up the fluctuations in the
-possession of the great islands. At the beginning of
-the ninth century, the Eastern Empire still took in
-Sardinia, Sicily, and Crete; Cyprus was in the hands
-of the Saracens.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>901.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the beginning of the tenth
-century, the Empire held nothing in any of the four
-except the north-eastern corner of Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1001.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the beginning
-of the eleventh, Crete and Cyprus had been won
-back; Sicily was wholly lost.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1101.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the beginning of the
-twelfth, Crete and Cyprus were still Imperial possessions;
-a great part of Sicily had been won and lost
-again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1201.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the beginning of the thirteenth, Cyprus,
-like Sicily, had passed to a Western master; Crete was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">{373}</a></span>
-still held by the Empire, but only by a very feeble tie.
-Thus they stood at the fall of the old Roman Empire
-of the East; of the revived Empire of the Palaiologoi
-none of them ever formed a part.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations of
-the Empire
-towards the
-Slavonic
-powers.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">In the islands the enemies with whom the Empire
-had to strive were, first the Saracens, and then the
-Latins or Franks, the nations of Western Europe. On
-the mainland the part of the Saracen was taken by
-the Slave. During the four hundred years between
-the division of the Empires and the Frank conquest
-of the East, the geographical history of the Eastern
-Empire has mainly to deal with the shiftings of its
-frontier towards the Slavonic powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Three
-Slavonic
-groups.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These fall into
-three main groups.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servia and
-Croatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First, in the north-western corner
-of the Empire, are the Croatian and Servian settlements,
-whose history is closely connected with that of the
-kingdom of Hungary and the commonwealth of Venice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Macedonia
-and Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Secondly, there are the Slaves of Thrace, Macedonia,
-and Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bulgaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thirdly, the great Bulgarian kingdom
-comes between the two. These two last ranges gradually
-merge into one; the first remains distinct throughout.
-Servia, Croatia, and Dalmatia, will be best
-treated of in another section, remembering that, amidst
-all fluctuations, the claims of the Empire over them
-were never denied or forgotten, and were from time to
-time enforced. It was towards the Bulgarian kingdom that
-the greatest fluctuations of the Imperial frontier took
-place.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Bulgarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The original Finnish Bulgarians were the vanguard
-of Turanian invasion in the lands with which we have
-to do. Earlier, it would seem, in their coming than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">{374}</a></span>
-the Avars, they were slower to settle down into actual
-occupation of European territory. But when they
-did settle, it was not on the outskirts of the Empire,
-but in one of its acknowledged provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-south of
-the Danube,
-679.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Late in the
-seventh century, the first Bulgarian kingdom was established
-between Danube and Hæmus. It must be remembered
-that another migration in quite another
-direction founded another Bulgarian power on the
-Volga and the Kama.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>White
-Bulgaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This settlement, <i>Great</i> or <i>White
-Bulgaria</i>, remained Turanian and became Mahometan;
-<i>Black Bulgaria</i> on the Danube became Christian and
-Slavonic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-Bulgarian
-name.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The modern Bulgarians bear the Bulgarian
-name only in the way in which the Romanized Celts
-of Gaul bear the name of their Frankish masters from
-Germany, in which the Slaves of Kief and Moscow
-bear the name of their Russian masters from Scandinavia.
-In all three cases, the power formed by the
-union of conquerors and conquered has taken the
-name of the conquerors and has kept the speech of the
-conquered. But though the Bulgarian power became
-essentially Slavonic, it took quite another character
-from the less fully organized Slavonic settlements
-to the west and south of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-and the
-Macedonian
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Towards the Slaves of
-Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece, it cannot be said
-that the Empire had any definite frontier. Settled
-within the Empire, they were its tributaries or its
-enemies, according to the strength of the Empire at
-any particular moment. Up to the coming of the
-Bulgarians, we might, from different points of view,
-place the Imperial border either at the Danube or at
-no great distance from the Ægæan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-and the
-Bulgarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But from the
-Bulgarian conquest onwards, there was on the Bulgarian
-side a real frontier, a frontier which often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">{375}</a></span>
-shifted, but which was often fixed by treaty, and which,
-wherever it was fixed, marked off lands which were, for
-the time, wholly lost to the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-Danubian
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the first
-Bulgarian settlement, the Imperial frontier definitely
-withdrew for three hundred years from the lower Danube
-to the line of Hæmus or Balkan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bulgarians
-south of
-Hæmus.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the Bulgarian
-power pushed to the south and west the two fields of
-warfare, against the Bulgarians to the north and against
-the half-independent Slaves to the west, gradually
-melted into one. But as long as the Isaurian Emperors
-reigned, the two fields were kept distinct.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Bulgaria in
-the eighth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They kept
-the Balkan range against the Bulgarians, whose kingdom,
-stretching to the north-west over lands which are
-now Servian, had not, at the end of the eighth century,
-passed the mountain barrier of the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of the
-Slavonic
-settlements
-in Macedonia
-and
-Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, as a wholly distinct work, the Imperial
-power was restored over the Slaves of Thrace,
-Macedonia, and Greece. In the middle of the eighth,
-century the inland parts of Greece were chiefly occupied
-by Slavonic immigrants, while the coast and the cities
-remained Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>775-784.<br />
-807.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before the end of the century, the
-Slaves of Macedonia were reduced to tribute, and early
-in the ninth, those of Greece wholly failed to recover
-their independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Greece from
-the Slaves.<br />
-Slaves on
-Taÿgetos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The land was gradually settled
-afresh by Greek colonists, and by the middle of the
-tenth, only two Slavonic tribes, <i>Melings</i> and <i>Ezerites</i>
-(<i>Melinci</i> and <i>Jezerci</i>), remained, distinct, though tributary,
-on the range of Taÿgetos or Pentedaktylos.
-From this time to the Frankish conquest, Greece, as a
-whole, was held by the Empire. But, as a recovered
-land, it was one of those parts of the Empire in which
-a tendency to separate began to show itself. In the
-course of these changes, the name <i>Hellênes</i>, as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">{376}</a></span>
-national name, quite died out.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hellênes of
-Maina.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It had long meant
-<i>pagan</i>, and it was confined to the people of <i>Maina</i>, who
-remained pagan till near the end of the ninth century.
-The Greeks now knew no name but that of <i>Romans</i>.
-The local, perhaps contemptuous, name of the inhabitants
-of Hellas was <i>Helladikoi</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, at the division of the Empires, Thrace, Macedonia,
-and Greece had been more or less thoroughly recovered
-by the Eastern Empire, while the lands between
-Hæmus and Danube were wholly lost.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Romania.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Imperial
-dominion from the Hadriatic to the Euxine formed,
-together with the Asiatic provinces, <i>Romania</i>, the land
-of the Romans of the East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dalmatia,
-Servia, and
-Croatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Emperors also kept
-the cities on the Dalmatian coast, and the precarious
-allegiance of the Servian and Croatian principalities.
-These lands were bound to the Empire by a common
-dread of the encroaching Bulgarian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatness
-of the first
-Bulgarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ninth century
-and the early years of the tenth was a great
-time of Bulgarian advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Attempt on
-Pannonia,
-818-829.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bulgarians seem to
-have failed in establishing any lasting dominion to
-the north-west in Pannonia;<a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> at the expense of the
-Empire they were more successful.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-against the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the
-eighth century <i>Anchialos</i> and <i>Sardica</i>—afterwards
-called <i>Triaditza</i> and <i>Sofia</i>—were border cities of the
-Empire. The conquest of Sardica early in the ninth
-marks a stage of Bulgarian advance. At the end of
-the century, after the conversion of the nation to
-Christianity, comes the great era of the first Bulgarian
-kingdom, the kingdom of <i>Peristhlava</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Simeon,
-923-934.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Tzar Simeon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">{377}</a></span>
-established the Bulgarian supremacy over Servia, and
-carried his conquests deep into the lands of the Empire.
-In Macedonia and Epeiros the Empire kept only the
-sea-coast, Ægæan and Hadriatic; Sardica, Philippopolis,
-Ochrida, were all cities of the Bulgarian realm.
-Hadrianople, a frontier city of the Empire, passed more
-than once into Bulgarian hands. Nowhere in Europe,
-save in old Hellas, did the Imperial dominion stretch
-from sea to sea.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revival of
-the Imperial
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>So stood matters in the middle of the tenth century.
-Then came that greatest of all revivals of the
-Imperial power which won back Crete and Cyprus, and
-which was no less successful on the mainland of Europe
-and Asia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Bulgaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Bulgaria was conquered and lost and conquered
-again. But the first time it was conquered,
-not from the Bulgarian but from the Russian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Russians
-and
-Bulgarians.
-968-971.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Russians, long dangerous to Constantinople, now suddenly
-appear as a land power. Their prince Sviatoslaf
-overthrew the first Bulgarian kingdom, and
-Philippopolis became for a moment a Russian outpost.
-But John Tzimiskês restored the power of the Empire
-over the whole Bulgarian dominions. The Danube was
-once more the frontier of the Eastern Rome.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The second
-Bulgarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It remained so for more than two hundred years
-during the lower part of its course. But in the inland
-regions the Imperial power fell back almost at once, to
-advance again further than ever. A large part of the
-conquered land soon revolted, and a second Bulgarian
-kingdom, Macedonian rather than Mœsian, arose. The
-kingdom of <i>Ochrida</i>, the kingdom of Samuel, left to
-the Empire the eastern part of the old Bulgaria between
-Danube and Hæmus, together with all Thrace
-and the Macedonian coast. But it took in all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">{378}</a></span>
-inland region of Macedonia; it stretched down into
-Thessaly and Epeiros; and, while it nowhere touched
-the Euxine or the Ægæan, it had a small seaboard on
-the Hadriatic. Now came the great struggle between
-Romania and Bulgaria which fills the last years of the
-tenth century and the opening years of the eleventh.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second conquest
-of Bulgaria,
-1018.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last all Bulgaria, and with it for a while Servia,
-was restored to the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Croatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Croatia continued its
-vassalage, and its princes were presently raised to royal
-rank by Imperial authority.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Eastern Empire again took in the whole
-south-eastern peninsula. Of its outlying European
-possessions, southern Italy was still untouched.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At
-what moment Venice ceased to be a dependency of the
-Empire, it would be hard to say. Its dukes still received
-the Imperial investiture, and Venetian ships often joined
-the Imperial fleet. This state of things seems never
-to have been formally abolished, but rather to have
-dropped out of sight as Venice and Constantinople became
-practically hostile. In the other outlying city
-north of the Euxine the ninth and tenth centuries
-change places. Through all changes the Empire kept
-its maritime province in the Tauric Chersonêsos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cherson
-annexed,
-829-842;
-taken by
-Vladimir,
-988.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There
-the allied city of <i>Cherson</i>, more formally annexed to the
-Empire in the ninth century, was taken by the Russian
-Vladimir in the interval between the two great Bulgarian
-wars.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-in Asia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">In Asia the Imperial frontier had changed but
-little since the first Saracen conquests. The solid
-peninsula of Asia Minor was often plundered by the
-Mussulmans, but it was never conquered. Now, in Asia
-as in Europe, came a time of advance. For eighty years,
-with some fluctuations, the Empire grew on its eastern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">{379}</a></span>
-side. The Bagdad caliphate was now broken up, and
-the smaller emirates were more easily overcome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Asiatic conquests
-of
-Nikêphoros
-and John,
-963-976;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-wars of Nikêphoros Phôkas and John Tzimiskês restored
-<i>Kilikia</i> and <i>Syria</i> to the list of Roman provinces,
-<i>Tarsos</i>, <i>Antioch</i>, and <i>Edessa</i> to the list of Christian
-cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Basil the
-Second,
-991-1022.<br />
-Beginning
-of the
-annexation
-of Armenia
-1021;
-Ani, 1045;
-of Kars,
-1064.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Basil the Second extended the Imperial power
-over the <i>Iberian</i> and <i>Abasgian</i> lands east of the Euxine,
-and began a series of transactions by which, in the
-space of forty years, all <i>Armenia</i> was added to the
-Empire on the very eve of the downfall of the Imperial
-power in Asia.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>New
-enemies.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>For the great extension of the Empire laid it open
-to new enemies in both continents.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turks.<br />
-Magyars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Asia it became
-the neighbour of the Seljuk <i>Turks</i>, in Europe of the
-Magyars or Hungarians, who bear the name of <i>Turks</i>
-in the Byzantine writers of the tenth century. Hungary
-had now settled down into a Christian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revolt of
-Servia,
-1040.<br />
-Loss of Belgrade,
-1064.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A Servian revolt presently placed a new independent
-state between Hungary and Romania, but Belgrade
-remained an Imperial possession till it passed under
-Magyar rule twenty-four years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Turks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By this time
-the Empire had begun to be cut short in a far more
-terrible way in Asia. The Seljuk Turks now reached
-the new Roman frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Ani, 1064.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Plunder grew into conquest,
-and the first Turkish conquest, that of <i>Ani</i>, happened
-in the same year as the last Imperial acquisition of <i>Kars</i>.
-The Emperors now tried to strengthen this dangerous
-frontier by the erection of vassal principalities. The
-very name of <i>Armenia</i> now changes its place.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lesser
-Armenia,
-1080.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-new or <i>Lesser Armenia</i> arose in the Kilikian mountains,
-and was ruled by princes of the old Armenian dynasty,
-whose allegiance to the Empire gradually died out.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">{380}</a></span>
-But before this time the Turkish power was fully established
-in the peninsula of Asia Minor. The plunderers
-had become conquerors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1071.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The battle of Manzikert
-led to formal cessions and further advances.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1074.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Throughout
-Asia Minor the Empire at most kept the coast;
-the mass of the inland country became Turkish.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Sultans
-of <i>Roum</i>.<br />
-1081.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-the Roman name did not pass away;
-the invaders took
-the name of Sultans of <i>Roum</i>. Their capital was at
-<i>Nikaia</i>, a threatening position indeed for Constantinople.
-But distant positions like Trebizond and Antioch
-were still held as dependencies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Antioch,
-1081.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Antioch was before
-long betrayed to the Turks.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the Empire was attacked by a new
-enemy in its European peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Normans
-in Corfu
-and
-Epeiros.
-1081-1085.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Norman conquerors
-of Apulia and Sicily crossed the Hadriatic, and
-occupied various points, both insular and continental,
-especially <i>Dyrrhachion</i> or <i>Durazzo</i> and the island
-of <i>Korkyra</i>, now called by a new Greek name, <i>Koryphô</i>
-or <i>Corfu</i>. At every point of its frontier the
-Empire had, towards the end of the eleventh century,
-altogether fallen back from the splendid position
-which it held at its beginning.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-aspect
-of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The geographical
-aspect of the Empire was now the exact opposite of
-what it had been in the eighth and ninth centuries.
-Then its main strength seemed to lie in Asia. Its
-European dominion had been cut down to the coasts
-and islands; but its Asiatic peninsula was firmly held,
-touched only by passing ravages. Now the Asiatic
-dominion was cut down to the coasts and islands, while
-the great European peninsula was, in the greater part
-of its extent, still firmly held. Never before had
-the main power of the Empire been so thoroughly
-European. No wonder that in Western eyes the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">{381}</a></span>
-Empire of Romania began to look like a kingdom of
-Greece.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The states founded by the Crusaders will be dealt
-with elsewhere.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Asiatic
-territory,
-1097.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The crusades concern us here only
-as helping towards the next revival of the Imperial
-power under the house of Komnênos. Alexios himself
-won back Nikaia and the other great cities of western
-Asia Minor. Some of these, as <i>Laodikeia</i>, were received
-rather as free cities of the Empire than as mere
-subjects.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reigns of
-John and
-Manuel.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquering reigns of John and Manuel
-again extended the Empire in both continents.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1097.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Turk still ruled in the inland regions of Asia, but his
-capital was driven back from Nikaia to <i>Ikonion</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1137.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-superiority of the Empire was restored over Antioch and
-Kilikian Armenia at the one end, over Servia at the
-other.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1148.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hungary itself had to yield <i>Zeugmin</i>, <i>Sirmium</i>,
-and all Dalmatia. <span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1163-1168.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a moment the Empire again
-took in the whole eastern coast of the Hadriatic and
-its islands; even on its western shore <i>Ancona</i> became
-something like a dependency of the Eastern Cæsar.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Falling of
-distant possessions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The conquests of Manuel were clearly too great for
-the real strength of the Empire. Some lands fell away
-at once.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dalmatia,
-1181.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Dalmatia was left to be struggled for between
-Venice and Hungary. And the tendency to fall away
-within the Empire became strengthened by increased
-intercourse with the feudal ideas of the West. Cyprus,
-Trebizond, old Greece itself, came into the hands of
-rulers who were rather feudal vassals than Roman governors.
-We have seen how Cyprus fell away. Its Poitevin
-conqueror presently gave it to Guy of Lusignan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Latin kingdom
-of
-Cyprus,
-1192.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus,
-before the Latin conquest of Constantinople, a province
-had been torn from the Eastern Empire to become a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">{382}</a></span>
-Latin kingdom. The Greek-speaking lands were now
-beginning largely to pass under Latin rule. In Sicily
-the Frank might pass for a deliverer; in Corfu and
-Cyprus he was a mere foreign invader.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The third
-Bulgarian
-kingdom,
-1187.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Meanwhile the Empire was again cut short to the
-north by a new Bulgarian revolt, which established
-a third Bulgarian kingdom, but a kingdom which
-seems to have been as much Vlach or Rouman as
-strictly Bulgarian. The new kingdom took in the old
-Bulgarian land between Danube and Hæmus, and it
-presently spread both to the west and to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Other
-Slavonic
-revolts.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bulgarian revolt was followed by other movements
-among the Thracian and Macedonian Slaves, which did
-not lead to the foundation of any new states, but which
-had their share in the general break-up of the Imperial
-power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Increased
-Greek
-character of
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The work of Basil and Manuel was now undone,
-but its undoing had the effect of making the
-Empire more nearly a Greek state than ever. It did
-not wholly coincide with the Greek-speaking lands:
-the Empire had subjects who were not Greeks, and
-there were Greeks who were not subjects of the Empire.
-But the Greek speech and the new Greek
-nationality were dominant within the lands which were
-still left to the Empire. The Roman name was now
-merely a name: Roman and Greek meant the same
-thing. Whatever was not Greek in European Romania
-was mainly Albanian and Vlach. The dominion of
-the Empire in the peninsula was mainly confined to
-the primitive races of the peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Slavonic
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great element
-of later times, the Slavonic settlers, had almost
-wholly separated themselves from the Empire, establishing
-their independence, but not their unity. They
-formed a group of independent powers which had simply<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">{383}</a></span>
-fallen away from the Empire; it was by the powers of
-the West that the Empire itself was to be broken in
-pieces.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Latin conquest
-of
-Constantinople,
-1204.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The taking of Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade
-was the work of an alliance between the now independent
-commonwealth of Venice and a body of Western
-crusaders who, along with the states which they
-founded, may be indifferently called <i>Latins</i> or <i>Franks</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Act of
-Partition.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A regular act of partition was drawn out, by which the
-Empire was to be divided into three parts. One was
-to be assigned to a Latin <i>Emperor of Romania</i>, another
-of the pilgrims as his feudatories, a third to the commonwealth
-of Venice. But the partition was never
-carried out. A large part of the Empire was never
-conquered; another large part was not assigned by the
-act of partition. In fact the scheme of partition is
-hardly a geographical fact at all. The real partition
-to which the Latin conquest led was one of quite
-another kind, a partition of the Empire among a
-crowd of powers, Greek, Frank, and Venetian, more
-than one of which had some claim to represent the
-Empire itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Latin Empire
-of
-Romania.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>These were the Latin Empire of <i>Romania</i>, and the
-Greek Empire which maintained itself at <i>Nikaia</i>, and
-which, after nearly sixty years of banishment, won
-back the Imperial city. In the crusading scheme the
-Latin Emperor was to be the feudal superior of the
-lesser princes who were to establish themselves within
-the Empire. For his own Imperial domain he was to
-have the whole of the Imperial possessions in Asia, with
-a Thracian dominion stretching as far north as <i>Agathopolis</i>.
-Hadrianople, with a narrow strip of territory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">{384}</a></span>
-stretching down to the Propontis, was to be Venetian.
-The actual result was very different.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its extent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Latin Emperors
-never got any footing in Asia beyond parts of
-the themes bordering on the Propontis, reaching from
-Adramyttion to the mouth of the Sangarios. In Europe
-they held the eastern part of Thrace, with a fluctuating
-border towards Bulgaria on the north, and to the new
-Latin and Greek states which arose to the west. Their
-dominion also took in <i>Lêmnos</i>, <i>Lesbos</i>, <i>Chios</i>, and some
-others of the Ægæan islands.</p>
-
-<p>But the Latin Empire of Romania was not the only
-Empire which arose out of the break-up of the old
-East-Roman power. Two, for a time three, Greek
-princes bore the Imperial title; there was also a Latin
-king. It will be convenient for a while to leave out of
-sight both Asia and southern Greece, and to look to
-the revolutions of Thrace, Macedonia, northern Greece,
-and what we may now begin to call <i>Albania</i>. The immediate
-result of the Latin conquest was to divide
-these lands between three powers, two Latin and one
-Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Thessalonikê.
-1204-1222.
-Despotat of
-Epeiros.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides the Empire of Romania, there was the
-Latin kingdom of <i>Thessalonikê</i>, and the Greek <i>despotat</i><a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-of <i>Epeiros</i> held by the house of Angelos. Of these
-the Thessalonian kingdom was the most short-lived,
-and there can be little doubt that its creation was the
-ruin of the Latin Empire. It cut off the Emperor from
-his distant vassals in Greece, whose vassalage soon
-became nominal. It gave him, in successive reigns, a
-powerful neighbour who knew his own power, and a
-weak neighbour, who fell before the Greek advance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">{385}</a></span>
-sooner than himself. But the beginnings of the kingdom,
-under its first king Boniface, were promising. His
-power stretched over Thessaly, now known as <i>Great
-Vlachia</i>, and he received the homage of the Frank
-princes further to the south. But within twenty years
-from its foundation, Frank rule had ceased in Macedonia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Thessalonikê
-again
-Greek.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thessalonikê was again a Greek and an Imperial
-city, and its recovery by the Greeks split the Latin
-Empire asunder.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Epeirot
-despotat.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This blow came from the west. It was the Nicene
-Empire which did in the end win back the Imperial
-city; but, for some years after the Latin conquest, things
-looked as if the restoration of the Greek power in Europe
-was designed for Epeiros. The first despot Michael
-paid a nominal homage to all the neighbouring powers,
-Greek and Frank, in turn; but in truth he was the lord
-of an independent and growing state. His power began
-in the Epeirot land west of Pindos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1208-1210.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a moment
-he held in Peloponnêsos Corinth, Nauplia, and Argos.
-Durazzo and Corfu were won from Venice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1215.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Epeirot power advanced also to the east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1222.<br />
-1225.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thessalonikê was taken; its ruler took the Imperial title;
-Hadrianople followed, and the new Empire stretched
-across the peninsula from sea to sea, and took in Thessaly
-to the south. But the Thessalonian Empire was
-hardly more long-lived than the Thessalonian kingdom.
-It was first dismembered among the princes of the
-ruling house.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of Epeiros
-and Thessalonia.
-1237.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The original Epeirot despotat, along
-with Corfu, parted away from the new Macedonian
-power, to survive it by many years. But by this
-time the championship of the Greek speech and faith
-against the Latin lords of Constantinople had passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">{386}</a></span>
-to the foremost of the Greek powers which had grown
-up in Asia, to the Empire of Nikaia.</p>
-
-<p>These Greek powers were two, which arose at the
-same time, but by different processes and with different
-destinies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-of Trebizond,
-1204-1461.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Empire of <i>Nikaia</i> was the truer continuation
-of the old East-Roman power; the Empire
-of <i>Trapezous</i> or <i>Trebizond</i> was the last independent
-fragment of Roman dominion and Greek culture. The
-Trapezuntine Empire was not in strictness one of the
-states which arose out of the Latin partition. One of
-the parts of the Empire which showed most disposition
-to fall away was independently seized by a rival
-Emperor, at the very moment of the Latin conquest.
-Alexios Komnênos occupied Trebizond, an occupation
-largely wrought by Iberian help, as if the Empire,
-already dismembered by the Christians of the West,
-was to be further dismembered by the Christians
-of the further East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent
-of the
-Komnenian
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominions of Alexios, enlarged
-by his brother David to the west, at first took
-in the whole south coast of the Euxine from the Sangarios
-eastward, broken by the city of <i>Amisos</i>, which
-contrived to make itself virtually independent, and by
-the neighbouring Turkish settlement at <i>Samsoun</i>. But
-this dominion was only momentary. The eastern part
-alone survived to form the later Empire of Trebizond;
-the western part, the government of David, soon passed
-to the rising power of Nikaia.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Empire of
-Nikaia.
-1206-1261.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The founder of that power was Theodore Laskaris,
-in whom the succession of the Eastern Empire was held
-to be continued.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1214.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Ten years after the taking of Constantinople,
-a treaty fixed his border towards the small
-Latin dominion in Asia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1220.<br />
-1240.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Six years later the Latins
-kept only the lands north of the gulf of Nikomêdeia;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">{387}</a></span>
-sixteen years later they held only the Asiatic coast of
-the Bosporos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1247.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Seven years later Chios, Lêmnos, Samos,
-Kôs, and other islands were won back by the growing
-Greek state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Nicene
-Empire in
-Europe.
-1235.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, long before this, the Nicene Empire
-had become an European power. The Thracian
-Chersonêsos was first won, the work beginning at <i>Kallipolis</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1242.<br />1246.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently the Thessalonian Emperor sank to the
-rank of a despot under him of Nikaia; four years later
-Thessalonikê was incorporated with the Nicene dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1245-1256.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A series of Bulgarian campaigns carried the
-Imperial frontier, first to the Hebros—already the Slavonic
-<i>Maritza</i>—and then to the foot of Hæmus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1254-1259.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A
-series of Epeirot campaigns won a Hadriatic seaboard,
-and made <i>Durazzo</i> for a while again a city of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1259.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Nicene power in these regions was confirmed by
-the victory of Pelagonia, won over the combined forces
-of Epeiros, Achaia, and Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1260.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next year <i>Selymbria</i>
-was won from the Latins, and the Frank Empire was
-cut down to so much territory as could be guarded
-from the walls of Constantinople.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Constantinople,
-1261.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last the recovery
-of Constantinople changed the Empire of Nikaia into
-the revived Byzantine Empire of the Palaiologoi.</p>
-
-<p>That Empire still lasted a hundred and ninety years,
-and we must carefully distinguish between its European
-and its Asiatic history. The Asiatic border fell back
-almost as soon as the seat of rule was restored to Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Empire
-in Europe.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Europe the revived Empire kept the character of an
-advancing power till just before the entrance of the
-Ottoman into Europe, in some parts till just before the
-fall of Constantinople. Many events helped to weaken
-the real power of the Empire, which did not affect its
-geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1302.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such were the earlier Turkish inroads and
-the destroying visit of the Catalans.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-Peloponnêsos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The land in which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">{388}</a></span>
-advance was most steady was Peloponnêsos, where, at
-the time of the recovery of Constantinople, the Empire
-did not hold a foot of ground.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1262.<span class="sne">♦</span></span> <i>Misithra</i>, <i>Monembasia</i>,
-and <i>Maina</i> were the fruits of the day of Pelagonia.
-For a while the Imperial frontier was stationary, but
-from the beginning of the fourteenth century it steadily
-advanced. It advanced perhaps all the more after
-Peloponnêsos became an Imperial dependency, or an
-appanage for princes of the Imperial house, rather than
-an immediate possession of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1404.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Early in the
-fifteenth century the greater part of the peninsula, including
-Corinth, was again in Greek hands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last,
-twenty-three years only before the Turkish conquest of
-Constantinople, all Peloponnêsos, except the points held
-by Venice, was under the superiority of the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-Macedonia
-and Epeiros.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In more northern parts the advance of the Empire,
-though chequered by more reverses, went on steadily
-till the growth of the Servian power in the middle of
-the fourteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1308.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The frontier varied towards
-Servia, Bulgaria, Epeiros, and the Angevin power
-which established itself on the Hadriatic coast. Even
-under Andronikos the Second the Imperial dominion
-was extended over the greater part of Thessaly or <i>Great
-Vlachia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1318-1339.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later still, all Epeiros, <i>Jôannina</i> and <i>Arta</i>—once
-<i>Ambrakia</i>—were won. At the moment of the
-great Servian advance, the Empire held the uninterrupted
-seaboard from the Euxine to the Pagasaian
-Gulf, as well as its Hadriatic seaboard from the Ambrakian
-gulf northward. But the Frank principalities
-still cut off the main body of the Empire from its possessions
-in Peloponnêsos.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Losses of
-the Empire
-in Asia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In Asia there is another tale to tell. There the
-frontier of the Empire steadily went back from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">{389}</a></span>
-recovery of Constantinople. A few points gained or
-lost to European powers go for little.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1260.<span class="sne">♦</span></span> <i>Smyrna</i> passed
-for a while to Genoa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Knights of
-Saint John,
-1309-1315.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Knights of Saint John won
-<i>Rhodes</i>, <i>Kôs</i>, and other islands, but they did not become
-a power on the mainland of Asia till the Empire had
-almost withdrawn from that continent.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Turks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Imperial
-power steadily crumbled away before the advance of
-the Turk, first the Seljuk and then the Ottoman. The
-small Turkish powers into which the Sultanate of
-Roum had now split up began to encroach on the Greek
-dominion in Asia as soon as its centre was transferred
-to Europe. By the end of the thirteenth century, the
-Imperial possessions in Asia had again shrunk up to a
-narrow strip on the Propontis, from the Ægæan to the
-Euxine. Losses followed more speedily when the
-Turkish power passed from the Seljuk to the Ottoman.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1326-1338.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Brusa</i>, <i>Nikaia</i>, <i>Nikomêdeia</i>, were all lost within twelve
-years. By the middle of the fourteenth century, the
-Emperors kept nothing in Asia, save a strip of land
-just opposite Constantinople, and the outlying cities of
-<i>Philadelphia</i> and <i>Phôkaia</i>, their allies rather than their
-subjects.</p>
-
-<p>The Ottoman was now all but ready to pass into
-Europe, and the way was made easier for him by the
-rise and fall of an European power which again cut
-short the Empire in its western provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-falls back
-towards
-Servia and
-Bulgaria.<br />
-1331.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While the
-Imperial frontier was advancing in Epeiros and Thessaly,
-it fell back towards Servia, and advanced towards
-Bulgaria only to fall back again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Philippopolis,
-1344.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Philippopolis</i>, so
-often lost and won, now passed away for ever.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest.
-Stephen
-Dushan.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And
-now came the great momentary advance of <i>Servia</i>
-under Stephen Dushan, which wrested from the Empire
-a large part of its Thracian, Macedonian, Albanian, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">{390}</a></span>
-Greek possessions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the middle of the fourteenth
-century, the Empire, all but banished from Asia, kept no
-unbroken European dominion out of Thrace. Its other
-possessions were isolated. It kept Thessalonikê and
-Chalkidikê, with a small strip of Macedonia as far as
-<i>Berrhoia</i> and <i>Vodena</i>. It kept a small Thessalian territory
-about <i>Lamia</i> or <i>Zeitouni</i>. There was the Peloponnesian
-province, fast growing into importance;
-there was <i>Lesbos</i> and a few other islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1355.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On
-Stephen’s death his dominion broke in pieces, but the
-Empire did not win back its lost lands. For the
-Ottoman was already in Europe, ready, in the space of
-the next hundred years, to swallow up all that was left.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>1336.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">As in the recovery of Romania by the Greeks of
-Nikaia, so in the final conquest of Romania by the
-Turks of Brusa, Constantinople itself was—with the
-exception of the Peloponnesian appanage—the last
-point of the Empire to fall. The Turk, like the Greek,
-made his way in by Kallipolis; like the Greek, he
-hemmed in the Imperial city for years before it fell
-into his hands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Hadrianople,
-1361.<br />
-1366.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In seven years from his first landing,
-Hadrianople had become the European capital of the
-Turk; the Empire was his tributary, keeping, besides
-its outlying possessions, only the land just round the
-city. The romantic expedition of Amadeo of Savoy
-gave back to the Empire its Euxine coast as far as
-<i>Mesêmbria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Philadelphia,
-1374-1391.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before the end of the century Philadelphia
-was lost in Asia, and the Imperial dominion in
-Europe hardly reached beyond the city itself and the
-Peloponnesian province. Thessalonikê and the Thessalian
-province were both lost for a while.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-Timour’s
-invasion,
-1401.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Bajazet
-was on the point of doing the work of Mahomet, when
-the Empire was saved for another half-century by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">{391}</a></span>
-invasion of Timour and the consequent break-up of the
-Ottoman power. During the Ottoman civil wars, the
-outlying points of the Empire were restored and seized
-again more than once.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1424.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last the boundaries of the
-Empire were fixed by treaty between Sultan Mahomet
-and the Emperor Manuel, much as they had stood sixty
-years before. The coast of the Propontis to Selymbria,
-the coast of the Euxine to Mesêmbria, Thessalonikê and
-Chalkidikê, the Peloponnesian province, the smaller
-Thessalian province, the overlordship of Lesbos, Ainos,
-and Thasos, was all that was left. Further losses soon
-followed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1426.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thessalonikê passed from the Empire within
-two years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1453.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last, as all the world knows, the Imperial
-city itself fell, and the name of the Eastern Roman
-Empire was blotted out of European geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1460.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Six
-years later came the conquest of Peloponnêsos, and the
-whole of European Greece passed into the hands of
-foreign masters.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>States
-growing
-out of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Having thus sketched the changes in the extent of
-the Eastern Roman Empire during a period of six hundred
-and fifty years, we have now to trace the geography
-of the states which, within that time, grew up
-within its borders or upon its frontiers. These fall
-naturally into four groups.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Slavonic
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First come the national
-states which were formed by throwing off the dominion
-of the Empire. These are mainly the Slavonic powers
-to the north, Bulgaria, Servia, Croatia, and the later
-states which arose out of their divisions and combinations.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungary.<br />
-Rouman
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And with these, different as was their origin, we
-must, for our purposes, place both the <i>Hungarian</i> kingdom
-which annexed so many of the Slavonic lands, and
-the <i>Rouman</i> states, so closely connected with Hungarian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">{392}</a></span>
-history, which arose by migrations out of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Greek
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another group consists of the Greek states which split
-off from the Empire before or at the Latin conquest,
-and which were not recovered by the Greek Emperors
-of Nikaia and Constantinople. Both these classes of
-states belong strictly to Eastern Christendom. Catholic
-Hungary ruling over Orthodox Slaves forms a link
-between the East and the West; so do those Slaves who
-themselves belong to the Latin Church.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Latin states
-with the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another link is
-supplied by a third group of states, namely, those parts
-of the Empire which, either at or before the Latin conquest,
-came under Latin rule. This class is not confined
-to the Frank powers in Romania or to the Eastern settlements
-of Venice and Genoa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Sicily.<br />
-Kingdom of
-Jerusalem.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From our point of view
-it takes in the Norman kingdom of Sicily and the crusading
-kingdom of Jerusalem with its fiefs. In all
-these cases, territory which had formed part of the
-Eastern Empire came under Latin rule. And in all
-these cases, Latin masters bore rule over alien subjects,
-Greek, Slave, Syrian, or any other. None of the Latin
-powers were national states, like the Slavonic or even
-like the Greek powers. But the foreign masters of these
-lands were at least European and Christian. The last
-class consists of powers which lie beyond the range of
-European and Christian civilization.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turkish
-dynasties.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These are the
-Turkish dynasties which arose within the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Ottomans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of
-these only the last and greatest, the dynasty of <i>Othman</i>,
-became geographically European, and swallowed
-up nearly all the lands which had belonged to the
-Empire in Europe, together with much which lay
-beyond its bounds. Here we have, not only the
-absence of national being, but the rule of the Asiatic
-over the European, of the Mussulman over the Christian.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">{393}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The New
-States.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, we come to the partial redressing of this
-wrong by the re-establishment of independent Greek
-and Slavonic states in our own century.</p>
-
-<p>These seem to make four natural groups, and it is
-needful to bear in mind their nature and relations to
-each other. But it will be more convenient to speak of
-the several states thus formed in an order approaching
-more nearly to the order of their separation from the
-Empire. And first comes a power which parted off
-so early, and which became so thoroughly a part of
-Western Europe, that it needs an effort to grasp the
-fact that its right place is among the powers which had
-their beginning in separation from the Imperial throne
-of Constantinople.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Kingdom of Sicily.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Norman
-power in
-Italy and
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This is the power which, in the course of the eleventh
-century, was formed by the Norman adventurers in
-southern Italy and in Sicily. It was not wholly
-formed at the expense of the Eastern Empire. But
-all its insular, and the greater part of its continental,
-territory, was either won from the Eastern Empire and
-its vassals, or else had once formed part of that Empire.
-Its kings also more than once established their power,
-for a longer or shorter time, in the Imperial lands
-east of the Hadriatic. With the Western Empire and
-the Kingdom of Italy the Sicilian kingdom had in its
-beginnings nothing to do, though it was afterwards
-somewhat enlarged at their expense.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possessions
-of the
-Empire in
-Italy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>When the Norman conquests in Italy began, early
-in the eleventh century, the Eastern Empire still kept
-the coast of both seas from the further side of the peninsula<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">{394}</a></span>
-of <i>Gargano</i> to the head of the gulf of <i>Policastro</i>.
-The Imperial duchies of Naples, Gaeta, and Amalfi,
-lying to the north of this point, were cut off by the
-duchies of <i>Benevento</i>, <i>Capua</i>, and <i>Salerno</i>, over which
-the Empire had at the most a very precarious superiority.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-the Normans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within a hundred years, all these lands, together
-with the island of Sicily, were brought under
-Norman rule. Thus grew up a new European power,
-sometimes forming one kingdom, sometimes two, sometimes
-held alone, sometimes together with other kingdoms.
-This power supplanted alike the Eastern Empire,
-the Saracen powers of Sicily, and the Lombard
-princes of southern Italy. It started from two points,
-two distinct Norman settlements, of which the later outshone
-the earlier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Aversa,
-1021.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The earliest Norman territorial settlement
-was the county of <i>Aversa</i>, held in vassalage of the
-Imperial duchy of Naples.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Principality
-of Capua,
-1062-1068.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Forty years later its counts
-became possessed of the principality of <i>Capua</i>, of which
-they received a papal confirmation which implied a
-denial of all dependence on either Empire. The more
-lasting duchy of <i>Apulia</i> began later under the adventurers
-of the house of Hauteville.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Apulia,
-1042.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Their first stage is
-marked by the foundation of the county of Apulia, with
-<i>Melfi</i> as its capital, under William of-the-Iron-arm.
-This took in the peninsula of Gargano and the lands
-immediately to the south of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Investiture
-by Pope
-Leo, 1053.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next stage is when
-Leo the Ninth invested Count Humfrey, or rather the
-Normans as a body, with all that they could conquer
-in Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Robert
-Wiscard
-Duke, 1059.<br />
-Completion
-of the
-Apulian
-duchy,
-1077.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first of several
-takings of <i>Tarentum</i>, and the assumption of the ducal
-title by Robert Wiscard, mark another stage. Less
-than twenty years later the Eastern Empire kept
-nothing but the duchy of Naples; <i>Benevento</i> had passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">{395}</a></span>
-to the Popes. The rest of the lands both of the Empire
-and of the Lombard princes were now very unequally
-divided between two Norman lords, the Duke of Apulia
-and the Prince of Capua.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Robert
-Wiscard in
-Epeiros,
-1081-1085.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Byzantine power west of
-the Hadriatic being thus overthrown, Robert Wiscard
-for the first time pushed the Norman arms into the
-Eastern peninsula itself. For the last few years of his
-life he held the islands of Corfu and Kephallênia, with
-Durazzo and the coast to the south, and even inland as
-far as <i>Kastoria</i> and <i>Trikkala</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1147-1150.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His power was renewed
-for a moment by his son Bohemond, and in the middle
-of the next century Corfu was again for a short time
-held by King Roger.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Norman
-Conquest of
-Sicily,
-1060-1093.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>For by that time the island of Sicily was a kingdom
-of Western Christendom. The second time of Mussulman
-rule over the whole island was short. In the
-space of thirty years Count Roger won the great island
-alike from Islam and from Eastern Christendom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Taking of
-Messina,
-1061;<br />
-of Palermo,
-1072;<br />
-of Syracuse,
-1086;<br />
-of Noto,
-1091;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Greek Messina was first won; after a while Saracen Palermo followed;
-Syracuse was won much later; the last Saracen post in the island to
-hold out was <i>Noto</i> in the south-eastern corner.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Malta,
-1091.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Malta</i>, the natural appendage of
-Sicily, was soon added. The first Norman capital was
-<i>Messina</i>. Duke Robert, as overlord of his brother
-Count Roger, kept Palermo and the surrounding district
-in his own hands. It was not till the next century
-that the Count of Sicily won full possession of the
-city.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Palermo
-capital of
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Palermo then became again, as it had been
-under the Saracens, the head of Sicily.</p>
-
-<p>The ruler of Sicily also became a potentate on the
-Italian mainland. First the half, then the whole, of
-Calabria formed part of his dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Roger the
-Second,
-1105-1154.<br />
-King, 1130.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The third
-Great Count, the first King, of Sicily, Roger the Second,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">{396}</a></span>
-gradually won the whole possessions of his family on
-the mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Capua,
-1132-1136.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To these he presently added the Norman
-principality of Capua, first as a dependent territory,
-then as fully incorporated with his dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Naples,
-1138.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-He
-next won the last possession in the West which was still
-held by the Eastern Empire, the city of Naples.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Abruzzi,
-1140.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-He
-then pressed beyond the bounds both of the Eastern
-Empire and of the early Norman conquests by the annexation
-of the <i>Abruzzi</i>. He then, as we have seen,
-extended his power for a moment east of the Hadriatic.
-Meanwhile he was more successful against the common
-enemies of Eastern and Western Christendom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-in Africa,
-1135-1137.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As
-Sicily had twice been conquered from Africa, Africa
-now began to be conquered from Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1160.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Roger held
-a considerable dominion on the African coast including
-<i>Mehadia</i>, <i>Bona</i>, and other points, which were lost
-under his son William.</p>
-
-<p>Thus was founded a kingdom which has, perhaps
-oftener than any other European state, been divided
-and united and handed over from one dynasty of
-strangers to another, but whose boundaries, strictly so
-called, have hardly changed at all. For the only immediate
-neighbour of the Sicilian king was his ecclesiastical
-overlord. The question was whether the king of
-the mainland should be also king of the island. But
-the successive dynasties which reigned both over the
-whole kingdom and over its divided parts were for a
-long time eager to carry out the policy of their first
-founder, by conquests east of the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Epeirot
-conquests
-of William
-the Good,
-1185.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before
-the fall of the old Empire, William the Good began
-again to establish an Epeirot and insular dominion by
-the conquest of Durazzo, Corfu, Kephallênia, and
-Zakynthos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Margarito,
-1186.<br />
-1338.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But these outlying dominions were granted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">{397}</a></span>
-in fief to the Sicilian Admiral Margarito,<a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> who, himself
-bearing the strange title of <i>King of the Epeirots</i>,
-founded a dynasty which, with the title of Count
-Palatine, held <i>Kephallênia</i>, <i>Zakynthos</i>, and <i>Ithakê</i> into
-the fourteenth century. Thus these lands, like Cyprus
-and Trebizond, were cut off from the Empire
-just before its fall, and the revolutions of Sicily cut
-them off equally from the Sicilian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Epeirot
-dominion
-of Manfred,
-1258.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A more
-lasting power in these regions began under Manfred,
-who received with his Greek wife Corfu, Durazzo,
-and a strip of the Albanian coast, with the title of
-<i>Lord of Romania</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Charles
-of Anjou,
-1266-69.<br />
-1272-1276.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This dominion passed to his conqueror
-Charles of Anjou, who further established
-a feudal superiority over the Epeirot despotat.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1282.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-his plans were cut short by the revolution of the
-Vespers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-Durazzo,
-1322.<br />
-Duchy of
-Durazzo,
-1333-1360.<br />
-1378.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Durazzo was lost and won more than once;
-but it came back to the Angevin house, to become a
-separate Angevin duchy, till it fell before the growth of
-the Albanian powers. Another branch held <i>Lepanto</i>—once
-<i>Naupaktos</i>—which lasted longer.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1373-1386.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Corfu and
-Butrinto became immediate possessions of the Neapolitan
-crown till they found more lasting masters
-at Venice.</p>
-
-<p>This Eastern dominion of the two Sicilian crowns,
-besides their influence of which we shall have presently
-to speak in southern Greece, tends to keep up the connexion
-of the Sicilian kingdoms with the Empire out
-of which they sprang. But it can hardly be called a
-geographical enlargement of the kingdoms themselves.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">{398}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acre occupied
-by
-Charles of
-Anjou.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Still less can that name be given to the short occupation
-of <i>Acre</i> by Charles of Anjou in his character of
-one of the many Kings of Jerusalem.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Malta
-granted
-to the
-Knights,
-1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Sicilian
-kingdoms themselves cannot be said to have gained or
-lost territory till Charles the Fifth granted Malta to the
-Knights of Saint John, till Philip the Second added
-the <i>Stati degli Presidi</i> to the Two Sicilies. The great
-revolution of all has taken place in our own day. The
-name of Sicily has for the first time been wiped from
-the European map. The island of Hierôn and Roger
-has sunk to form seven provinces of a prince who has
-not deigned to take the crown or the title of that
-illustrious realm.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Crusading States.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-between
-Sicily and
-the crusading
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Sicilian kingdom has much in common with
-the states formed by the crusaders in Asia and Eastern
-Europe. Both grew out of lands won by Western
-conquerors, partly from the Eastern Empire itself, partly
-from Mussulman holders of lands which had belonged
-to the Eastern Empire. But the order of the two processes
-is different. The Sicilian Normans began by
-conquering lands of the Empire, and then went on to
-win the island which the Saracens had torn from the
-Empire. The successive crusades first founded Christian
-states in the lands which the Mussulmans had won
-from the Empire, and then partitioned the Empire itself.
-The first crusaders undertook to hold their conquest as
-fiefs of the Eastern Empire. This condition was only
-very partially carried out; but the mere theory marks
-a stage in the relations between the Eastern Empire
-and the Latin powers of Palestine which has nothing
-answering to it in the case of Sicily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">{399}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Jerusalem
-and Frank
-principalities
-in
-Syria.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>First among these powers come the <i>Kingdom of
-Jerusalem</i> and the other Frank principalities which
-arose out of the first crusade.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cyprus.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom of <i>Cyprus</i>,
-which in some sort continued the Kingdom of Jerusalem,
-forms a link between the true crusading states
-and those which arose out of the partition of the Empire
-in the fourth crusade.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Armenia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And closely connected
-with this was the kingdom of <i>Kilikian Armenia</i> whose
-foundation we have already mentioned.<a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> This last
-was an Eastern state which became to some extent
-Latinized. But the Syrian states, Cyprus, and the
-Latin powers which arose out of the partition of the
-Empire, all agree in being colonies of Western Europe
-in Eastern lands, states where the Latin settlers appear
-as a dominant race over the natives, of whatever blood
-or creed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Crusaders
-cut
-off the Mussulmans
-from the
-sea.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The great geographical result of the first crusade
-was to cut off the Mussulman powers from the seas
-of Asia and Eastern Europe. In the first years of
-the twelfth century the Christian powers, Byzantine,
-Armenian, and Latin, held the whole coast of Asia
-Minor and Syria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Kingdom
-of
-Jerusalem.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Kingdom of Jerusalem, at its
-greatest extent, stretched along the coast from <i>Berytos</i>
-to <i>Gaza</i>. To the east it reached some way beyond
-Jordan and the Dead Sea, with a strip of territory
-reaching southward to the eastern gulf of the Red Sea.
-To the north lay two Latin states which, in the days of
-Komnenian revival, acknowledged the superiority of the
-Eastern Emperor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tripolis.<br />
-Antioch.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were the county of <i>Tripolis</i>,
-reaching northwards to the Syrian <i>Alexandretta</i>, and
-the more famous principality of <i>Antioch</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>640.<br />
-968.<br />
-1081.<br />
-1098.<br />
-1268.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That great
-city, lost to Christendom in the first days of Saracen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">{400}</a></span>
-conquest, won back to the Empire in the Macedonian
-revival, lost to the Turk, won back by the Frank,
-remained a Christian principality long after the fall of
-Jerusalem, and did not pass again under Mussulman
-rule till late in the thirteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Edessa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-North-east of
-Antioch lay the furthest of the Latin possessions, the
-inland county of <i>Edessa</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1128-1173.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was the first to be
-lost; it fell under the power of the Turkish Attabegs
-of Syria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-lands
-beyond
-Jordan.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They cut short the kingdom of Jerusalem,
-taking away the territory east of Jordan. On their
-ruin arose the mightier power of Saladin, lord alike
-of Egypt and Syria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Jerusalem
-taken by
-Saladin,
-1187.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-He took Jerusalem, and the
-kingdom which still bore that name was cut down to
-the lands just round Tyre.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Jerusalem
-recovered by
-Frederick
-the Second,
-1228.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The crusades which followed
-won back <i>Acre</i> and various points, and at last
-the diplomacy of Frederick the Second won back from
-the Egyptian Sultan Tyre, Sidon, and the Holy City
-itself. A strip of coast running inland at two points,
-so as to take in Tiberias and Nazareth at one end,
-Jerusalem and Bethlehem at the other, formed the
-Eastern realm of the lord of Rome and Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1239-1243.<br />
-Final loss
-of Jerusalem,
-1244.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lost
-and won again by the Christians, Jerusalem was finally
-won for Islam by the invasion of the Chorasmians
-from the shores of the Caspian. But for nearly fifty
-years longer the points on the coast were lost and won,
-as the Mussulman powers or fresh crusaders from
-Europe had the upper hand.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fall of
-Acre, 1291.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the fall of <i>Acre</i>,
-the Latin dominion on the Syrian mainland came to an
-end. The land won by the Western Christians from
-the Mussulman went back to the disciples of the Prophet.
-The land won by the Western Christian from
-the Eastern, and the land where the Eastern Christian
-still maintained his independence, held out longer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">{401}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cyprus.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>These were the kingdoms of <i>Cyprus</i> and <i>Armenia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Famagosta
-Genoese.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The frontier of Cyprus hardly admitted of geographical
-change, unless it were when, for a part of the fourteenth
-and fifteenth centuries, the city and haven of
-<i>Famagosta</i> passed to Genoa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Connexion
-between
-Cyprus and
-Jerusalem.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kings of Cyprus
-however claimed the crown of Jerusalem, and sometimes,
-before the whole Syrian coast was lost, they
-really held this or that piece of territory on the mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Armenia
-acknowledges
-the
-Western
-Emperor,
-1190.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile the Armenian kingdom in some sort
-entered the Western world, when its king, after receiving
-one confirmation from the Eastern Emperor,
-thought it wise to receive another from the Western
-Emperor also.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1342.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom, though sadly cut short
-by its Mussulman neighbours, lived on under native
-princes till the middle of the fourteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Connexion
-between
-Armenia
-and
-Cyprus,
-1393.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-the fragments of the kingdom passed, first to a branch of
-the Cypriot royal family, and then to the reigning king
-of Cyprus. But the first joint reign was the last.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>End of
-Armenia
-and
-Cyprus,
-1489.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-remnant of independent Armenia was swallowed up by
-the Mameluke lords of Syria, while Cyprus lingered on
-till Saint Mark and his commonwealth became the heirs
-of its last king.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The kingdom of Cyprus forms a link between the
-Latin states in Syria and those which arose in Romania
-after the crusading capture of Constantinople. And these
-last again fall into two classes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frank principalities
-in
-Greece.<br />
-Possessions
-of the
-maritime
-commonwealths.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There are the Frank
-principalities on the mainland of Greece, and there are
-the lands, chiefly insular, which fell to the lot of the
-maritime commonwealths of the West and of their
-citizens. Among these the first place belongs to the
-great commonwealth which had now cast off all traces
-of allegiance to the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Genoa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Genoa</i>, which had no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">{402}</a></span>
-share in the original partition of the Empire, obtained
-several points of Imperial territory, both for the commonwealth
-itself and for particular Genoese citizens.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the part played by Genoa in the East is small
-beside the great and abiding dominion of Venice.
-No result of the partition was greater than the field
-which it gave to Venetian growth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-between
-the two.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The position of
-the two commonwealths is different. Genoa was a
-mere stranger in the East; Venice was in a manner at
-home. Once an outlying possession of the Empire,
-her really great historical position is due to her share
-in its overthrow.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>The Eastern Dominion of Venice and Genoa.</i></h3>
-
-<p>We have already seen the origin of the Venetian
-state, and the beginning of Venetian rule over the Slavonic
-coasts of the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Connexion
-of the
-Dalmatian
-and Greek
-dominion of
-Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eastern dominion
-of Venice now began, and, in a strictly geographical
-view, her Istrian and Dalmatian dominion cannot be
-separated from her Albanian and purely Greek dominion.
-But Venice did not become a great European
-power till she passed from the Slavonic lands whose
-connexion with the Empire was nominal or precarious
-into the Albanian and Greek lands which were among
-its immediate possessions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-the partition
-on
-Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greatness of Venice
-dates from that partition of the Empire which was the
-surest proof that she had wholly cast aside her Byzantine
-allegiance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-between
-Venice and
-Sicily.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In this point of view the history of Venice
-may be compared and contrasted with the history of
-Sicily. In each case, a part of the dominions of the
-Eastern Rome grew into a separate power; that power
-passed, so to speak, from Eastern Europe to Western,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">{403}</a></span>
-and, in its new Western character, it appeared as a conqueror
-in the Eastern lands. But, as Venice and Sicily
-parted from the Empire in different ways, so their later
-relations to the Empire were widely different. The
-Sicilian state began in actual conquests made by foreign
-invaders at the expense of the Empire. Venice was a
-dependency of the Empire which gradually drifted into
-independence. Thus Sicily became more thoroughly
-Western than Venice. The attempts of the kings, both
-of the whole Sicilian kingdom and of its divided parts,
-to establish an Eastern dominion were attacks from
-without, and were not really lasting.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice
-inherits
-the position
-of the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Venice, whose
-princes were lords of one fourth and one eighth of the
-Empire of Romania,<a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> took up in some sort the position of
-the Empire itself. If she destroyed one bulwark against
-the Mussulman, she set up another. As long as Venice
-was really a great power, her main interests lay east of
-the Hadriatic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Importance
-of the
-fourth crusade
-in
-Venetian
-history.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The fourth crusade was her turning
-point. It was at once the beginning of her Greek
-dominion and the recovery of her Dalmatian dominion.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territory
-assigned to
-Venice by
-the Act of
-Partition.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The scheme of partition gave to Venice a vast
-dominion, insular and continental. She was to be mistress
-of the Hadriatic and Ionian seas. To her were
-assigned, not only the islands off the west coast of the
-Empire, but the whole western coast itself, from the
-north of Albania to the southern point of Peloponnêsos.
-She was to have some points in the Ægæan, among
-them <i>Oreos</i> and <i>Karystos</i> at the two ends of Euboia.
-She was to have her quarter of the capital, with a
-Thracian and an Asiatic dominion, including, according<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">{404}</a></span>
-to some versions, the strange allotment of <i>Lazia</i> at the
-east of the Euxine<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her actual
-possessions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The actual possessions of Venice
-in the East have a very different look. Much of the
-territory which was assigned to the republic never
-became hers, while she obtained large possessions
-which were not assigned to her.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her dominion
-primarily
-Hadriatic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the main point,
-the dominion of the Hadriatic, was never forgotten,
-though some both of her earliest and of her latest
-conquests lay beyond its necessary range.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possessions
-not assigned
-by
-the partition.<br />
-Crete.
-1206-1669.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Among those possessions of Venice which were not
-assigned to her in the act of partition was her greatest
-and most lasting possession of all, the island of <i>Crete</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1645-1669.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This she won almost at the first moment of the conquest,
-and she kept it for more than four centuries and a half,
-till the war of <i>Candia</i> handed over all Crete, save two
-fortresses, to the Ottoman.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of
-Cyprus.
-1489.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before this loss, Saint Mark
-had won and lost another great island which lay altogether
-beyond the scheme of the Latin conquerors of
-Constantinople. Late in the fifteenth century the
-republic succeeded the Latin kings in the possession of
-<i>Cyprus</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Cyprus,
-1571.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this was held for less than a century.
-Cyprus, like Crete and Sicily, was a special scene of
-struggle between European and barbarian powers. But
-it shared the fate, not of Sicily but of Crete, and became
-the solid prize of the Ottoman, when Christendom won
-the barren laurels of Lepanto.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occupation
-of Thessalonikê,
-1426-1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another possession
-which lay out of the usual course of Venetian dominion
-was the short occupation of <i>Thessalonikê</i>. Bought of
-a Greek despot, it was after four years taken by the
-Turk. Had Thessalonikê been kept, it might have
-passed as a late compensation to the republic for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">{405}</a></span>
-early loss of Hadrianople and her other Thracian
-territory.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venetian
-power
-both Dalmatian
-and
-Greek.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But the true scene of Venetian enterprise in the
-East is primarily the Hadriatic, and next to that, the
-coasts and islands of the Ægæan. She remained both a
-Dalmatian and a Greek power down to the moment of
-her overthrow, and, at the moment of her overthrow,
-it was not eighty years since she had ceased to be a
-Peloponnesian and an Ægæan power. The Greek
-dominion of Venice was an enlargement of her Dalmatian
-dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Taking of
-Zara,
-1202.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is significant that Zara was taken—not
-for the first or the last time—on the way to
-the taking of Constantinople.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hadriatic
-dominion
-of Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Already mistress, or
-striving to be mistress, of the northern part of the
-eastern coast of the Hadriatic, the partition of the
-Empire opened to Venice the hope of becoming mistress
-of the southern part. Mistress of the whole coast she
-never was at any one moment; one point was gained
-and another lost. But extension in those lands was
-steadily aimed at for more than seven hundred
-years, and the greater part of the eastern Hadriatic
-coast has been, at one time or another, under Venetian
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Venetian dominion in these parts cannot
-be kept apart from the story of the neighbouring
-Slavonic lands. The states of Servia and Croatia were
-from the beginning the inland neighbours of the Dalmatian
-coast cities.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servian districts
-on the
-coast.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The river Tzettina may pass as the
-boundary between the Servian and Croatian states.
-<i>Pagania</i> on the Narenta, <i>Zachloumia</i> between the Narenta
-and Ragusa, <i>Terbounia</i>, represented by the modern
-<i>Trebinje</i>, the coast district of the <i>Canali</i>, <i>Dioklea</i>,
-taking in the modern Montenegro with the coast as far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">{406}</a></span>
-as the Drin—<i>Skodra</i> or <i>Scutari</i> on its lake, the harbours
-of <i>Spizza</i>, <i>Antivari</i>, and <i>Dulcigno</i>, were all originally
-Servian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Dalmatian
-cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Dalmatian coast cities, <i>Dekatera</i> or <i>Cattaro</i>,
-<i>Raousion</i> or <i>Ragusa</i>, <i>Tragourion</i> or <i>Traü</i>, <i>Diadora</i>,
-<i>Jadera</i>, or <i>Zara</i>, formed a Roman fringe on what
-had become a Slavonic body. It was not even a continuous
-fringe, as the Slaves came down to the sea at
-more than one point.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pagania.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Pagania</i> above all, the land of
-the heathen Narentines, cut Roman Dalmatia into two
-marked parts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It even took in most of the great islands,
-<i>Curzola</i>—once <i>Black Korkyra</i>—<i>Meleda</i>, <i>Lesina</i>—once
-<i>Pharos</i>—and others. At the separation of the two
-Empires the Croatian power was strongest in those
-lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Croatia
-under
-Charles the
-Great, 806-810.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The wars of Charles the Great left the coast
-cities to the Eastern Empire, while inland Dalmatia
-and Croatia passed under Frankish rule.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>825-830.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently
-Croatia won its independence of the Western Empire,
-while the coast cities were practically lost by the
-Eastern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-under Basil
-the Macedonian,
-868-878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Basil the Macedonian the Imperial
-authority was admitted, in name at least, both by the
-cities and by the Croatian prince.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First Venetian
-Conquest,
-995-997.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-More than a century
-later came the first Venetian conquest, which was
-looked on at Venice as a deliverance of the cities from
-Croatian rule. The pagan power on the Narenta was
-destroyed, and the Duke of Venice took the title of <i>Duke
-of Dalmatia</i>. But all this involved no formal separation
-from the Empire.<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The cities
-under
-Croatia,
-1052.<br />
-Dalmatian
-Kingdom,
-1062.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such a separation may be held to
-have taken place in the middle of the next century,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">{407}</a></span>
-when the cities again passed under Croatian rule, and
-when the taking of the title of <i>King of Dalmatia</i> by
-Croatian Kresimir may pass for an assertion of complete
-independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Magyar
-Kingdom of
-Croatia,
-1091; <br />
-of
-Dalmatia,
-1102.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the kingdoms, first of Croatia,
-then of Dalmatia, were presently swallowed up by the
-growing power of the Magyar. Then comes a time in
-which this city and that passes to and fro between
-Venice and Hungary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Croatia and
-Dalmatia
-restored to
-the Empire,
-1171.<br />
-Dalmatia
-passes to
-Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Manuel Komnênos the
-whole of Croatia and Dalmatia was fully restored to the
-Empire; but ten years later the cities again passed to
-Hungary. This was their final separation from the
-Empire, and by this time Venice had thrown off all
-Byzantine allegiance.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Struggle
-for the
-dominion of
-Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>From this time the history of Croatia forms part of
-the history of the Hungarian kingdom. The history
-of Dalmatia becomes part of the long struggle of
-Venice for Hadriatic dominion. For five hundred
-years the cities and islands of the whole Hadriatic
-coast were lost and won over and over again in the
-strifes of the powers of the mainland. These were in
-Dalmatia the Hungarian and Bosnian Kings; more to
-the south they were the endless powers which rose and
-fell in Albania and northern Greece. In after times the
-Ottoman took the place of all. And many of the cities
-were able, amid the disputes of their stronger neighbours,
-to make themselves independent commonwealths
-for a longer or shorter time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-Ragusa;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Ragusa</i>, above all, kept
-her independence during the whole time, modified in
-later times by a certain external dependence on the
-Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Polizza.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And the almost invisible inland commonwealth
-of <i>Polizza</i>—a Slavonic San Marino—kept its separate
-being into the present century.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-between
-Venice and
-Hungary,
-1315.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The crusading conquest of Zara was the beginning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">{408}</a></span>
-of this long struggle. The frontier fluctuated during
-the whole of the thirteenth century; early in the
-fourteenth the whole coast was again Venetian.
-Meanwhile the republic was striving to make good
-her position further south. The Epeirot despotat
-long hindered her establishment either on the coasts
-or the islands of northern Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final conquest
-of
-Durazzo
-and Corfu,
-1206.<br />
-1216.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Durazzo, the
-central point between the older and the newer Venetian
-range, was won, along with Corfu, in the earliest
-days of the conquest; but they were presently
-lost, to come back again in after times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-Corfu.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The famous
-island of Korkyra or Corfu has a special history of its
-own. No part of Greece has been so often cut off from
-the Greek body. Under Pyrrhos and Agathoklês, no
-less than under Michael Angelos and Roger, it obeyed
-an Epeirot or a Sicilian master. It was among the
-first parts of Greece to pass permanently under Roman
-dependence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-Venetian
-conquest of
-Corfu,
-1386-1797.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last, after yet another turn of Sicilian
-rule, it passed for four hundred years to the great commonwealth.
-In our own day Corfu was not added to
-free Greece till long after the deliverance of Attica and
-Peloponnêsos. But, under so many changes of foreign
-masters, the island has always remained part of Europe
-and of Christendom. Alone among the Greek lands,
-Corfu has never passed under barbarian rule.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1716.<br />
-1800.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It has
-seen the Turk only, for one moment as an invader, for
-another moment as a nominal overlord.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek
-advance of
-Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The second Venetian occupation of Corfu was the
-beginning of a great advance among the neighbouring
-islands. But, during the hundred and eighty years
-between the two occupations, the main fields of Venetian
-action lay more to the north and more to the
-south. The Greek acquisitions of the republic at this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">{409}</a></span>
-time were in Peloponnêsos and the Ægæan islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modon and
-Coron,
-1206.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the mainland she won, at the very beginning of
-Latin settlement in the East, the south-western peninsula
-of Peloponnêsos, with the towns of <i>Methônê</i> and
-<i>Kôrônê</i>—otherwise <i>Modon</i> and <i>Coron</i>—which she held
-for nearly three hundred years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-Euboia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Among the Ægæan
-islands Venice began very early to win an influence
-in the greatest of their number, that of <i>Euboia</i>,
-often disguised under the specially barbarous name of
-<i>Negropont</i>.<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> The history of that island, the endless
-shiftings between its Latin lords and the neighbouring
-powers of all kinds, is the most perplexed
-part of the perplexed Greek history of the time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Complete
-occupation
-of Euboia,
-1390.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Venice, mixed up in its affairs throughout, obtained in
-the end complete possession, but not till after the
-second occupation of Corfu.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turkish
-conquest of
-Euboia,
-1470.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The island was kept till
-the Turkish conquest eighty years later. Several other
-islands were held by the republic at different times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-Ægæan
-islands,
-1718.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these <i>Tênos</i> and <i>Mykonos</i> were not finally lost till
-Venice was in the eighteenth century confined to the
-western seas.</p>
-
-<p>Between the first and the second occupation of
-Corfu, the Venetian power in Dalmatia had risen and
-fallen again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Zara, 1358.<br />
-Dalmatia
-Hungarian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the peace of Zara, Lewis the Great of
-Hungary shut out Venice altogether from the Dalmatian
-coasts, and, as Dalmatian King, he required the
-Venetian Duke to give up his Dalmatian title.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New
-advance of
-Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later
-in the century Venice again gained ground, and her
-Dalmatian, Albanian, and Greek possessions began to
-draw near together, and to form one whole, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">{410}</a></span>
-never a continuous whole.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1378-1455.<br />
-Recovery
-of Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the space of about
-eighty years, amid many fluctuations towards Hungary,
-Bosnia, and Genoa—a new claimant called into rivalry
-by the war of Chioggia—Venice again became mistress
-of the greater part of Dalmatia. Some districts however
-formed part of the Duchy of <i>Saint Sava</i>, and Hungary
-kept part of the inland territory, with the fortress
-of <i>Clissa</i>. The point where the Hadriatic coast turns
-nearly due south may be taken as the boundary of the
-lasting and nearly continuous dominion of the Republic;
-but for the present the Venetian power went on spreading
-far south of that point.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-Albania
-and Greece,
-1392.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the second occupation
-of Corfu followed the acquisition of <i>Durazzo</i>, <i>Alessio</i>,
-and of the Albanian <i>Skodra</i> or <i>Scutari</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1401.<br />
-1407.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Butrinto</i> and
-the ever memorable <i>Parga</i> put themselves under Venetian
-protection, and <i>Lepanto</i> was ceded by a Prince of
-Achaia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1388.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Peloponnêsos the Messenian towns were
-still held, and to them were now added <i>Argos</i> and its
-port of <i>Nauplia</i>, known in Italian as <i>Napoli di Romania</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1408-1415.<br />
-1419.<br />
-1423.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Patras</i> was held for a few years, <i>Monembasia</i> was won,
-and the isle of <i>Aigina</i>, which might almost pass for
-part of Peloponnêsos. On the other side of Greece, the
-possession of Corfu led to the acquisition of the other
-so-called Ionian Islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Western
-Islands.
-1449.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The prince of <i>Kephallênia</i>, of
-<i>Zakynthos</i> or <i>Zante</i>, and of <i>Leukadia</i> or <i>Santa Maura</i>,
-found it to his interest, for fear of the advancing Ottoman,
-to put his dominions under the overlordship of
-Saint Mark.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venice the
-champion
-against the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This marks an epoch in the history of Venice and of
-Europe. The championship of Christendom against the
-Turk now passes from the New Rome to the hardly less
-Byzantine city in the Lagoons. The short occupation
-of Thessalonikê may pass for the beginning of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">{411}</a></span>
-struggle. Later in the fifteenth century, Venice and
-the Turk were meeting at every point.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Argos,
-1463.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Peloponnêsos,
-<i>Argos</i> was first lost to the Turk; at the same
-moment he appeared far to the north, and gradually
-occupied the Bosnian and Hungarian districts of Dalmatia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1505-1699.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
-the inland districts and the smaller towns were
-lost over and over again, but the Republic always kept
-the chief coast cities, <i>Zara</i>, <i>Sebenico</i>, and <i>Spalato</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Losses of
-Venice.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, to the south of Dalmatia, the Venetian power
-went back everywhere, except in the western islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1474-1478.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the mainland <i>Croja</i>, the city of Scanderbeg, was
-held for a while.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1479.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But both Croja and Skodra were won
-by Mahomet the Conqueror, and the treaty which
-ended this war left to the Republic nothing on the
-coast of Albania and Northern Greece, save <i>Durazzo</i>,
-<i>Antivari</i>, and <i>Butrinto</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1500.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The treaty which followed
-the next war took away <i>Durazzo</i>, <i>Butrinto</i>, and <i>Lepanto</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Western
-Islands,
-1481-1483.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A series of revolutions in the islands of which
-the Republic already held the overlordship placed them
-under her immediate dominion, to be struggled for
-against the Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1485.<br />
-1502.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the next peace <i>Zakynthos</i> was kept, on payment of a tribute to the Sultan;
-<i>Kephallênia</i> passed to the Turk, to be won back seventeen
-years later, and then to be permanently kept.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1502-1504.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Leukadia</i>
-was at the same time won for a moment and lost again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-Peloponnesian
-fortresses,
-1502.<br />
-1540.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Peloponnêsos <i>Modon</i> and <i>Koron</i> were lost along
-with <i>Durazzo</i> and <i>Lepanto</i>, and the great naval war with
-Suleiman cost the Republic her last Peloponnesian possessions,
-<i>Nauplia</i> and <i>Monembasia</i>, together with all
-her Ægæan islands, except <i>Tênos</i> and <i>Mykonos</i>. The
-strictly Greek dominion of Venice was now for a hundred
-and forty years confined to the islands, and, after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">{412}</a></span>
-the loss of Cyprus and Crete, almost wholly to the
-Western islands. But after the loss of Crete came a
-revival of the Venetian power, like one of the old revivals
-of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venetian
-conquest of
-Peloponnêsos,
-1685-1699.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great campaigns of Francesco
-Morosini, confirmed by the peace of Carlowitz,
-freed all Peloponnêsos from the Turk, and added it
-to the dominion of Saint Mark.</p>
-
-<p>The same treaty confirmed Venice in the possession
-of the greater part of Dalmatia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Peloponnêsos,
-1715-1718.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next war cost
-her the whole of Peloponnêsos, her two Cretan fortresses,
-and her two remaining Ægæan islands. She
-now withdrew wholly to the western side of Greece,
-where she had again won <i>Leukadia</i> and <i>Butrinto</i>,
-and had enlarged her dominion by the acquisition of
-<i>Prevesa</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Venetian
-dominion
-in Greece
-in the last
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the last century the Venetian possessions
-in Greece consisted of the seven so-called Ionian
-islands, with the continental posts of <i>Butrinto</i>, <i>Prevesa</i>,
-and <i>Parga</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venetian
-territory in
-Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Dalmatian territory of the Republic during the
-same time consisted of a considerable inland district in
-the north-east, and of the whole coast down to <i>Budua</i>,
-except where the territory of independent Ragusa
-broke the continuity of her rule.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ragusan
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Ragusa was so
-jealous of the mightier commonwealth that she preferred
-the Turk as a neighbour. At two points of the
-coast, at <i>Klek</i> at the bottom of the gulf formed by the
-long peninsula of Sabbioncello, and again at <i>Sutorina</i>
-on the <i>Bocche</i>, the Ottoman territory came down to
-the sea, so as to isolate the dominion of Ragusa from
-the Venetian possessions on either side. Such was the
-frontier of the two Hadriatic commonwealths down
-to the days when, first Venice and then Ragusa, passed
-away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">{413}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possession
-of Venetian
-cities.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Meanwhile, besides the direct possessions of the
-Venetian commonwealth, there were other lands within
-the former dominions of the Eastern Empire which were
-held by Venetian lords, as vassals either of the republic
-or of the Empire of Romania. It would be endless to
-trace out the revolutions of every Ægæan island; but
-one among the few which claim our notice became the
-seat of a dynasty which proved, next to the Venetian
-commonwealth itself, the most long-lived Latin power
-in the Greek world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Duchy
-of Naxos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is the duchy variously
-known as that of <i>Naxos</i>, of the <i>Dôdekannêsos</i>, and
-of the <i>Archipelago</i>, the barbarous name given to the
-Ægæan or <i>White Sea</i>.<a name="FNanchor_34" id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1207.<br />
-1566.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Founded in the early years
-of Latin settlement by the Venetian Marco Sanudo,
-the island duchy lived on as a Latin state, commonly
-as a vassal or tributary state of some greater
-power, till the last half of the sixteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexed
-by the
-Turk,
-1579.<br />
-1617.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Shorn of many of its islands by its Ottoman overlord,
-granted afresh to a Jewish duke, it passed thirteen
-years later under the immediate dominion of the Sultan.
-Most of the <i>Kyklades</i> were either parts of this duchy
-or fiefs held of it by other Venetian families. All came
-into the hands of the Turk; but some of the very
-smallest remained merely tributary, and not fully annexed,
-into the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlements
-of Genoa
-and of
-Genoese
-citizens.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The year which saw the Naxian duchy pass from
-Latin to Hebrew hands saw the fall of the most remarkable
-of the Genoese settlements in the Greek lands.
-These settlements, like those of Venice, formed two
-classes, those which were possessions of the Genoese<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">{414}</a></span>
-commonwealth itself and those which came into the
-hands of Genoese citizens.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1304.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Genoa had no share in the
-fourth Crusade; she had therefore no share in the
-division of the Empire, though, after the restoration of
-Byzantine rule, her colony of <i>Galata</i> made her almost
-a sharer in the capital of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Possessions
-of Genoa
-on the
-Euxine,
-1461.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the seat
-of direct Genoese dominion in the East was not the
-Ægæan but the Euxine. On the southern coast of that
-sea the republic held <i>Amastris</i> and <i>Amisos</i>, and in the
-Tauric Chersonêsos was her great colony of <i>Kaffa</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1475.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Euxine dominion of Genoa came to an end during
-the later half of the fifteenth century; but it outlived
-the Empires both of Constantinople and of Trebizond.</p>
-
-<p>The Ægæan dominion of the citizens of Genoa was
-longer lived than the Euxine dominion of Genoa herself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lesbos.
-1354-1462.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The family of Gattilusio received <i>Lesbos</i> as an
-Imperial fief in the fourteenth century, and kept it
-till after the fall of Constantinople. But the most remarkable
-Genoese settlement in the Ægæan was that
-of <i>Chios</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Zaccaria
-at
-Chios.
-1304-1346.<br />
-The
-Maona.
-1346-1566.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First held by princes of the Genoese house
-of Zaccaria, the island, with some of its neighbours,
-passed into the hands of a Genoese commercial company
-or <i>Maona</i>, a body somewhat like our own East
-India Company.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1566.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Samos</i>, <i>Kôs</i>, and <i>Phôkaia</i> on the
-mainland, came at different times under their power,
-and Chios did not fall under the Ottoman yoke till the
-same year as the duchy of Naxos.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">One more insular dominion remains, chiefly famous
-as the possession, not indeed of a commonwealth, but of
-an order.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revolutions
-of
-Rhodes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In a few years of the thirteenth century
-the island of <i>Rhodes</i> passed through all possible revolutions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1233.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the first moment of the Latin conquest, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">{415}</a></span>
-became an independent Greek principality, like Epeiros
-and Trebizond.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1246.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then it admitted the overlordship of the
-Nicene Emperors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1249.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Seized by Genoa, it was presently
-won back to the Empire, till seventy years later it was
-again seized by the Knights of Saint John.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Establishment
-of the
-Knights,
-1310.<br />
-1315.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From
-Rhodes as a centre, the order established its dominion
-over <i>Kôs</i> and some other islands, and on some points
-of the Asiatic coast, especially their famous fortress of
-<i>Halikarnassos</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1480.<br />
-1522.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They beat back Mahomet the Conqueror,
-but they yielded to Suleiman the Lawgiver
-forty years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their removal
-to
-Malta,
-1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Banished from Rhodes, the order
-received <i>Malta</i> from Charles the Fifth as a fief of his
-Sicilian kingdom. We are thus brought back to the
-island which had been lost to the Eastern Empire for
-seven hundred years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1566.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The knights in their new home
-beat back their former conqueror Suleiman, and kept
-their island till the times of confusion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revolutions
-of
-Malta.<br />
-1814.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Held by France,
-held by England, held, nominally at least, by its own
-Sicilian overlord, this fragment of the Empire of Leo
-and of the kingdom of Roger finally passed at the
-peace under the acknowledged rule of England.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The Principalities of the Greek Mainland.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The Greek possessions of Venice, of Genoa, and of
-the Knights of Saint John, consisted mainly of islands
-and detached points of coast. The Venetian conquest of
-Peloponnêsos was the only exception on a great scale.
-In this they are distinguished from the several powers,
-Greek and Frank, which arose on the Greek mainland.
-We have already heard, and we shall hear again, of the
-Greek despotat of Epeiros, which for a moment grew
-into an Empire of Thessalonikê. Among the Latin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">{416}</a></span>
-powers two rose to European importance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Athens.<br />
-Principality
-of Achaia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These are
-the <i>duchy of Athens</i> in central Greece—in <i>Hellas</i>,
-according to the Byzantine nomenclature—and the
-principality of <i>Achaia</i> or <i>Môraia</i> in Peloponnêsos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name
-Môraia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last name, of uncertain origin,<a name="FNanchor_35" id="FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> has come, in its
-Italian shape, to be a modern name of the peninsula
-itself. But the name of <i>Môraia</i> seems strictly to
-belong to the domain lands of the principality, and
-never to go beyond the bounds of the principality,
-which at no time took in the whole of Peloponnêsos.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">Both these powers were founded in the first days
-of the Latin conquest, and the Turk did not finally
-annex the territories of either till after the fall of
-Constantinople. But while the Athenian duchy lived
-on to become itself the prize of Mahomet the Conqueror,
-the lands of the Achaian principality had already
-gone back into Greek hands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lordship of
-Athens.
-1204-1205.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The lordship of Athens,
-founded by Otho de la Roche, was first a fief of the
-kingdom of Thessalonikê, then of the Empire of Romania.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Duchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was by the grant of Saint Lewis of
-France that the title of <i>Great Lord</i><a name="FNanchor_36" id="FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> was exchanged
-for that of <i>Duke</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1260.<br />
-The Catalan
-Conquest,
-1311.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy fell into the hands of the
-Catalan Great Company, who in central Greece grew
-from mere ravagers into territorial occupiers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Sicilian
-Dukes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They
-brought with them the Thessalian land of <i>Neopatra</i>, and
-transferred the nominal title of <i>Duke of Athens and
-Neopatra</i> to princes of the Sicilian branch of the House
-of Aragon. Thus the two claimants of the Sicilian
-crown were brought face to face on old Greek ground.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">{417}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dukes of
-the house of
-Acciauoli.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy next passed to the Florentine house of Acciauoli,
-which already held Corinth, Megara, Sikyôn, and
-the greater part of Argolis. But their Peloponnesian
-dominion passed to the Byzantine lords of the peninsula,
-and Neopatra fell into the hands of the Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1390.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Athenian duchy itself, taking in Attica and Boiôtia,
-lived on, the vassal in turn of the Angevin king at
-Naples, of the Greek despot of Peloponnêsos, and of
-the Ottoman Sultan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ottoman
-conquest.
-1456-1460.<br />
-1466.<br />
-1687.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Annexed at last to the Ottoman
-dominions, Athens remained in bondage till our own
-day, save only two momentary occupations by Venice,
-one soon after the first conquest, the other in the great
-war of Morosini.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Salôna and
-Bodonitza.<br /><hr />The Principality
-of
-Achaia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The smaller principalities of <i>Salôna</i> and <i>Bodonitza</i>
-play their part in the history of the Athenian duchy;
-but we turn to the chief Latin power of Peloponnêsos,
-the principality of Achaia. The shiftings of its dynasties
-and feudal relations are endless; its geographical
-history is simpler. The peninsula was, at the time
-of the Latin conquest, already beginning to fall away
-from the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1205.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-King Boniface of Thessalonikê
-had to win the land from its Greek lord Leôn Sgouros.
-The princes of the house of Champlitte and Villehardouin
-were his vassals. They had to struggle with
-the Venetian settlement in Messênia, and with the
-Greek despot of Epeiros, who, oddly enough, held
-Corinth, Argos, and Nauplia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1210-1212.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These last towns were
-won by the Latins, and became an Achaian fief in the
-hands of Otho of Athens.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its greatest
-extent.
-1248.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before the end of half a
-century, the conquest of the whole peninsula, save
-the Venetian possessions, was completed by the taking
-of <i>Monembasia</i>. Things looked as if, now that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">{418}</a></span>
-Latin power was waning at Constantinople, a stronger
-Latin power had arisen in Peloponnêsos. A crowd of
-Greek lands, Zakynthos, Naxos, Euboia, Athens, even
-Epeiros and Thessalonikê, acknowledged at one time or
-another the supremacy of Achaia. But Latin Achaia,
-like Latin Constantinople, had to yield to revived
-Greek energy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of lands in
-Peloponnêsos
-by
-the Empire
-1262.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Empire won back the three Lacedæmonian
-fortresses,<a name="FNanchor_37" id="FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> and presently made <i>Kalabryta</i> in
-northern Arkadia a Greek outpost.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1263.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here the Greek
-advance stopped for a while.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Angevin
-overlordship.
-1278.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Before the end of the century the Frank principality
-lost its independence. It passed into vassalage
-to the Angevin crown, and was held, sometimes by the
-Neapolitan kings themselves, sometimes by princes of
-their house—some of them nominal Emperors of Romania—sometimes
-by princes of Savoy, who carried
-the Achaian name into Northern Italy.<a name="FNanchor_38" id="FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dismemberment
-of
-the principality.
-1337.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course
-of the fourteenth century the principality crumbled
-away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1356.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Patras</i> became an ecclesiastical principality
-under the overlordship of the Pope of the Old Rome.
-Argos and its port became a separate lordship.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1358.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both of these passed for a longer or a shorter
-time under the power of Venice. Corinth and the
-north-east corner of the peninsula passed to the Acciauoli.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Byzantine
-advance.
-1348-1383.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meantime the Byzantine province grew. For
-some while, under despots of the house of Kantakouzênos,
-it might almost pass for an independent Greek
-state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1381.<br />
-1387.<br />
-1442.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Notwithstanding the inroads of the Navarrese,
-the second Spanish invaders of Greece, and the first
-appearance of the Ottoman, the Greek power advanced,
-till it took in all Peloponnêsos save the Venetian towns.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Constantine
-Palaiologos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last Constantine even appeared as a conqueror at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">{419}</a></span>
-Athens and in central Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1458-1460.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came more Ottoman
-inroads, dismemberment, Albanian colonization,
-final annexation by the Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Successive
-Turkish
-conquests
-of Peloponnêsos.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the last conqueror
-has been twice driven to conquer Peloponnêsos
-afresh. The first revolt under Venetian support was
-crushed a few years after the first conquest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1463-1540.<br />
-1670.<br />
-1685.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-the Turk gradually gathered in the Venetian ports,
-and the whole peninsula was his, save so far as <i>Maina</i>
-kept on a kind of wild independence almost down
-to the last Venetian conquest. The complete and
-unbroken possession of all Peloponnêsos by the
-Ottoman has never filled up the whole of any one
-century.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Despotat of
-Epeiros.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have seen how the despotat of Epeiros parted
-away from the momentary Empire of Thessalonikê.
-The despots, like their neighbours, often found it convenient
-to acknowledge the overlordship of some other
-power, Venice, Nikaia, Sicily, or Achaia. The boundaries
-of their dominions were greatly cut short by the
-advance of the restored Empire and by the cessions to
-Manfred of Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dismemberment
-of
-the despotat.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A state was left which took in old
-Epeiros, Akarnania, and Aitôlia, save the points on the
-coast which were held by other powers. <i>Arta</i>, the old
-<i>Ambrakia</i>, was, as in the days of Pyrrhos, its head.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1271-1318.<br />
-1309.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another branch reigned in <i>Great Blachia</i> or Thessaly,
-with its capital at <i>Neopatra</i>, a capital presently lost to
-the Catalan invaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1318.<br />
-1339.<br />
-Servian
-conquest.
-1331-1355.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Next the greater part of Thessaly,
-and then Epeiros itself, were recovered by the Empire,
-and then all gradually passed under the Servian power.
-On the break-up of that power came a time of utter
-confusion and endless shiftings, which has however one
-marked feature.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of the
-Albanians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Albanian race now comes fully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">{420}</a></span>
-to the front. Albanian settlers press into all the southern
-lands, and Albanian principalities stand forth on a level
-with those held by Greek and Latin lords.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kings of
-Albania of
-the house of
-Thopia,
-1358-1392.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The chief Albanian power which arose within the
-bounds of the despotat was the house of <i>Thopia</i> in
-northern Epeiros.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1366.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They called themselves <i>Kings of
-Albania</i>; they won Durazzo from the Angevins, and
-their power lasted till that duchy passed to Venice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servian
-dynasty in
-Epeiros.
-1359.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To
-the south of them, in southern Epeiros, Akarnania,
-and Aitolia, reigned a Servian dynasty, whose prince
-Stephen Urosh added Thessaly to his dominions, and
-called himself <i>Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks</i>.<a name="FNanchor_39" id="FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1363.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His
-western dominion passed from him. A Servian despot
-ruled at <i>Jôannina</i>, and an Albanian despot at <i>Arta</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Thessaly.<br />
-Turkish
-conquest.<br />
-1393.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-Thessaly went on as a kingdom, taking in the greater
-part of the land anciently so called,<a name="FNanchor_40" id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> a kingdom which
-was the first Hellenic land to pass under the power
-of the Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1396.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Neopatra and Salôna followed, and the
-Ottoman power stretched to the Corinthian gulf, and
-parted asunder the still independent states of Western
-Greece from Attica and Peloponnêsos.</p>
-
-<p>In Epeiros the Servian and Albanian despots had
-both to yield to Italian houses.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Buondelmonti
-in
-Northern
-Epeiros.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Northern Epeiros passed
-to the Florentine house of <i>Buondelmonte</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The house
-of Tocco.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south
-arose a dynasty of greater interest, the Beneventan
-house of <i>Tocco</i>, the last independent princes in Western
-Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1357.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They first, as counts palatine, held Kephallênia
-and Zakynthos as a fief of the Latin Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1362.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-they won Leukadia with the ducal title.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1394.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They next
-began a continental dominion, first for a moment in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">{421}</a></span>
-Peloponnêsos, then more lastingly in the lands near their
-island duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1405-1418.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Duke Charles of Leukadia gradually
-won all Epeiros save the Venetian posts; and he, his wife,
-and his heirs were called Despot of Romania, King
-of Epeiros, and even Empress of the Romans.<a name="FNanchor_41" id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its effects.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-dynasty, though not long-lived on the mainland, is of
-real and abiding importance in the history of the Greek
-nation. The advance of the Albanians was checked;
-their settlements were thrust further north and further
-south, while the Beneventan dominions became and remained
-purely Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Venetian
-and
-Turkish
-occupation.
-1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Soon after the death of Duke
-Charles, the Turk won Jôannina and the greater part
-of Epeiros; but his son kept <i>Arta</i> and its neighbourhood
-for nineteen years as a vassal of Venice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1449.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-the dominions of Duke <i>Charles</i> became the Turkish
-province of <i>Karlili</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1449-1479.<br />
-1481-1483.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The house of Tocco kept its island
-possessions for thirty years longer. Then they too
-passed to the Turk, to be recovered for a moment by
-their own Duke, and then to be struggled for between
-Turk and Venetian.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Northern
-Albania.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the strictly Albanian lands, from the
-Akrokeraunian point northwards, were subdued by
-the Turk, were freed, and subdued again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1414.<br />
-Turkish
-conquest.
-1431.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Early in the
-fifteenth century the Turk won all Albania, except the
-Venetian posts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revolt.
-1448.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Seventeen years later came a revolt
-and a successful defence of the country, whose later
-stages are ennobled by the name of George Kastriota of
-Croja, the famous Scanderbeg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Death of
-Scanderbeg.
-1467.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-His death gave his land
-back to the Ottoman, while Croja itself was for a while
-held by Venice. The whole Greek and Albanian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">{422}</a></span>
-mainland was now divided between Turk and Venetian.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Empire
-of
-Trebizond.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Lastly, we must not forget that Greek state which
-outlived all the rest. Far away, on the furthest bounds
-of the elder Empire, the Empire of <i>Trebizond</i> had the
-honour of being the last remaining fragment of the
-Eastern Roman power. The rule of the Grand Komnênos
-survived the fall of Constantinople; it survived
-the conquest of Athens and Peloponnêsos.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-the Empire.
-1204.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have seen the origin and early history of this
-power. After its western dominions passed to the Nicene
-Emperors and Sinôpê to the Turk, the Trapezuntine
-Empire was confined to the eastern part of the south
-coast of the Euxine, stretching over part of Iberia, and
-keeping the Imperial possessions in the Tauric Chersonêsos.
-Sometimes independent, sometimes tributary to
-Turks or Mongols, the power of Trebizond lived on
-for nearly eighty years as a distinct and rival Roman
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Agreement
-between
-Constantinople
-and
-Trebizond,
-1281.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then, when Constantinople was again in
-Greek hands, John Komnênos of Trebizond was content
-to acknowledge Michael Palaiologos as Emperor
-of the Romans, and to content himself with the style
-of ‘Emperor of all the East, of Iberia, and of <i>Perateia</i>.’
-This last name means the <i>province beyond the sea</i>, in
-the Tauric Chersonêsos or <i>Crim</i>. We thus see that
-the style of ‘Emperor of the East,’ which it is sometimes
-convenient to give to him of Constantinople,
-strictly belongs to him of Trebizond. The new Empire
-of the East suffered many fluctuations of territory,
-chiefly at the hands of the neighbouring Turkomans.
-<i>Chalybia</i>, the land of iron, was lost; the coast-line
-was split asunder; the Empire bowed to Timour.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turkish
-conquest of
-Trebizond;
-1461.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">{423}</a></span>
-the capital and a large part of the coast bore up to
-the last, and did not pass under the Ottoman yoke
-till eight years after the fall of Constantinople.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Perateia.
-1472.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-outlying dependency of <i>Perateia</i> or <i>Gothia</i> was not
-conquered till eleven years later still. As the Tauric
-Chersonêsos had sheltered the last Greek commonwealth,
-it sheltered also the last Greek principality.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>The Slavonic States.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The Greek and Frank states of which we have just
-been speaking arose, for the most part they directly
-arose, out of the Latin partition of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the partition
-of the
-Empire on
-the Slavonic
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On
-the Slavonic powers the effect of that partition was
-only indirect. Servia and Bulgaria had begun their
-second career of independence before the partition.
-The partition touched them only so far as the splitting
-up of the Empire into a number of small states took away
-all fear of their being again brought under its obedience.
-In Croatia and Dalmatia all trace of the Imperial power
-passed away. The Magyar held the inland parts; the
-question was whether the Magyar or the Venetian
-should hold the coast.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servia and
-Bulgaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The chief independent Slavonic powers were those
-of <i>Servia</i> and <i>Bulgaria</i>. Of these, Servia represents
-the unmixed Slave, as unmixed, that is, as any nation
-can be; Bulgaria represents the Slave brought under
-some measure of Turanian influence and mixture. The
-history of the purer race is the longer and the more
-brilliant. The Servian people made a longer resistance
-to the Turk than the Bulgarian people; they were the
-first to throw off his yoke; one part of them never submitted
-to his yoke at all.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-Servia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The oldest Servia, as we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">{424}</a></span>
-have seen, stretched far beyond the bounds of the present
-principality, and had a considerable Hadriatic sea-board,
-though interrupted by the Roman cities. Among
-the Zupans or princes of the many Servian tribes, the
-chief were the northern Grand-Zupans of <i>Desnica</i> on
-the Drina, and the southern Grand-Zupans of <i>Dioklea</i>
-or <i>Rascia</i>, so called from their capital <i>Rassa</i>, the
-modern <i>Novi-Bazar</i>. This last principality was the
-germ of the historical kingdom of Servia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-to the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But till the
-fall of the old Empire, the Imperial claims over Servia
-were always asserted and were often enforced.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1018.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Indeed
-common enmity to the Bulgarian, the momentary conqueror
-of Servia,<a name="FNanchor_42" id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> formed a tie between Servia and
-the Empire down to the complete incorporation of
-Servia by Basil the Second.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1040.<br />
-Conquest
-by Manuel
-Komnênos;
-1148.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The successful revolt of
-Servia made room for more than one claimant of Servian
-dominion and kingship; but the Imperial claims remained,
-to be enforced again in their fulness by Manuel
-Komnênos. At last the Latin conquest relieved Servia
-from all danger on the part of Constantinople; Servia
-stood forth as an independent power under the kings
-of the house of Nemanja.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-towards
-Hungary.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>They had to struggle against more dangerous
-enemies to the north in the Kings of Hungary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Bosnia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Even
-before the last Imperial conquest, the Magyars had cut
-away the western part of Servia, the land beyond the
-Drina, known as <i>Bosnia</i> or <i>Rama</i>. Under the last
-name it gave the Hungarian princes one of their royal
-titles.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1286.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This land was more than once won back by
-Servia; but its tendency was to separation and to
-growth at the cost of Servia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1326.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the first half of the
-fourteenth century, Bosnia was enlarged by the Servian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">{425}</a></span>
-lands bordering on the Dalmatian coast, the lands of
-<i>Zachloumia</i> and <i>Terbounia</i>, which were never permanently
-won back. So the lands on the Save, between
-the Drina and the Morava, taking in the modern capital
-of Belgrade, passed, in the endless shiftings of the
-frontier, at one time to Bulgaria and at another to
-Hungary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servian
-advance
-eastward
-and southward.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Servia, thus cut short to the north and
-west, was driven to advance southward and eastward,
-at the expense of Bulgaria and of the powers which
-had taken the place of the Empire on the lower Hadriatic
-coast. From the latter part of the thirteenth
-century onwards, Servia grew to be the greatest power
-in the south-eastern peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her seaboard.
-1296.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Shorn of her old Hadriatic
-seaboard, she gained a new and longer one,
-stretching from the mouths of Cattaro to Durazzo.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1319-1322.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Durazzo itself twice fell into Servian hands; but at
-the time of the highest power of Servia that city
-remained an Angevin outpost on the Servian mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Stephen
-Dushan,
-1331-1355.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That highest power was reached in the reign
-of Stephen Dushan, who spread his dominions far
-indeed at the cost of Greeks and Franks, at the cost
-of his old Slavonic neighbours and of the rising powers
-of Albania. In the new Servian capital of <i>Skopia</i>, <i>Skoupi</i>,
-or <i>Skopje</i>, the Tzar Stephen took an Imperial crown as
-<i>Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1346.<br />
-The
-Servian
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The new Empire
-stretched uninterruptedly from the Danube to the
-Corinthian gulf. At one end Bosnia was won back;
-at the other end the Servian rule was spread over
-Aitôlia and Thessaly, over Macedonia and Thrace as
-far as <i>Christopolis</i>. It only remained to give a head to
-this great body, and to make New Rome the seat of
-the Servian power.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break up
-of the
-Servian
-power,
-1355.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">But the Servian tzardom broke in pieces at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">{426}</a></span>
-death of the great Servian Tzar; and before he died,
-the Ottoman was already in Europe. In fact the historical
-result of the great advance of Servia was to
-split up the whole of the Greek and Slavonic lands,
-and to leave no power of either race able to keep out
-the barbarian. We have seen how the titles of Stephen’s
-Empire lived for a generation in the Greek part
-of his dominions.<a name="FNanchor_43" id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> In Macedonia and Thrace several
-small principalities sprang up, and a power arose at
-Skodra of which we shall have to speak again. To the
-north Bosnia fell away, and carried Zachloumia with
-it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later
-Kingdom of
-Servia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Servia itself comes out of the chaos as a separate
-kingdom, a kingdom wholly cut off from the sea, but
-stretching southward as far as <i>Prisrend</i>, and again
-holding the lands between the Drina and the Morava.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-and deliverances
-of
-Servia.
-1375.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Turk first took <i>Nish</i>, and brought the kingdom
-under tribute.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1389.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The overthrow at Kossovo made Servia
-wholly dependent.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1403.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the fall of Bajazet it again
-became free for a generation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1438.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the Turk won
-the whole land except Belgrade.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1442.<br />
-1444.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the campaign
-of Huniades restored Servia as a free kingdom;
-the event of Varna again brought her under tribute.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1459.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At
-last Mahomet the Conqueror incorporated all Servia,
-except Belgrade, with his dominions.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Kingdom
-of
-Bosnia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-
-<p>The history of <i>Bosnia</i>, as a really separate power,
-holding its own place in Europe, begins with the break-up
-of the momentary Servian Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its origin,
-1376.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ban Stephen
-Tvartko became the first king of the last Bosnian dynasty,
-under the nominal superiority of the Hungarian crown.
-Thus, at the very moment of the coming of the Turk, a
-kingdom of Latin creed and associations became the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">{427}</a></span>
-first power among the south-eastern Slaves. For a while
-it seemed as if Bosnia was going to take the place which
-had been held by Servia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatest
-extent of
-Bosnia,
-1382.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bosnian kingdom at
-its greatest extent took in all the present Bosnia and
-Herzegovina, with, it would seem, all Dalmatia except
-Zara, and the north-west corner of Servia stretching
-beyond the Drina. But the Bosnian power was broken
-at Kossovo as well as that of Servia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Jayce, 1391.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the time of
-confusion which followed, Jayce in the north-west
-corner became a power connected with both Hungary
-and Bosnia, while the Turk established himself in
-the extreme south. The Turk was driven out for
-a while, but the kingdom was dismembered to form
-a new Latin power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Saint Saba
-or Herzegovina.
-1440.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Lord of the old Zachloumia,
-a Bosnian vassal, transferred his homage to the
-Austrian king of the Romans, and, became sovereign
-Duke of <i>Saint Sava</i>, perhaps rather of <i>Primorie</i>. Thus
-arose the state of <i>Herzegovina</i>, that is the <i>Duchy</i>, commemorating
-in its half-German name the relation of
-its prince to the Western Empire. But neither kingdom
-nor duchy was long-lived.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1449.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within ten years after
-the separation of Herzegovina the Turk held western
-Bosnia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turkish
-conquest of
-Bosnia,
-1463;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Fourteen years later he subdued the whole
-kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Herzegovina,
-1483.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next year the duchy became tributary,
-and twenty years after the conquest of Bosnia it was
-incorporated with the now Turkish province of Bosnia.
-But in the long struggle between Venice and the Turk
-various parts of its territory, especially the coast, came
-under the power of the Republic.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Meanwhile one small Slavonic land, one surviving
-fragment of the great Servian dominion, maintained its
-independence through all changes.</p>
-
-<p>In the break-up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">{428}</a></span>
-of the Servian Empire, a small state, with Skodra for its
-capital, formed itself in the district of Zeta, reaching
-northwards as far as Cattaro.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion
-of the house
-of Balsa at
-Skodra.<br />
-Loss of
-Skodra,
-1394.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a moment its
-princes of the house of <i>Balsa</i> spread their power
-over all Northern Albania;
-but the new state was
-cut short on all sides by Bosnia, Venice, and the
-Turk, and Skodra itself was sold to Venice. In the
-middle of the fifteenth century, the state took a more
-definite shape, though with a smaller territory, under
-a new dynasty, that of Tzernojevich.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of Montenegro,
-1456.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This independent
-remnant answered to the modern <i>Tzernagora</i> or
-<i>Montenegro</i>, with a greater extent to the east and with a
-small seaboard taking in Antivari.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Establishment
-of
-Tzetinje,
-1488.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its capital <i>Zabljak</i>
-was more than once lost and won from the Turk; at the
-end of the century it was found hopeless to defend the
-lower districts, and prince and people withdrew to the
-natural fortress of the Black Mountain with its newly
-founded capital of Tzetinje.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Vladikas,
-1499.<br />
-Lay
-princes,
-1851.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last prince of the
-dynasty resigned his power to the metropolitan bishop,
-and Montenegro remained an independent state under
-its Vladikas or hereditary prelates, till their dominion
-was in our own time again exchanged for that of
-temporal princes. During all this time the territory
-of Montenegro was simply so much of the mountain
-region as could maintain its independence against
-the ceaseless attacks of the Turk. Yet Montenegro,
-as the ally of England and Russia, bore her part
-in the great European struggle, and won for herself
-a haven and a capital at Cattaro.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1813.<br />
-1858.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Her allies
-stood by while Cattaro was filched by the Austrian;
-and, more than forty years later, when a definite frontier
-was first traced, Western diplomacy so traced it as
-to give the Turk an inlet on both sides to the unconquered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">{429}</a></span>
-Christian land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Montenegrin
-conquests,
-1876-1877.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the latest times the Montenegrin
-arms set free a large part of the kindred land of
-Herzegovina, and won back a considerable part of the
-lost territory to the east, including part of the old seaboard
-as far as <i>Dulcigno</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then Western diplomacy drew
-another frontier, which forbade any large incorporation
-of the kindred Slavonic districts, while a small extension
-was allowed in that part of the lost ancient territory
-which had become Albanian. Of three havens won by
-Montenegro in the war, <i>Dulcigno</i> has been given back
-to the Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spizza.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Austria has been allowed to filch <i>Spizza</i>,
-as she had before filched Ragusa and Cattaro. The
-third haven, that of <i>Antivari</i>, was left to those who
-had won it under such restrictions as armed wrong
-knows how to impose on the weaker power of right.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The continued independence of Montenegro enables
-the Servian branch of the Slavonic race to say that
-their nation has never been wholly enslaved.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The third
-Bulgarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-case has been different with Bulgaria. We have seen
-the origin of the third Bulgarian, or rather <i>Vlacho-Bulgarian</i>,
-kingdom which won its independence of the
-Empire in the last years of the twelfth century. From
-that time to the Turkish conquest, one or more Bulgarian
-states always existed. And throughout the
-thirteenth century, the Bulgarian kingdom, though its
-boundaries were ever shifting, was one of the chief
-powers of the south-eastern peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The oldest Bulgaria between Danube and Hæmus
-was the first to throw off the Byzantine dominion, and
-the last to come under the power of the Turk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bulgarian
-advance.
-1197-1207.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-the new Bulgarian power grew fast, and for a while
-called back the days of Simeon and Samuel. Under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">{430}</a></span>
-Joannice the frontier stretched far to the north-west,
-over lands which gradually passed to Servia, taking in
-Skupi, Nish, and even Belgrade.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dominion
-of John
-Asan.
-1218-1241.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under the Tzar
-John Asan the new Bulgaria, the kingdom of <i>Tirnovo</i>,
-reached its greatest extent. The greater part of Thrace,
-Philippopolis and the whole land of <i>Rhodopê</i> or <i>Achridos</i>,
-Hadrianople itself, Macedonia too stretching
-away to Samuel’s Ochrida and to <i>Albanon</i> or Elbassan,
-were all under his rule. If his realm did not touch the
-Hadriatic or the Ægæan, it came very near to both;
-but Thessalonikê at least always remained to its Frank
-and Greek lords.<a name="FNanchor_44" id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> But this great power, like so many
-other powers of its kind, did not survive its founder.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline of
-Bulgaria.
-1246-1257.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The revived Greek states, the Nicene Empire and the
-Epeirot despotat, cut the Bulgarian realm short. The
-disputes of an older and of a later time went on.<a name="FNanchor_45" id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Shiftings
-of the
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There
-was undisputed Bulgaria north of Hæmus, an ever-shifting
-frontier south of it. The inland Philippopolis,
-and the coast towns of <i>Anchialos</i> and <i>Mesêmbria</i>,
-passed backwards and forwards between Greek and
-Bulgarian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Philippopolis
-finally
-Bulgarian.
-1344-1366.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last state of things, immediately before
-the common overthrow, gave Philippopolis to Bulgaria
-and the coast towns to the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars with
-Hungary.
-1260.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>An attempt at extension of the north by an attack
-on the Hungarian Banat of <i>Severin</i>, the western part
-of modern Wallachia, led only to a Hungarian invasion,
-to a temporary loss of <i>Widdin</i>, and the assumption of a
-Bulgarian title by the Magyar king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cuman
-dynasty in
-Bulgaria.
-1280.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently a new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">{431}</a></span>
-Turanian dynasty, this time of Cuman descent, reigned
-in Bulgaria, and soon after, the kingdom passed for
-the moment under a mightier overlord in the person
-of Nogai Khan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up of
-the kingdom.
-1357.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the fourteenth century the kingdom
-broke up.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Principality
-of
-Dobrutcha.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The despot <i>Dobroditius</i>—his name
-has many spellings—formed a separate dominion on
-the seaboard, stretching from the Danube to the Imperial
-frontier, cutting off the King of Tirnovo from
-the sea. Part of his land preserves his memory in its
-modern name <i>Dobrutcha</i>. Presently we hear of three
-Bulgarias, the central state at Tirnovo, the sea-land of
-Dobroditius, and a north-western state at Widdin.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1362.<br />
-1365-1369.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By
-this time the Ottoman inroads had begun; Philippopolis
-was lost, and Bulgarian princes were blind enough
-to employ Turkish help in a second attack on Severin,
-which led only to a second temporary loss of Widdin.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1382.<br />
-1388.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Turk now pressed on; Sofia was taken; the whole
-land became a Turkish dependency.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-by Bajazet,
-1393.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After Kossovo
-the land was wholly conquered, save only that the
-northern part of the land of Dobroditius passed to Wallachia.
-Bulgaria passed away from the list of European
-states both sooner and more utterly than Servia.
-Servia still had its alternations of freedom and bondage
-for sixty years. In after times large parts of it
-passed to a rule which, if foreign, was at least European.
-In later days Servia was the first of the subject nations
-to win its freedom. But the bondage of Bulgaria was
-never disturbed from the days of Bajazet to our own
-time.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 7. <i>The Kingdom of Hungary.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The origin of the Hungarian kingdom and the
-reasons for dealing with along with the states which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">{432}</a></span>
-arose out of the break-up of the Eastern Empire have
-already been spoken of.<a name="FNanchor_46" id="FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the
-Hungarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Finnish conquerors of
-the Slave, admitted within the pale of Western Christendom,
-founding a new Hungary on the Danube and
-the Theiss while they left behind them an older Hungary
-on the Kama, have points of contact at once with
-Asia and with both Eastern and Western Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its position
-in south-eastern
-Europe.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But,
-as closely connected in their history with the nations
-of the south-eastern peninsula, as sharers in the bondage
-and in the deliverance of Servia, Greece, and Bulgaria,
-in our geographical survey they claim a place
-where they may be looked at strictly as part of the
-south-eastern world.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the Magyar
-invasion.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It has been already noticed<a name="FNanchor_47" id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> that the main geographical
-work of the Magyar was to cut off that south-eastern
-world, the world where the Greek and the
-Slave, struggling for its supremacy, were both swallowed
-up by the Ottoman, from the Slavonic region
-between the Carpathians and the Baltic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great
-Moravia.
-884-894.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the moment
-of the Magyar inroad, the foundation of the
-<i>Great-Moravian</i> kingdom, the kingdom of Sviatopluk,
-made it more likely than it has ever been since that
-the Slaves of the two regions might be united into a
-single power. That kingdom, stretching to Sirmium,
-marched on the north-western dependencies of the
-Eastern Empire, while on the north it took in the Chrobatian
-land which was afterwards Little Poland. Such
-a power might have been dangerous to both Empires at
-once; but the invaders whom the two Emperors called
-in proved far more dangerous than Great Moravia could
-ever have been. The Magyars, Ogres, or Hungarians,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">{433}</a></span>
-the Turks of the Imperial geographer,<a name="FNanchor_48" id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> were
-called in by his father Leo to check the Bulgarians,
-as they were called in by Arnulf in the West to check
-the new power of Moravia. They passed, from the
-north rather than from the east, into the land which
-was disputed between Moravian and Bulgarian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>906.
-Relations
-between
-Hungary
-and Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Moravian power was overthrown, and the Magyars,
-stepping into its place, became constant invaders of
-both Empires and their dependent lands. But to the
-west, the victories of the Saxon kings put a check to
-their inroads, and, save some shiftings on the Austrian
-march, the frontier of Germany and Hungary has been
-singularly abiding.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The two
-Chrobatias
-separated
-by the
-Magyars.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While the Magyar settlement placed a barrier between
-the two chief regions of the Slavonic race as a
-whole, it specially placed a barrier between the two divisions
-of the <i>Croatian</i> or <i>Chrobatian</i> people, those on the
-Vistula and those on the Drave and Save.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1025.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The northern
-<i>Chrobatia</i> still reached south of the Carpathians, and
-it was not until the eleventh century that the Magyar
-kingdom, by the acquisition of its southern part, gained
-a natural frontier which, with some shiftings, served to
-part it off from the Slavonic powers to the north of it.
-To the south-east an uncultivated and wooded tract
-separated the Magyar territory from the lands between
-the Carpathians and the lower Danube which were still
-held by the Patzinaks.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-position
-of the
-Magyars.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The oldest Magyar settlement
-thus occupied the central part of the modern kingdom,
-on the Theiss and the middle Danube. There the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">{434}</a></span>
-Turanian invaders formed a ruling and central race,
-within a Slavonic fringe at each end. There were
-northern and southern Croats, <i>Slovaks</i> to the north,
-and <i>Ruthenians</i> to the north-west, towards the kindred
-land of <i>Halicz</i> or <i>Red Russia</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungary a
-kingdom:
-its growth.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Hungary, ranking from the beginning of the eleventh
-century as a kingdom of Latin Christendom, presently
-grew in all directions. We have just seen its advance
-at the expense of the northern Chrobatian land. Its
-advance at the expense of the southern branch of that
-race, and of the other Slavonic lands which owed more
-or less of allegiance to the Eastern Empire, was still
-more marked.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungary
-and Croatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these lands at one time or another
-gave royal titles to the King of Hungary, King also of
-Croatia, of Dalmatia, of Rama, even of Bulgaria. But in
-most of these lands the Hungarian kingship was temporary
-or nominal; in Croatia alone, though the frontier
-has often shifted, Hungarian rule has been abiding.
-Croatia has never formed an independent state since the
-first Hungarian conquest; it has never been fully wrested
-from Hungary since the days of Manuel Komnênos. In
-those days it was indeed a question whether Hungary
-itself had not an overlord in the Eastern Emperor.
-After the great Bulgarian revolt that question could
-never be raised again. But the Hungarian frontier was
-ever shifting towards the former lands of the Empire,
-Venetian, Servian, and Bulgarian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom of
-Slavonia.
-1492.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-One part of the old
-Croatian kingdom, the land between Save and Drave,
-was cut off to form, first an appanage, then an annexed
-kingdom, by the special name of <i>Slavonia</i>, a name
-shared by it with lands on the Baltic, perhaps on the
-Ægæan.</p>
-
-<p>But, from the first days of its conversion, the Hungarian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">{435}</a></span>
-realm began to advance in other directions, in
-lands which had formed no part of the Empire since
-the days of Aurelian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Transsilvania
-or
-<i>Siebenbürgen</i>.<br />
-1004.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before their Chrobatian conquest,
-the Magyars passed the boundary which divided them
-from the Patzinaks, and won the land which from its
-position took the name of <i>Transsilvania</i>.<a name="FNanchor_49" id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> Colonists
-were invited to settle in the thinly inhabited land. One
-chief settlement was of the Low-Dutch speech from
-Saxony and Flanders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Various
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another element was formed
-by the Turanian <i>Szeklers</i>, whose Latin form of <i>Siculi</i>
-might easily mislead. Another migration brought back
-the name and speech of the Old Rome to the first land
-from which she had withdrawn her power.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-the Roumans.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The legendary belief in the unbroken life of the
-Roman name and speech in the lands north of the
-Danube is merely a legendary belief.<a name="FNanchor_50" id="FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> There can be no
-reasonable doubt that the present principality of Roumania
-and the Rouman lands beyond its borders derived
-their present population and language from a settlement
-of the Rouman people further south. South of the
-Danube, the Rouman or Vlach population, scattered
-among Greeks, Slaves, and Albanians, at many points
-from Pindos northwards, has kept its distinct nationality,
-but it has never formed a political whole.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their
-Northern
-migration.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But a
-migration beyond the Danube enabled the Roumans in
-course of time to found two distinct principalities, and
-to form a chief element in the population of a third.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">{436}</a></span>
-There is no sign of any Rouman population north of
-the Danube before the thirteenth century. The events
-of that century opened a way for a reversal of the
-ordinary course of migration, for the settlement of lands
-beyond the Empire by former subjects of the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rouman
-element in
-the third
-Bulgarian
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have seen that the third Bulgarian kingdom, that
-which arose at the end of the twelfth century, was in its
-origin as much Rouman as Bulgarian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cumans in
-Dacia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By this time
-the rule of the Patzinaks beyond the lower Danube had
-given way to that of the kindred <i>Cumans</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mongolian
-invasion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the
-storm of Mongolian invasion, which crushed Hungary
-itself for a moment, crushed the Cuman power for
-ever. But the remnant of the Cuman nation lived on
-within the Magyar realm, and gave its king yet another
-title, that of <i>King of Cumania</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rouman
-settlement
-in the
-Cuman
-land.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The former Cuman
-land now lay open to new settlers, and the Rouman part
-of the inhabitants of the new Bulgaria began to cross the
-Danube into that land and the neighbouring districts.
-In the course of the thirteenth century they occupied
-the present Wallachia, and already formed an element
-in the mixed population of Transsilvania. A Rouman
-state thus began to be formed, which took the name
-by which the Roumans were known to their neighbours.
-The new <i>Vlachia</i>, <i>Wallachia</i>, stretched on both
-sides of the Aluta.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Little
-Wallachia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the west of that river, <i>Little
-Wallachia</i> formed, as the banat of <i>Severin</i>, an integral
-part of the Hungarian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great
-Wallachia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Great Wallachia</i> to
-the east formed a separate principality, dependent or
-independent on Hungary, according to its strength from
-time to time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dobrutcha.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, towards the end of the fourteenth
-century, the land south of the Danube, called <i>Dobrutcha</i>,
-passed from Bulgaria to Wallachia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Moldavia.
-c. 1341.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another Rouman
-migration, passing from the land of <i>Marmaros</i> north<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">{437}</a></span>
-of Transsilvania, founded the principality of <i>Moldavia</i>
-between the Carpathians and the Dniester. This too
-stood to the Hungarian crown in the same shifting
-relation as Great Wallachia, and sometimes transferred
-its vassalage to Lithuania and Poland.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lewis the
-Great,
-1342-1382;<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The greatest extension of the Hungarian dominion
-was in the fourteenth century, under the Angevin
-King Lewis the Great. Before his time the Magyar
-frontier had advanced and fallen back.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-possession of
-Halicz,
-1185-1220,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hungary,
-having a Russian population within its borders, had for
-a while enlarged its Russian dominion by the annexation
-of the Red Russian land of <i>Halicz</i> or <i>Galicia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Widdin,
-1260-1264.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It
-had also, for a shorter time, occupied the Bulgarian
-town of Widdin.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Lewis,
-Halicz and
-Vladimir,
-1342;
-Widdin,
-1365-1369.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lewis renewed both these conquests,
-and made others. Halicz was not only won again,
-but was enlarged by the neighbouring principality
-of <i>Vladimir</i>. The great day of Hungary was contemporary
-with the great day of Servia, but it was a
-longer day, and Hungary profited greatly by the fall
-of Servia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1356.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While Lewis annexed Dalmatia, he also at
-various times established his supremacy over Bosnia
-and the Rouman principalities. That Lewis was king
-of Poland by a personal union did not affect Hungarian
-geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Red Russia
-restored to
-Poland,
-1390.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the separation of the crowns
-at his death led presently to the restoration of the
-Red Russian provinces to Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pledging of
-Zips, 1412.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Somewhat later,
-under Sigismund, a territory within the Hungarian
-border, part of the county of <i>Zips</i> or <i>Czepusz</i>, was
-pledged to Poland, and continued to be held by that
-power.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Meanwhile the Ottoman was on his march to overthrow
-Hungary as well as its neighbours, though the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">{438}</a></span>
-position of the Magyar kingdom made it the last to
-be devoured and the first to be delivered. The Turkish
-inroads as yet barely grazed the strictly Hungarian
-frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-Turkish invasion.
-1391.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first Turkish invasion of Hungary, the
-first Turkish exaction of tribute from Wallachia, came
-in the same year in which Sigismund established his
-supremacy over Bosnia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Nikopolis.
-1396.<br />
-Campaign
-of Huniades
-1443.<br />
-Battle of
-Varna.
-1444.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The defeat of Nikopolis confirmed
-the Turkish supremacy in Wallachia, a supremacy
-which was again won for Hungary in the great
-campaign of Huniades, and was again lost at Varna.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Disputes
-for Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile the full possession of Dalmatia did not outlive
-the reign of Lewis. Henceforth Hungary is merely
-one competitor among others in the ceaseless shiftings
-of the Dalmatian frontier.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hungary
-under
-Matthias
-Corvinus.
-1458-1490.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Later in the fifteenth century came another day of
-Hungarian greatness under the son of Huniades, Matthias
-Corvinus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1477.<br />
-1485.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its most distinguishing feature was
-the extension of the Magyar power to the west, over
-Bohemia and its dependencies, and even over the
-Austrian archduchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1467.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the south-eastern lands Wallachia
-and Moldavia again became Hungarian dependencies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1463.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Jayce</i> was won back from the Turk, now lord
-of Bosnia, and, Belgrade being now Hungarian, the
-frontier towards the Ottoman was fixed till the time
-of his great advance northwards.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Belgrade.
-1521.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The first stage of Ottoman conquest in Hungary, as
-distinguished from mere ravage, was the taking of Belgrade.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Mohacz.
-1526.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the battle of Mohacz, five years later,
-the separate history of Hungary ends.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Turkish
-occupation
-of the
-greater
-part of
-Hungary.
-1552-1687.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That victory,
-followed by the disputes for the Hungarian crown
-between an Austrian archduke and a Transsilvanian
-palatine, enabled Suleiman to make himself master of
-the greater part of the kingdom, especially of the part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">{439}</a></span>
-which was most thoroughly Magyar. From the middle
-of the sixteenth century till the latter years of the
-seventeenth, the Austrian Kings of Hungary kept only
-a fragment of Croatia, including <i>Zagrab</i> or <i>Agram</i>, and
-a strip of north-western Hungary, including <i>Pressburg</i>.
-The whole central part of the kingdom passed under
-the immediate dominion of the Turk, and a Pasha ruled
-at Buda. Besides this great incorporation of Hungarian
-soil, the Turk held three vassal principalities within
-the dominions of Lewis the Great.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tributary
-principalities:
-Transsilvania,
-Wallachia,
-Moldavia.
-1497.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-One was <i>Transsilvania</i>,
-increased by a large part of north-eastern
-Hungary; the second was <i>Wallachia</i>; the third was
-<i>Moldavia</i>, which began to be tributary late in the
-fifteenth century. The Rouman lands became more
-and more closely dependent on the Turk, who took
-on him to name their princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1606.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Indeed, one might for a
-while add the Austrian kingdom of Hungary itself as a
-fourth vassal state, as it paid tribute to the Turk into
-the seventeenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Rouman
-lands
-disputed
-between
-Poland and
-the Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For the superiority of the
-Rouman principalities an endless struggle went on
-between Poland and the Turk. At last the same
-Slavonic power stepped in to deliver Hungary and
-Austria also.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Vienna.
-1683.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With the overthrow of the Turk before
-Vienna began the reaction of Christendom against Islam
-which has gone on to our own day.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery of
-Hungary
-from the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The wars which follow answer to the wars of independence
-in Servia and Greece in so far as the Turk
-was driven out of a Christian land. They differ in this,
-that the Turk was driven out of Greece and Servia
-to the profit of Greece and Servia themselves, while he
-was driven out of Hungary to the profit of the Austrian
-king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Carlowitz.
-1699.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first stage of the work, the war which was
-ended by the Peace of Carlowitz, won back nearly all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">{440}</a></span>
-Croatia and Slavonia, and all Hungary proper, except
-the land of <i>Temeswar</i> between Danube, Theiss, and
-Maros.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of
-Transsilvania.
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Transsilvania became a dependency of the
-Hungarian kingdom, with which it was presently incorporated.
-Wallachia and Moldavia remained under
-Turkish supremacy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Passarowitz.
-1718.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next war, ended by the
-Peace of Passarowitz, fully restored the Hungarian
-kingdom as part of Christendom. The Turk kept only
-a small part of Croatia. All Slavonia and the banat of
-Temeswar were won back; the frontier was even
-carried south of the Save, so as to take in a small
-strip of Bosnia and a great part of Servia, as also the
-Lesser Wallachia, the old banat of Severin. Thus,
-while the first stage delivered Buda, the second delivered
-Belgrade. But the next war, ended by the Peace of
-Belgrade, largely undid the work.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Losses by
-the Peace
-of Belgrade.
-1739.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The frontier fell
-back to the point at which it stayed till our own day.
-From the mouth of the Unna to Orsovo, the Save and
-the Danube became the frontier. Belgrade, and all the
-land south of those rivers, passed again to the Turk, and
-Little Wallachia became again part of a Turkish dependency.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final loss
-of Belgrade.
-1789-1791.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At a later stage of the century Belgrade
-was again delivered and again lost.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisitions
-from
-Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The later acquisitions of the House of Austria were
-made in the character of Hungarian kings, but they
-did not lead to any enlargement of the Hungarian
-kingdom. Thus the claim to the Austrian acquisitions
-made at the first and third partitions of Poland,
-rested solely on the two Hungarian occupations of
-Red Russia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Galicia
-and Lodomeria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under the softened forms of <i>Galicia</i>
-and <i>Lodomeria</i>, the Red Russian lands of <i>Halicz</i>
-and <i>Vladimir</i>, together with part of Poland itself,
-became a new kingdom of the House of Habsburg,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">{441}</a></span>
-as the greater part of the territory thus won still remains.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of Bukovina.
-1776-1786.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Between the two partitions the new kingdom
-was increased by the addition of <i>Bukovina</i>, the north-western
-corner of Moldavia, which was claimed as an
-ancient part of the Transsilvanian principality. It was
-again only in its Hungarian character that the House of
-Habsburg could make any claim to Dalmatia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dalmatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Certainly
-no Austrian duke had ever reigned over Dalmatia,
-Red Russia, or the Rouman principalities. Yet in the
-present dual arrangement of the Austro-Hungarian
-monarchy the so-called <i>triple kingdom</i> of Croatia, Dalmatia,
-and Slavonia, is divided between the rule of
-Pest and the rule of Vienna. Galicia also counts to
-the Austrian, and not to the Hungarian, division of the
-monarchy. All this is perhaps in harmony with the
-generally anomalous character of the power of which
-they form part.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spizza.
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The port of <i>Spizza</i> has been added
-to the Dalmatian kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bosnia and
-Herzegovina.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is hard to say in which
-of his many characters the Hungarian King and
-Austrian Archduke holds the lands of <i>Bosnia</i> and
-<i>Herzegovina</i>, of which the Treaty of Berlin confers on
-him, not the sovereignty, but the administration. They
-might have been claimed by the Hungarian king in his
-ancient character of King of Rama. But the formal
-aspect of the transaction would seem rather to be that
-he has, like his predecessors in the sixteenth century,
-become the man of the Turk.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later history
-of
-Roumania.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>After the restoration of the Lesser Wallachia to the
-Turk and the addition of Bukovina to Galicia, the
-geographical history of the Rouman principalities parts
-off wholly from that of Hungary, and will be more
-fittingly treated in another section.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">{442}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 8. <i>The Ottoman Power.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Ottoman
-Turks.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Last among the powers which among them supplanted
-the Eastern Empire, comes the greatest and
-most terrible of all, that which overthrew the Empire
-itself and most of the states which arose out of its
-ruins, and which stands distinguished from all the rest
-by its abiding possession of the Imperial city. This is
-the power of the Ottoman Turks.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their
-special
-character
-as Mahometans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They stand distinguished
-from all the other invaders of the European
-mainland of the Empire by being Mahometan invaders.
-The examples of Bulgaria and Hungary show that
-Turanian invaders, as such, are not incapable of being
-received into European fellowship. This could not be in
-the case of a Mahometan power, bound by its religion to
-keep its Christian subjects in the condition of bondmen.
-The Ottomans could not, like the Bulgarians, be lost in
-the greater mass of those whom they conquered.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Preservation
-of the
-subject
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-this very necessity helped in some measure to preserve
-the national being of the subject nations. Greeks,
-Servians, Bulgarians, have under Ottoman rule remained
-Greeks, Servians, and Bulgarians, ready to begin their
-national career afresh whenever the time for independence
-should come.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-with the
-Saracen
-power in
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominion of the Turk in
-Eastern Europe answers, as a Mahometan dominion, to
-the dominion of the Saracen in Western Europe. But
-in everything, save the mere reckoning of years, it has
-been far more abiding. The Mahometan dominion in
-southern Spain did indeed last two hundred years
-longer than Mahometan dominion has yet lasted in
-any part of Eastern Europe. But the Saracen power
-in the West began to fall back as soon as it was established,
-and its last two hundred years were a mere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">{443}</a></span>
-survival. The Ottomans underwent no considerable
-loss of territory till more than four centuries and a
-half after their first appearance in Asia, till more than
-three centuries after their passage into Europe. Constantinople
-has been Ottoman sixty years longer than
-Toledo was Saracen.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent
-of the
-Ottoman
-dominion
-compared
-with the
-Eastern
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Ottoman, possessor of the Eastern Rome, does
-in a rough way represent the Eastern Roman in the
-extent of his dominion. The dominions and dependencies
-of the Sultans at the height of their power took
-in, in Eastern Europe, in Asia, and in Africa, nearly
-all that had formed part of the Empire of Justinian,
-with a large territory, both in Europe and Asia, which
-Justinian had not held. Justinian held nothing north
-of the Danube; Suleiman held, as sovereign or as overlord,
-a vast dominion from Buda to Azof. On the
-other hand, no part of the dominions of Justinian in
-Western Europe, save one city for one moment, ever
-came under Ottoman rule. The Eastern Empire in the
-year 800 was smaller than even the present reduced
-dominion of the Turk. The Eastern Empire, at its
-height in the eleventh century, held in Europe a
-dominion far smaller than the dominion of the Turk in
-the sixteenth century, far larger than his dominion
-now. But in the essential feature of Byzantine geography,
-the possession of Constantinople and of the
-lands on each side of the Bosporos and Hellespont, the
-Ottoman Sultan took the place of the Eastern Emperor,
-and as yet he keeps it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the Mongolian
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The history of the Eastern Empire, and that of the
-Ottomans in connexion with it, was largely affected by
-the movements of the Mongols in the further East.
-Mongolian pressure weakened the Seljuk Turks, and so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">{444}</a></span>
-allowed the growth of the Nicene Empire. Mongolian
-invasions also led indirectly to the growth of the
-Ottoman power, and at a later time they gave it its
-greatest check.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-the Ottomans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ottomans grew out of a Turkish
-band who served the Seljuk Sultan against the Mongols.
-As his vassals, they began to be a power in Asia and to
-harry the coasts of Europe. They passed into Europe,
-and won a great European dominion far more quickly
-than they had won their Asiatic dominion. This is the
-special characteristic of the Ottoman power. Asiatic
-in everything else, it is geographically European; most
-of its Asiatic and all its African dominion was won
-from an European centre.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up
-and reunion
-of the
-Ottoman
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Already a power in Europe,
-but not yet in possession of the Imperial city, the
-new Ottoman power was for a moment utterly broken
-in pieces by the second flood of Mongol invasion. That
-the shattered dominion came together again is an event
-without a parallel in Eastern history. The restored
-Ottoman power then won Constantinople, and from
-Constantinople, as representing the fallen Empire, it won
-back the lost dominion of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its permanence.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The permanence
-of the Ottoman power, when Constantinople was
-once won, is in no way wonderful. Even the unreclaimed
-Asiatic, when he was once seated on the throne of the
-New Rome, inherited his share of Rome’s eternity.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>First settlements
-of
-the Ottomans.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The first settlements of the Ottoman Turks were
-on the banks of the <i>Sangarios</i>, which gave them from
-the beginning a threatening position towards Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1299.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the end of the thirteenth century they were firmly
-established in that region. In the first half of the fourteenth
-they became the leading power in Western Asia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Brusa.
-1326-1330.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Brusa</i>, the Asiatic capital, won in the last days of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">{445}</a></span>
-Emir Othman, has a manifest eye towards Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Nikaia
-and Nikomêdeia.
-1330-1338.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Nikaia</i> and <i>Nikomêdeia</i> followed, and the Ottoman
-stepped geographically into the same position towards
-the revived Greek Empire which the Nicene princes
-had held towards the Latin Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Entry into
-Europe.
-1354.<br />
-Conquest
-of Hadrianople.
-1361.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the last days of
-the Emir Othman came their passage into Europe, and a
-few more years saw Amurath in his European capital of
-Hadrianople, completely hemming Constantinople in.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ottoman
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The second half of the fourteenth century was a time
-of the most speedy Ottoman advance, and the amount of
-real advance is by no means represented by the change
-on the map. We have seen in the case of Servia, of
-Greece, and of Hungary, that the course of Turkish
-invasion commonly went through three stages. There
-was first the time of mere plunder. Then came the
-tributary stage, and lastly, the day of complete bondage.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bajazet
-first Sultan,
-1389-1402.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Bajazet, the first Ottoman prince who bore
-the title of Sultan, the immediate Ottoman dominion in
-Europe stretched from the Ægæan to the Danube. It
-took in all Bulgaria, all Macedonia, Thessaly, and
-Thrace, save only Chalkidikê and the district just round
-Constantinople. Servia and Wallachia were dependent
-states, as indeed was the Empire itself. Central and
-southern Greece, Bosnia, Hungary, even Styria, were
-lands open to plunder.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Angora.
-1402.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This great dominion was broken in pieces by the
-victory of Timour at Angora. It seemed that the
-empire of the Ottoman had passed away like the empire
-of the Servian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break up of
-the Ottoman
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The dominion of Bajazet was
-divided among his sons and the princes of the dispossessed
-Turkish dynasties. The Christian states had
-a breathing-time, and the sons of Bajazet were glad to
-give back to the Empire some important parts of its lost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">{446}</a></span>
-territories.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reunited
-under
-Mahomet.
-1413.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ottoman power came together again
-under Mahomet the First; but for nearly half a century
-its advance was slower than in the half-century before.
-The conquests of Mahomet and of Amurath the Second
-lay mainly in the Greek and Albanian lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Thessalonikê.
-1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Turk
-now reached the Hadriatic, and the conquest of Thessalonikê
-gave him a firmer hold on the Ægæan. Towards
-Servia and Hungary he lost and he won again; he hardly
-conquered.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mahomet
-the Conqueror.
-1451-1481.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was the thirty years of Mahomet the
-Conqueror which finally gave the Ottoman dominion its
-European position.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Constantinople.
-1453.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From his first and greatest conquest
-of the New Rome, he gathered in what remained,
-Greek, Frank, and Slave. The conquest of the Greek
-mainland, of Albania and Bosnia, the final conquest of
-Servia, made him master of the whole south-eastern
-peninsula, save only the points held by Venice and the
-unconquered height of the Black Mountain. He began
-to gather in the Western islands, and he struck the first
-great blow to the Venetian power by the conquest of
-Euboia. Around the Euxine he won the Empire of
-Trebizond and the points held by Genoa. The great
-mass of the islands and the few Venetian points on the
-coast still escaped.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-his dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Otherwise Mahomet the Conqueror
-held the whole European dominions of Basil the Second,
-with a greater dominion in Asia than that of Manuel
-Komnênos. From the Danube to the Tanais and beyond
-it, he held a vast overlordship, over lands which had
-obeyed no Emperor since Aurelian, over lands which
-had never obeyed any Emperor at all. At last the
-Mussulman lord of Constantinople seemed about to win
-back the Italian dominion of its Christian lords.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Taking of
-Otranto,
-1480.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In
-his last days, by the possession of Otranto, Mahomet
-ruled west of the Hadriatic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">{447}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It might have been deemed that the little cloud
-which now lighted on Otranto would grow as fast
-as the little cloud which a hundred and thirty years
-before had lighted on Kallipolis. But Bajazet the
-Second made no conquests save the points which were
-won from Venice.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Syria
-and Egypt.
-1516-17.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Selim the First, the greatest conqueror
-of his line against fellow Mahometans, had no leisure,
-while winning Syria and Egypt, to make any advance on
-Christian ground.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Suleiman.
-1520-1566.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But under Suleiman the Lawgiver,
-not only the overlordship but the immediate rule of
-Constantinople under its Turkish Sultans was spread
-over wide European lands which had never obeyed its
-Christian Emperors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>His African
-overlordship.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then too its Mussulman lords won
-back at least the nominal overlordship of that African
-seaboard which the first Mussulmans had rent away
-from the allegiance of Constantinople. The greatest
-conquest of Suleiman was made in Hungary; but he
-also made the Ægæan an Ottoman sea. The early years
-of his reign saw the driving of the Knights from Rhodes,
-and the winning of their fortress of Halikarnassos, the
-last European possession on Asiatic ground. His last
-days saw the annexation of the Naxian duchy; at
-an intermediate stage Venice lost her Peloponnesian
-strongholds.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Algiers.
-1519.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Africa the Turk received the commendation
-of <i>Algiers</i> and of <i>Tunis</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tunis conquered
-by
-Charles the
-Fifth.
-1531.<br />
-1535.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Tunis, won
-for Christendom by the Imperial King of the Two
-Sicilies, was lost and won again, till it was finally
-won for Islam by the second Selim. <i>Tripolis</i>, granted
-to the Knights, also passed to Suleiman.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1574.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under
-Selim <i>Cyprus</i> was added; the fight of Lepanto could
-neither save nor recover it; but the advance of the
-Turk was stopped.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline
-of the
-Ottoman
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquests of the seventeenth
-century were small compared with those of earlier<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">{448}</a></span>
-days, and, before that century was out, the Ottoman
-Terminus had begun to go back.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatest
-extent of
-the Ottoman
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Yet it was in the last half of the seventeenth
-century that the Ottoman Empire reached its greatest
-geographical extent.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Crete.
-1641-1669.<br />
-of Podolia.
-1672-1676.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Crete</i> was now won; a few years
-later <i>Kamienetz</i> and all <i>Podolia</i> were ceded to the Turk
-by Poland. This was not absolutely his last European
-acquisition, but it was his last acquisition of a great
-province. The Ottoman dominion now covered a
-wider space on the map than it had done at any earlier
-moment. Suleiman in all his glory had not reigned
-over Cyprus, Crete, and Podolia. The tide now turned
-for ever.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Ottoman
-frontier
-falls
-back.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From that time the Ottoman has, like his
-Byzantine predecessor, had his periods of revival and
-recovery, but on the whole his frontier has steadily
-gone back.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ottoman
-loss of
-Hungary.
-1683-1699.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The first great blow to the integrity and independence
-of the Ottoman Empire was dealt in the war which was
-ended by the Peace of Carlowitz. We have seen how
-Hungary and Peloponnêsos were won back for Christendom;
-so was Podolia. We have seen too how at the next
-stage the Turk gained at one end and lost at the other,
-winning back Peloponnêsos, winning Mykonos and
-Tênos, but losing on the Save and the Danube. The
-next stage shows the Ottoman frontier again in advance;
-in our own day we have seen it again fall back. And
-the change which has given Bosnia and Herzegovina
-to the master of Dalmatia, Ragusa, and Cattaro has,
-besides throwing back the frontier of the Turk, redressed
-a very old geographical wrong.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-inland and
-maritime
-Illyricum.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Ever since
-the first Slavonic settlements, the inland region of
-northern Illyricum has been more or less thoroughly
-cut off from the coast cities which form its natural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">{449}</a></span>
-outlets. Whatever may be the fate of those lands, the
-body is again joined to the mouth, and the mouth to
-the body, and we can hardly fancy them again severed.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The same arrangements which transferred the
-‘administration’ of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the King
-of Hungary and Dalmatia, have transferred another part
-of the Ottoman dominion to a more distant European
-power on terms which are still less easy to understand.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cyprus.
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Greek island of <i>Cyprus</i> has passed to English rule;
-but it is after a fashion which may imply that the conquest
-of Richard of Poitou is held—not, it is to be hoped,
-by the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, but possibly
-by the Empress of India—as a tributary of the Ottoman
-Sultan.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">During the former half of the eighteenth century
-the shiftings of the Ottoman territory to the north were
-all on the side of Austria or Hungary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations of
-the Turk
-towards
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But a new
-enemy of the Turk appeared towards the end of the
-seventeenth century, one who was, before the end of the
-eighteenth, to stand forth as his chief enemy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss and
-recovery of
-Azof.
-1696-1711.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under
-Peter the Great <i>Azof</i> was won by Russia and lost again.
-Sixty years later great geographical changes took place
-in the same region.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Kainardji.
-1774.<br />
-Independence
-of
-Crim.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the Treaty of Kainardji, the
-dependent khanate of <i>Crim</i>—the old Tauric Chersonêsos
-and the neighbouring lands—was released from the
-superiority of the Sultan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-annexation
-of Crim.
-1783.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was a natural step
-towards its annexation by Russia, which thus again
-made her way to the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Jedisan.
-1791.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bug was now the
-frontier; presently, by the Russian annexation of
-<i>Oczakow</i> and the land of Jedisan, it fell back to the
-Dniester. By the treaty of Bucharest the frontier alike<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">{450}</a></span>
-of the dominion and of the overlordship of the Turk fell
-back to the Pruth and the lower Danube.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Bessarabia.
-1812.<br />
-Shiftings
-of the
-Moldavian
-frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Russia thus
-gained <i>Bessarabia</i> and the eastern part of <i>Moldavia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Hadrianople.
-1829.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By
-the Treaty of Hadrianople she further won the islands at
-the mouth of the Danube.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Paris,
-1856;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Treaty of Paris restored
-to Moldavia a small part of the lands ceded at Bucharest,
-so as to keep the Russian frontier away from the Danube.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Berlin,
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last cession, with the exception of the islands, was
-recovered by Russia at the Treaty of Berlin. But
-changes of frontier in those regions no longer affect the
-dominion of the Turk.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 9. <i>The Liberated States.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lands liberated
-from
-the Ottoman.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The losses which the Ottoman power has undergone
-at the hands of its independent neighbours, Russia,
-Montenegro, and Austria or Hungary, must be distinguished
-from the liberation of certain lands from
-Turkish rule to form new or revived European states.
-We have seen that the kingdom of Hungary and its
-dependent lands might fairly come under this head,
-and we have seen in what the circumstances of their
-liberation differ from the liberation of Greece or Servia
-or Bulgaria. But it is important to bear in mind
-that the Turk had to be driven from Hungary, no less
-than from Greece, Servia, and Bulgaria. If the Turk
-has ruled at Belgrade, at Athens, and at Tirnovo, he
-has ruled at Buda no less. All stand in the same
-opposition to Tzetinje, where he has never ruled.</p>
-
-<p>As the Servian people was the only one among the
-south-eastern nations of which any part maintained its
-abiding independence, so the enslaved part of the
-Servian people was the first among the subject nations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">{451}</a></span>
-to throw off the yoke.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Ionian
-Islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the first attempt to form
-anything like a free state in south-eastern Europe was
-made among a branch of the Greek nation, in the so-called
-<i>Ionian Islands</i>. But the form which the attempt
-took was no lessening of the Turkish dominion, but its
-increase.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ceded to
-France.
-1797.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the peace of Campoformio, the islands,
-with the few Venetian points on the mainland, were to
-pass to France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Septinsular
-Republic
-under Ottoman
-overlordship.
-1798.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the treaty of the next year between
-Russia and the Turk, the points on the mainland were
-to be handed over to the Turk, while the islands were
-to form a commonwealth, tributary to the Turk, but
-under the protection of Russia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Venetian
-outposts
-given
-to the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus, besides an advance
-of the Turk’s immediate dominion on the mainland, his
-overlordship was to be extended over the islands, including
-Corfu, the one island which had never come under
-his power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Surrender
-of Parga.
-1819.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The other points on the mainland passed,
-not so much to the Sultan as to his rebellious vassal Ali
-of Jôannina;
-but <i>Parga</i> kept its freedom till five years
-after the general peace.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>All Albania
-and
-continental
-Greece
-under the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the Turk made his last
-encroachment on Christendom, and held for a moment
-the whole of the Greek and Albanian mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Ionian
-Islands
-under
-English
-protection.
-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-islands meanwhile, tossed to and fro during the war
-between France and England, were at the peace again
-made into a nominal commonwealth, but under a form
-of British protection which it is not easy to distinguish
-from British sovereignty. Still a nominally free Greek
-state was again set up, and the possibility of Greek
-freedom on a larger scale was practically acknowledged.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Greek
-War of Independence.
-1821.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">It was only for a very short time that the Turk
-held complete possession of all Albania and continental
-Greece. Two years after the betrayal of Parga began
-the Greek War of Independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Greek
-nation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The geographical
-disposition of the Greek nation has changed very little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">{452}</a></span>
-since the Latin conquest of Constantinople; it has
-changed very little since the later days of old Hellas.
-At all these stages some other people has held the solid
-mainland of south-eastern Europe and of western Asia,
-while the Greek has been the prevailing race on the
-coasts, the islands, the peninsular lands, of both continents,
-from Durazzo to Trebizond.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>General
-Greek
-revolt.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within this range the
-Greeks revolted at every point where they were strong
-enough to revolt at all.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent
-of the
-liberated
-territory.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was only in the old
-Hellenic mainland, and in Crete and others of the Ægæan
-islands, that the Greeks were able to hold their ground.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1829-1833.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these lands some parts were allowed by Western
-diplomacy to keep their freedom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Greece.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A <i>Kingdom of
-Greece</i> was formed, taking in Peloponnêsos, Euboia,
-the Kyklades, and a small part of central Greece, south
-of a line drawn from the gulf of Arta to the gulf of
-Volo. But the Turk was allowed to hold, not only the
-more distant Greek lands and islands, but Epeiros,
-Thessaly, and Crete.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ionian
-islands
-added to
-Greece.
-1864.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom was afterwards
-enlarged by the addition of the Ionian islands, whose
-nominal Septinsular Republic was merged in the
-kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Berlin.
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the Treaty of Berlin, Crete, which had
-twice risen, was thrust back into bondage, but parts of
-Thessaly and Epeiros were ordered to be set free and
-to be added to the kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its promises
-unfulfilled.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But even this small instalment
-of Greek emancipation has not yet been carried
-out.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>First revolt
-and deliverance
-of
-Servia.
-1805-1812.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Between the first and the second establishment of
-the Ionian commonwealth, Servia had been delivered
-and had been conquered again. The first revolt made
-Servia a tributary principality.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-revolt and
-deliverance.
-1817-1829.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was then won back
-by the Turk and again delivered.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1826-1829.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its freedom,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">{453}</a></span>
-modified by the payment of tribute and by the presence
-of Turkish garrisons in certain towns, was decreed by
-the peace of Akerman, and was carried out by the treaty
-of Hadrianople.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Withdrawal
-of
-Turkish
-garrisons.
-1867.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Fifty years after the second establishment
-of the principality, its practical freedom was
-made good by the withdrawal of the Turkish garrisons.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servia independent
-with an
-enlarged
-territory.
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last changes have made Servia, under a native
-dynasty, an independent state, released from all tribute
-or vassalage. The same changes have given Servia
-a slight increase of territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Servian
-territory
-left to the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the boundary is so
-drawn as to leave part of the old Servian land to the
-Turk, and carefully to keep the frontiers of the Servian
-and Montenegrin principalities apart. That is to say,
-the Servian nation is split into four parts—Montenegro,
-free Servia, Turkish Servia, and those Servian lands
-which are, some under the ‘administration,’ some under
-the acknowledged rule, of the King of Hungary and
-Dalmatia.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Rouman
-principalities.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While Servia and Greece were under the immediate
-rule of the Turk, the Rouman lands of <i>Wallachia</i>
-and <i>Moldavia</i> always kept a certain measure of separate
-being. The Turk named and deposed their
-princes, but they never came under his direct rule.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Wallachia
-and
-Moldavia.
-1861.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After the Treaty of Paris, the two principalities, being
-again allowed to choose for themselves, took the
-first step towards union by choosing the same prince.
-Then followed their complete union as the <i>Principality
-of Roumania</i>, paying tribute to the Turk, but otherwise
-free.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-Roumania.
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last changes have made Roumania,
-as well as Servia, an independent state. Its frontier
-towards Russia, enlarged at Paris, was cut short at
-Berlin.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Change of
-its frontier.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this last treaty restored to it the land of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">{454}</a></span>
-<i>Dobrutcha</i> south of the Danube, thus giving the new
-state a certain Euxine sea-board. Thus the Roumans,
-the Romance-speaking people of Eastern Europe, still a
-scattered remnant in their older seats, have, in their
-great colony on the Danube, won for themselves a
-place among the nations of Europe.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pb2">Lastly, while Servia and Roumania have been
-wholly freed from the yoke, a part of <i>Bulgaria</i> has been
-raised to that position of practical independence which
-they formerly held.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Bulgaria
-of San
-Stefano.
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Russian treaty of San Stefano
-decreed a tributary principality of Bulgaria, whose boundaries
-came most nearly to those of the third Bulgarian
-kingdom at its greatest extent. But it was to have, what
-no Bulgarian state had had before, a considerable
-Ægæan sea-board. This would have had the effect of
-splitting the immediate dominion of the Turk in two. It
-would also have had the real fault of adding to Bulgaria
-some districts which ought rather to be added to free
-Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Treaty of
-Berlin.<br />
-Division of
-Bulgaria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the Treaty of Berlin the Turk was to keep
-the whole north coast of the Ægæan, while the Bulgarian
-nation was split into three parts, in three different political
-conditions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Free.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The oldest and latest Bulgarian land,
-the land between Danube and Balkan, forms, with the
-exception of the corner ceded to Roumania, the tributary
-<i>Principality of Bulgaria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Half-free.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The land immediately
-south of the Danube, the southern Bulgaria of
-history—northern Roumelia, according to the compass—receives
-the diplomatic name of <i>Eastern Roumelia</i>,
-a name which would more naturally take in Constantinople.
-Its political condition is described as ‘administrative
-autonomy,’ a half-way house, it would
-seem, between bondage and freedom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Enslaved.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">{455}</a></span>
-the old Macedonian land, the land for which Basil and
-Samuel strove so stoutly, the question between Greek
-and Bulgarian is held to be solved by handing over
-Greek and Bulgarian alike to the uncovenanted mercies
-of the Turk.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>General
-Survey.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We may end our survey of the south-eastern lands
-by taking a general view of their geographical position
-at some of the most important points in their history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>800.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the eighth century we see the Eastern
-Empire still stretching from Tauros to Sardinia; but
-everywhere, save in its solid Asiatic peninsula, it has
-shrunk up into a dominion of coasts and islands. It
-still holds Sicily, Sardinia, and Crete, the heel and the
-toe of Italy, the outlying duchies of Campania, the outlying
-duchy at the head of the Hadriatic. In its great
-European peninsula it holds the whole of the Ægæan
-coast, a great part of the coasts of the Euxine and the
-Hadriatic. But the lord of the sea rules nowhere far
-from the sea; the inland regions are held, partly by
-the great Bulgarian power, partly by smaller Slavonic
-tribes fluctuating between independence and formal
-submission.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>900.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of the next century the
-general character of the East-Roman dominion remains
-the same, but many points of detail have changed.
-Sardinia and Crete are lost; a corner is all that is
-left in Sicily; but the Imperial power is acknowledged
-along the whole eastern Hadriatic coast; the heel and
-the toe have grown into the dominion of all southern
-Italy; all Greece has been won back to the Empire.
-But the Empire has now new neighbours. The
-Turanian Magyar is seated on the Danube, and other
-kindred nations are pressing in his wake. Russians,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">{456}</a></span>
-Slaves that is under Scandinavian leadership, threaten the
-Empire by sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1000.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last year of the tenth century shows
-Sicily wholly lost, but Crete and Cyprus won back;
-Kilikia and Northern Syria are won again; Bulgaria is
-won and lost again; Russian establishment on the Danube
-is put off for eight hundred years; the great struggle
-is going on to decide whether the Slave or the Eastern
-Roman is to rule in the south-eastern peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>c. 1040.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At
-one moment in the eleventh century we see the
-dominion of the New Rome at its full height. Europe
-south of the Danube and its great tributaries, Asia to
-Caucasus and almost to the Caspian, form a compact
-body of dominion, stretching from the Venetian isles to
-the old Phœnician cities. The Italian and insular
-dominion is untouched; it is enlarged for a moment
-by Sicilian conquest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>c. 1090.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another glance, half-a-century
-later, shows the time when the Empire was most frightfully
-cut short by old enemies and new. The Servian
-wins back his own land; the Saracen wins back Sicily.
-The Norman in Italy cuts down the Imperial dominion
-to the nominal superiority of Naples, the last of Greek
-cities in the West, as Kymê was the first. For a
-moment he even plants himself east of Hadria, and
-rends away Corfu and Durazzo from the Eastern world,
-as Rome rent them away thirteen centuries before.
-The Turk swallows up the inland provinces of Asia; he
-plants his throne at Nikaia, and leaves to the Empire
-no Asiatic dominion beyond a strip of Euxine and
-Ægæan coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>c. 1180.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Towards the end of the twelfth century,
-the Empire is restored to its full extent in Europe;
-Servia and Dalmatia are won back, Hungary itself
-looks like a vassal. In Asia the inland realm of the
-Turk is hemmed in by the strong Imperial grasp of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">{457}</a></span>
-whole coast-line, Euxine, Ægæan, and Mediterranean.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>c. 1200.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the next moment comes the beginning of the final
-overthrow; before the century is out, the distant
-possessions of the Empire have either fallen away of
-themselves, or have been rent away by other powers.
-Bulgaria, Cyprus, Trebizond, Corfu, even Epeiros and
-Hellas, have parted away, or are in the act of parting
-away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1204.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Venice, its long nominal homage cast aside,
-joins with faithless crusaders to split the Empire in
-pieces. The Flemish Emperor reigns at Constantinople;
-the Lombard King reigns at Thessalonikê; Achaia,
-Athens, Naxos, give their names to more abiding
-dynasties; Venice plants herself firmly in Crete and
-Peloponnêsos. Still the Empire is not dead. The
-Frank, victorious in Europe, hardly wins a footing in
-Asia. Nikaia and Trebizond keep on the Imperial succession,
-and a third Greek power, for a moment Imperial
-also, holds it in Western Greece and the islands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1250.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Fifty years later, the Empire of Nikaia has become an
-European power; it has already outlived the Latin
-dominion at Thessalonikê; it has checked the revived
-power of Bulgaria; it has cut short the Latin Empire
-to the immediate neighbourhood of the Imperial city.
-To the north Servia is strengthening herself; Bosnia is
-coming into being; the Dalmatian cities are tossed to
-and fro among their neighbours.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1300.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another glance at the
-end of the thirteenth century shows us the revived East-Roman
-Empire in its old Imperial seat, still in Europe
-an advancing and conquering power, ruling on the
-three seas of its own peninsula, established once more in
-Peloponnêsos, a compact and seemingly powerful state,
-as compared with the Epeirot, Achaian, and Athenian
-principalities, or with the scattered possessions of Venice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">{458}</a></span>
-in the Greek lands. But the power which seems so
-firmly established in Europe has all but passed away in
-Asia. There the Turk has taken the place of the Greek,
-and the Greek the place of the Frank, as they stood a
-hundred years earlier. And behind the immediate
-Turkish enemies stands that younger and mightier
-Turkish power which is to swallow up all its neighbours,
-Mussulman and Christian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>c. 1354.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the central years
-of the fourteenth century we see the Empire hemmed
-in between two enemies, European and Asiatic, which
-have risen to unexpected power at the same time.
-Part of Thrace, Chalkidikê, part of Thessaly, a few
-scattered points in Asia, are left to the Empire; in
-Peloponnêsos alone is it an advancing power; everywhere
-else its frontiers have fallen back. The Servian
-Tzar rules from the Danube to the Gulf of Corinth.
-The Ottoman Emir has left but a few fragments to the
-Empire in Asia, and has already fixed his grasp on
-Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1400.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before the century is ended, neither Constantinople,
-nor Servia, nor any other Christian power, is
-dominant in the south-eastern peninsula. The Ottoman
-rules in their stead. The Empire is cut short to a
-corner of Thrace, with Thessalonikê, Chalkidikê, and
-the Peloponnesian province which now forms its greatest
-possession. Instead of the great power of Servia, we
-see a crowd of small principalities, Greek, Slavonic,
-and Albanian, falling for the most part under either
-Ottoman or Venetian supremacy. The Servian name
-is still borne by one of them; but its prince is a
-Turkish vassal; the true representative of Servian independence
-has already begun to show itself among the
-mountains which look down on the mouths of Cattaro
-and the lake of Skodra. Bulgaria has fallen lower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">{459}</a></span>
-still; the Turk’s immediate power reaches to the
-Danube. Bosnia at one end, the Frank principalities
-at the other end, the Venetian islands in either sea, still
-hold out; but the Turk has begun, if not to rule over
-them, at least to harry them. Within the memory of
-men who could remember when the Empire of Servia
-was not yet, who could remember when the eagles of
-Constantinople still went forth to victory, the Ottoman
-had become the true master of the South-Eastern lands;
-whatever has as yet escaped his grasp remained simply
-as remnants ready for the gleaning.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>1500.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We will take our next glance in the later years
-of the fifteenth century, a few years after the death of
-the great conqueror. The momentary break-up of
-the power of the Ottoman has been followed by the
-greatest of his conquests. All now is over. The New
-Rome is the seat of barbarian power. Trebizond,
-Peloponnêsos, Athens, Euboia, the remnant of independent
-Epeiros, Servia, Bosnia, Albania, all are gathered
-in. The islands are still mostly untouched; but the
-whole mainland is conquered, save where Venice still
-holds her outposts, and where the warrior prelates of
-the Black Mountain, the one independent Christian
-power from the Save to Cape Matapan, have entered on
-their career of undying glory. With these small exceptions,
-the whole dominion of the Macedonian Emperors
-has passed into Ottoman hands, together with a vast
-tributary dominion beyond the Danube, much of which
-had never bowed to either Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1600.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of another
-century, we see all Hungary, save a tributary remnant,
-a subject land of the Turk. We see Venice shorn of
-Cyprus and all her Peloponnesian possessions. The
-Dukes have gone from Naxos and the Knights from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">{460}</a></span>
-Rhodes, and the Mussulman lord of so many Christian
-lands has spread his power over his fellow Mussulmans
-in Syria, Egypt, and Africa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1700.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another century passes,
-and the tide is turned. The Turk can still conquer; he
-has won Crete abidingly and Podolia for a moment.
-But the crescent has passed away for ever from Buda
-and from the Western isles; it has passed away for a
-moment from Corinth and all Peloponnêsos.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1800.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the
-end of another century we see the Turk’s immediate
-possession bounded by the Save and the Danube, and
-his overlordship bounded by the Dniester. His old
-rivals Poland and Venice are no more; but Austria
-hems in his Slavonic provinces; France struggles for
-the islands off his western shore; Russia watches him
-from the peninsula so long held by the free Goth and
-the free Greek.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Seventy-eight years more, and his
-shadow of overlordship ends at the Danube, his shadow
-of immediate dominion ends at the Balkan. Free
-Greece, free Servia, free Roumania—Montenegro again
-reaching to her own sea—Bulgaria parted into three,
-but longing for reunion—Bosnia, Herzegovina, Cyprus,
-held in a mysterious way by neighbouring or distant
-European powers—all join to form, not so much a
-picture as a dissolving view. We see in them a transitional
-state of things, which diplomacy fondly believes
-to be an eternal settlement of an eternal question, but
-of which reason and history can say only that we
-know not what a day may bring forth.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[Long after this chapter was written, after the whole of it was
-printed, after a great part of it was revised for the press, there appeared
-the first volume of the great collection of C. N. Sathas,
-Μνημεῖα τῆς Ἑλληνικῆς Ἱσορίας, <i>Documents Inédits relatifs à
-l’Histoire de la Grèce au Moyen Âge</i> (Paris, 1880). In his preface
-M. Sathas insists on two points. One is the Greek character of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">{461}</a></span>
-Eastern Empire throughout its whole being; that it had a Greek
-side no one ever thought of denying. He brings together a good
-many occasional instances, largely from unprinted manuscripts, of
-the use of Ἕλλην and Ἑλλάς through the whole period of the
-Empire. That the name came into rhetorical use by a kind of
-<i>Renaissance</i> about the thirteenth century is undoubted. I brought
-together some few instances in my Historical Essays, iii. 246, and the
-whole history of Laonikos Chalkokondylas is one long instance. M.
-Sathas brings several others from much earlier times. But they
-seem to me to be mainly cases of the rhetorical use of an antiquated
-name, such as is common among all nations. They do not seem to
-affect the proposition that the regular national name of the Empire
-and its people was always <i>Roman</i>. M. Sathas’ other point is somewhat
-startling. It is that the Slavonic occupation of a large part of
-Greece, as to the extent of which there has been much disputing,
-but which I never before saw altogether denied, is all a mistake.
-According to him the settlers were not Slaves, but Albanians, called
-Slaves by that lax use of national names of which there certainly
-are plenty of instances. I cannot undertake either to accept or to
-refute M. Sathas’ doctrine during the process of revising a proof-sheet.
-I can only put the fact on record that one who has gone very deeply
-into the matter has come to this, to me at least, altogether new
-conclusion.]</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">{462}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE BALTIC LANDS.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lands beyond
-the
-two
-Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> survey of the two Empires and of the powers
-which sprang out of them has still left out of sight
-a large part of Europe, including some lands which
-formed part of the elder Empire. It is only indirectly
-that we have spoken of the extreme north,
-the extreme east, or the extreme west, of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span><i>Quasi</i>-Imperial
-position of
-certain
-powers.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In all these regions powers have risen and fallen
-which might pass for shadows of the two Empires
-of Rome.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The British
-islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus in the north-west lie two great islands
-with a following of smaller ones, of which the
-elder Empire never held more than part of the greater
-island and those of the smaller ones which could
-not be separated from it. Britain passed for a world
-of its own, and the princes who rose to a <i>quasi</i>-Imperial
-position within that world took, by a kind
-of analogy, the titles of Empire.<a name="FNanchor_51" id="FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scandinavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the extreme
-north are a larger and smaller peninsula, with their
-attendant islands, which lay wholly beyond the elder
-Empire, and of which the later Western Empire took
-in only a very small part for a short time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Empire
-of Cnut.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-momentary union of these two insular and peninsular
-systems, of Britain and Scandinavia, formed more truly
-a third Empire of the North, fully the fellow of those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">{463}</a></span>
-of the East and West.<a name="FNanchor_52" id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the south-west of Europe
-again lay another great peninsula, which had been
-fully incorporated with the elder Empire, parts of
-which—at two opposite ends—had belonged to the
-Empire of Justinian and to the Empire of Charles,
-but whose history, as a whole, stands apart from that
-of either the Eastern or the Western Roman power.
-And in Spain also, as being, like Britain, in some sort
-a world of its own, the leading power asserted an
-Imperial rank.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Castilian
-Emperors.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As Wessex had its Emperors, so had
-Castile.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-the lands
-beyond the
-Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Britain, Scandinavia, and Spain, thus form three
-marked geographical wholes, three great divisions of
-that part of Europe which lay outside the bounds of
-either Empire at the time of the separation. But the
-geographical position of the three regions has led to
-marked differences in their history. Insular Britain is
-wholly oceanic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-comparison
-of
-Scandinavia
-and
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Peninsular Spain and Scandinavia have
-each an oceanic side; but each has also a side towards
-one of the great inland seas of Europe—Spain towards
-the Mediterranean, Scandinavia towards the northern
-Mediterranean, the Baltic. But the Baltic side of
-Scandinavia has been of far greater relative importance
-than the Mediterranean side of Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Aragon in
-the Mediterranean.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the three chief
-Spanish kingdoms Aragon alone has a Mediterranean
-history; the seaward course of Castile and Portugal
-was oceanic. Of the three Scandinavian kingdoms
-Norway alone is wholly oceanic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-Sweden in
-the Baltic.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark is more
-Baltic than oceanic; the whole historic life of Sweden
-lies on the Baltic coasts. The Mediterranean position
-of Aragon enabled her to win whole kingdoms as
-her dependencies. But they were not geographically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">{464}</a></span>
-continuous, and they never could be incorporated.
-Sweden, on the other hand, was able to establish a
-continuous dominion on both sides of the great northern
-gulfs, and to make at least a nearer approach to the
-incorporation of her conquests than Aragon could ever
-make.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth
-and decline
-of Sweden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The history of Sweden mainly consists in the
-growth and the loss of her dominion in the Baltic lands
-out of her own peninsula. It is only in quite modern
-times that the union of the crowns, though not of
-the kingdoms, of Sweden and Norway has created
-a power wholly peninsular and equally Baltic and
-oceanic.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-and
-western aspects
-of
-Scandinavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This eastern aspect of Scandinavian history needs the
-more to be insisted on, because there is another side of it
-with which we are naturally more likely to be struck.
-Scandinavian inroads and conquests—inroads and conquests,
-that is, from Denmark and Norway—make
-up a large part of the early history of Gaul and Britain.
-When this phase of their history ends, the Scandinavian
-kingdoms are apt to pass out of our sight, till we are
-perhaps surprised at the great part which they suddenly
-play in Europe in the seventeenth century. But both
-Denmark and Sweden had meanwhile been running
-their course in the lands north, east, and south of the
-Baltic. And it is this Baltic side of their history which
-is of primary importance in our general European
-view.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Baltic
-lands generally.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It follows then that, for the purposes of our present
-survey, while the British islands and the Spanish peninsula
-will each claim a distinct treatment, we cannot
-separate the Scandinavian peninsulas from the general
-mass of the Baltic lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Northern
-Slavonic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We must look at Scandinavia
-in close geographical connexion with the region<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">{465}</a></span>
-which stretches from the centre to the extreme east of
-Europe, a region which, while by no means wholly Slavonic,
-is best marked as containing the seats of the
-northern branch of the Slavonic race. This region has a
-constant connexion with both German and Scandinavian
-history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Germanized
-Slavonic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It takes in those wide lands, once Slavonic,
-which have at various times been more or less
-thoroughly incorporated with Germany, but which did
-not become German without vigorous efforts to make
-large parts of them Scandinavian. In another part of
-our survey we have watched them join on to the
-Teutonic body; we must now watch them drop off
-from the Slavonic body.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Northern
-Slaves
-under
-Hungary
-or Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And with them we must take
-another glimpse at those among the Northern Slaves who
-passed under the power of the Magyar, and of that composite
-dominion which claims the Magyar crown among
-many others. These North-Slavonic lands which have
-passed to non-Slavonic rulers form a region stretching
-from Holstein to the Austrian kingdom of Galicia
-and Lodomeria and to the Slovak and Ruthenian districts
-of Hungary. But above all, this North-Slavonic
-region takes in those two branches of the Slavonic race
-which have in turn lorded it over one another, neither
-of which passed permanently under the lordship of
-either Empire, but one of which owed its unity and
-national life to settlers from the Scandinavian north.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Characteristics
-of
-Poland and
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That is to say, it is the land of the Pole and the Russian,
-the land of the two branches of the Slavonic race which
-passed severally under the spiritual dominion of the
-elder and the younger Rome without passing under the
-temporal dominion of either.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-primitive
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And within the same
-region we have to deal with the remnant that is left of
-those ancient nations, Aryan and non-Aryan, which so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">{466}</a></span>
-long refused all obedience to either Church as well as to
-either Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Aryan
-nations;
-Prussians
-and Lithuanians.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The region at which we now look takes
-in the land of those elder brethren of the European
-family whose speech has changed less than any other
-European tongue from the Aryan speech once common to
-all. Alongside of the Orthodox Russian, of the Catholic
-Pole, of the Swede first Catholic and then Lutheran, we
-have to look on the long abiding heathendom of the
-Lithuanian and the Prussian.<a name="FNanchor_53" id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Non-Aryan
-Fins.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And at their side we
-have to look on older races still, on the præ-Aryan
-nations on either side of the Bothnian and Finnish gulfs.
-The history of the eastern coast of the Baltic is the
-history of the struggle for the rule or the destruction of
-these ancient nations at the hands of their Teutonic
-and Slavonic neighbours.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Central
-position of
-the North-Slavonic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The whole North-Slavonic region, north-eastern
-rather than central with regard to Europe in general,
-has still a central character of its own. It is connected
-with the history of northern, of western, and
-of south-eastern Europe. The falling away of so
-many Slavonic lands to Germany is of itself no small
-part of German history. But besides this, the strictly
-Polish and Russian area marches at once on the
-Western Empire, on the lands which fringe the Eastern
-Empire, on the Scandinavian North, and on the barbarian
-lands to the north-east. This last feature is a
-characteristic both of the North-Slavonic region and of
-the Scandinavian peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Barbarian
-neighbours
-of Russia
-and Scandinavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Norway, Sweden, Russia,
-are the only European powers whose land has always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">{467}</a></span>
-marched on the land of barbarian neighbours, and have
-therefore been able to conquer and colonize in barbarian
-lands simply by extending their own frontiers. This
-was done by Norway and Sweden as far as their geographical
-position allowed them; but it has been done on
-a far greater scale by Russia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-conquest
-and colonization
-by land.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While other European
-nations have conquered and colonized by sea, Russia,
-the one European state of later times which has marched
-upon Asia, has found a boundless field for conquest and
-colonization by land. She has had her India, her
-Canada, and her Australia, her Mexico, her Brazil, her
-Java, and her Algeria, geographically continuous with
-her European territory. This fact is the key to much
-in the later history of Russia.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relation of
-the Baltic
-lands to
-the two
-Empires.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>With regard to the two Empires, the lands round
-the Baltic show us several relations.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Norway
-always independent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Scandinavia,
-Norway stands alone in never having had anything to
-do with the Roman power in any of its forms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-of Sweden
-and Denmark
-to the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Sweden
-itself has always been equally independent; but in later
-times Swedish kings have held fiefs within the Western
-Empire. The position of Denmark has naturally caused
-it to have much more to do with its Roman or German
-neighbour. In earlier times some Danish kings became
-vassals of the Empire for the Danish crown; others
-made conquests within the lands of the Empire. In
-later times Danish kings have held fiefs within the
-German kingdom and have been members of the more
-modern Confederation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Empire
-and the
-West-Slavonic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The western parts of the Slavonic
-region became formally part of the Western Empire.
-But this was after the Empire had put on the character
-of a German state; these lands were not drawn to it from
-its strictly Imperial side.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Poland and
-the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Poland sometimes passed in
-early days for a fief of the German kingdom; in later days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">{468}</a></span>
-it was divided between the two chief powers which
-arose out of that kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-of Russia
-to the
-Eastern
-Church and
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Russia, on the other hand,
-the pupil of the Eastern Empire, has never been the
-subject or the vassal of either Empire. When Russia
-had an external overlord, he was an Asiatic barbarian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Imperial
-style of
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The peculiar relation between Russia and Constantinople,
-spiritual submission combined with temporal independence,
-has led to the appearance in Russia of Imperial
-ideas and titles with a somewhat different meaning from
-that with which they were taken in Spain and in
-Britain. The Russian prince claims the Imperial style
-and bearings, not so much as holding an Imperial
-position in a world of his own, as because the most
-powerful prince of the Eastern Church in some sort
-inherits the position of the Eastern Emperor in the
-general world of Europe.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Scandinavian Lands after the Separation of the Empires.</i></h3>
-
-<p>At the end of the eighth century the Scandinavian
-and Slavonic inhabitants of the Baltic lands as yet
-hardly touched one another. The most northern
-Scandinavians and the most northern Slaves were still
-far apart; if the two races anywhere marched on one
-another, it must have been at the extreme south-western
-corner of the Baltic coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Baltic
-still
-mainly
-held by the
-earlier
-races.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greater part of that
-coast, all its northern and eastern parts, was still held
-by the earlier nations, Aryan and non-Aryan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formation
-of the
-Scandinavian
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But,
-within the two Scandinavian peninsulas, the three
-Scandinavian nations were fast forming. A number
-of kindred tribes were settling down into the kingdoms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">{469}</a></span>
-of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden,<a name="FNanchor_54" id="FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> which,
-sometimes separate, sometimes united, have existed
-ever since.</p>
-
-<p>Of these three, Denmark, the only one which had
-a frontier towards the Empire, was naturally the first to
-play a part in general European history.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formation
-of the
-Danish
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the course
-of the tenth century, under the half-mythical Gorm and
-his successors Harold and Sven, the Danish kingdom
-itself, as distinguished from other lands held in after
-times by its kings, reached nearly its full historical
-extent in the two peninsulas and the islands between
-them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Denmark
-in the
-northern
-peninsula.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Halland</i> and <i>Skåne</i> or <i>Scania</i>, it must always be
-remembered, are from the beginning at least as Danish
-as Zealand and Jutland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Frontier
-of the
-Eider.<br />
-The
-Danish
-March.
-934-1027.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Eider remained the frontier
-towards the Empire, save during part of the tenth and
-eleventh centuries, when the Danish frontier withdrew
-to the Dannewerk, and the land between the two
-boundaries formed the <i>Danish March</i> of the Empire.
-Under Cnut the old frontier was restored.</p>
-
-<p>The name of <i>Northmen</i>,<a name="FNanchor_55" id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> which the Franks used in
-a laxer way for the Scandinavian nations generally, was
-confined to the people of <i>Norway</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Formation
-of the
-kingdom of
-Norway.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were formed
-into a single kingdom under Harold Harfagra late in
-the ninth century. The Norwegian realm of that day
-stretched far beyond the bounds of the later Norway,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">{470}</a></span>
-having an indefinite extension over tributary Finnish
-tribes as far as the White Sea. The central part of
-the eastern side of the northern peninsula, between
-Denmark to the south and the Finnish nations to
-the north, was held by two Scandinavian settlements
-which grew into the Swedish kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Swedes and
-<i>Gauts</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were
-those of the Swedes strictly so called, and of the
-<i>Geátas</i> or <i>Gauts</i>. This last name has naturally been
-confounded with that of the Goths, and has given
-the title of <i>King of the Goths</i> to the princes of
-Sweden. <i>Gothland</i>, east and west, lay on each side of
-Lake Wettern. <i>Swithiod</i> or <i>Svealand</i>, Sweden proper,
-lay on both sides of the great arm of the sea whose
-entrance is guarded by the modern capital.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Swedish
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union
-of Svealand and Gothland made up the kingdom of
-Sweden.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-towards
-Norway
-and Denmark.
-1111.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Its early boundaries towards both Denmark
-and Norway were fluctuating. <i>Wermeland</i>, immediately
-to the north of Lake Wenern, and <i>Jamteland</i> farther to
-the north, were long a debateable land. At the beginning
-of the twelfth century Wermeland passed finally
-to Sweden, and Jamteland for several ages to Norway.
-<i>Bleking</i> again, at the south-east corner of the peninsula,
-was a debateable land between Sweden and Denmark
-which passed to Denmark.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth to
-the north.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a land thus bounded
-the natural course of extension by land lay to the
-north, along the west coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. In
-the course of the eleventh century at the latest, Sweden
-began to spread itself in that direction over <i>Helsingland</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Sweden had thus a better opportunity than Denmark
-and Norway for extension of her own borders by land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Western
-expeditions
-of the
-Danes and
-Northmen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile Denmark and Norway, looking to the west,
-had their great time of Oceanic conquest and colonization<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">{471}</a></span>
-in the ninth and tenth centuries.<a name="FNanchor_56" id="FNanchor_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> These two processes
-must be distinguished.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Some lands, like the
-Northumbrian and East-Anglian kingdoms in Britain and
-the duchy of Normandy in Gaul, received Scandinavian
-princes and a Scandinavian element in their population,
-without the geographical area of Scandinavia being
-extended.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But that area may be looked on as being extended
-by colonies like those of <i>Orkney</i>, <i>Shetland</i>,
-<i>Faroe</i>, the islands off the western coast of Scotland,
-<i>Man</i>, <i>Iceland</i>, <i>Greenland</i>. Some of these were actually
-discovered and settled for the first time by the Northmen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlements
-in
-Ireland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The settlements on the east coast of Ireland,
-Dublin, Waterford, Wexford, may also pass as outposts
-of Scandinavia on Celtic ground. Of these outlying
-Scandinavian lands, some of the islands, specially
-Iceland, have remained Scandinavian; the settlements
-on the mainland of Britain and Ireland, and on the
-islands nearest to them, have been merged in the British
-kingdoms or have become dependencies of the British
-crown.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Expedition
-to the east.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Against this vast range of Oceanic settlement there
-is as yet little to set in the form of Baltic conquest on
-the part of Norway and Denmark. Norway indeed
-hardly could become a Baltic power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danes in
-Samland.
-950.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But there was
-a Danish occupation of <i>Samland</i> in Prussia in the tenth
-century, which caused that land to be reckoned among
-the kingdoms which made up the Northern Empire of
-Cnut.<a href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Jomsburg.
-935-1043.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There is also the famous settlement of the
-<i>Jomsburg</i> Wikings at the mouth of the Oder. But the
-great eastern extension of Danish power came later.
-Nor did the lasting Swedish occupation of the lands
-east of the gulf of Bothnia begin till the twelfth century.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">{472}</a></span>
-But there is no doubt that, long before this, there were
-Swedish inroads and occasional Swedish conquests in
-other parts of the Baltic lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Swedish
-conquest of
-Curland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus <i>Curland</i> is said
-to have been won for a while by Sweden, and to have
-been again won back by its own Lettic people.<a name="FNanchor_57" id="FNanchor_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> The
-ninth century indeed saw a wonderful extension of
-Scandinavian dominion far to the east and far to the
-south. But it was neither ordinary conquest nor ordinary
-settlement. No new Scandinavian people was
-planted, as in Orkney and Iceland. Nor were Scandinavian
-outposts planted, as in Ireland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scandinavians
-in
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Scandinavian
-princes, who in three generations lost all trace of their
-Scandinavian origin, created, under the name of <i>Russia</i>,
-the greatest of Slavonic powers. The vast results of
-their establishment have been results on the history and
-geography of the Slaves; on Scandinavian geography
-it had no direct effect at all. Still it forms a connecting
-link between the Scandinavian lands west and north of
-the Baltic and the Slavonic region to the east and south
-of that sea.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Lands East and South of the Baltic at the Separation of the Empires.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slaves
-between
-Elbe and
-Dnieper.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the ninth century the inland
-region stretching from the Elbe a little beyond the
-Dnieper was continuously held by various Slavonic
-nations. Their land marched on the German kingdom
-at one end, and on various Finnish and Turkish nations
-at the other.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their lack
-of sea-board.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But their sea-board was comparatively
-small. Wholly cut off from the Euxine, from the
-northern Ocean, and from the great gulfs of the Baltic,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">{473}</a></span>
-their only coast was that which reaches from the modern
-haven of Kiel to the mouth of the Vistula. And this
-Slavonic coast was gradually brought under German
-influence and dominion, and has been in the end fully
-incorporated with the German state. It follows then
-that, in tracing the history of the chief Slavonic powers
-in this region, of Bohemia, Poland, and Russia, we are
-dealing with powers which are almost wholly inland.
-At the time of the separation of the Empires, there was
-no one great Slavonic power in these parts. One
-such, with Bohemia for its centre, had shown itself for a
-moment in the seventh century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemian
-kingdom
-of Samo.
-623.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was the kingdom
-of Samo, which, if its founder was really of
-Frankish birth, forms an exact parallel to Bulgaria
-and Russia, also Slavonic powers created by foreign
-princes.<a name="FNanchor_58" id="FNanchor_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Great-Moravia.
-884.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next considerable power which arose
-nearly on the same ground was the Great Moravian
-kingdom of Sviatopluk, which passed away before the
-advance of the Magyars. Before its fall the Russian
-power had already begun to form itself far to the
-north-east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Four
-Slavonic
-groups.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Looking at the map just before the beginning
-of the momentary Moravian and the lasting
-Russian power, the North-Slavonic nations fall into four
-main historical groups.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>North-western
-group;
-thoroughly
-Germanized.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-There are, first, the tribes to
-the north-west, whose lands, answering roughly to the
-modern Mecklenburg, Pomerania, Brandenburg, and
-Saxony, have been thoroughly Germanized.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>South-western
-group under
-German
-supremacy<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Secondly,
-there are the tribes to the south-west in <i>Bohemia</i>,
-<i>Moravia</i>, and <i>Lusatia</i>, which were brought under
-German dominion or supremacy, but from which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">{474}</a></span>
-Slavonic nationality has not in the same sort passed
-away. <i>Silesia</i>, connected in different ways with both
-these groups, forms the link between them and the third
-group.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Central
-group;
-Polish.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is formed by the central tribes of the whole
-region, lying between the Magyar to the south and the
-Prussian to the north, whose union made up the
-original Polish kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-group;
-Russian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, to the east lie the
-tribes which joined to form the original Russian state.
-Looking at these groups in our own time, we may
-say that from the first of them all signs of Slavonic
-nationality have passed away. The second and third,
-speaking roughly, keep nationality without political
-independence. The fourth group has grown into the
-one great modern power whose ruling nationality is
-Slavonic.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p2">With regard to the first group, we have now to
-trace from the Slavonic side the same changes of frontier
-which we have already slightly glanced at from the
-German side.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Polabic
-group.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the land between the Elbe and the
-Oder, taking the upper course of those rivers as represented
-by their tributaries the Saale and the Bober,
-we find that division of the Slaves which their own
-historian marks off as <i>Polabic</i>.<a name="FNanchor_59" id="FNanchor_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> These again fall
-under three groups.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sorabi.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First, to the south, in the modern
-Saxony, are the <i>Sorabi</i>, the northern Serbs, cut off
-for ever from their southern brethren by the Magyar
-inroad.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Leuticii.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the north of them lie the <i>Leuticii</i>, <i>Weleti</i>,
-<i>Weletabi</i>, or <i>Wiltsi</i>, and other tribes stretching to the
-Baltic in modern Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Obotrites:<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the north-west corner, in Mecklenburg and eastern
-Holstein, were the <i>Obotrites</i>, <i>Wagri</i>, and other tribes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">{475}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>their relations
-to the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Through the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries the
-relations between these lands and the Western Empire
-was not unlike the relation of the southern Slaves
-to the Eastern Empire during the same ages. Only
-the Western Emperors never had such a rival on
-their immediate border as the Bulgaria of Simeon
-or Samuel.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-of
-tribute and
-independence.
-921-968.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Slavonic tribes on the north-eastern
-border of the Western Empire were tributary or independent,
-according as the Empire was strong or
-weak. Tributary under Charles the Great, tributary
-again under the great Saxon kings, they had an intermediate
-period of independence. The German dominion,
-which fell back in the latter part of the tenth
-century, was again asserted by the Saxon dukes and
-margraves in the eleventh and twelfth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final
-conquest.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Long before
-the end of the twelfth century the work was done.
-The German dominion, and with it the Christian
-religion, had been forced on the Slaves between Elbe
-and Oder.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of the
-Sorabi.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Serbs between Elbe and Saale seem to have
-been the earliest and the most thoroughly conquered.
-They never won back their full independence after the
-victories of the first Saxon kings. The Serbs between
-Elbe and Bober, sometimes tributary to the Empire,
-were also sometimes independent, sometimes under the
-superiority of kindred powers like Poland or Bohemia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Meissen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The lands included in the mark of <i>Meissen</i> were
-thoroughly Germanized by the twelfth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lusatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-in the lands included in the mark of <i>Lusatia</i> the
-Slavonic speech and nationality still keep a firm
-hold.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Leuticians.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Leutician land to the north was lost and won
-over and over again.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>927-1157.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Branibor</i>, the German <i>Brandenburg</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">{476}</a></span>
-was often taken and retaken during a space of two
-hundred years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>983.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Late in the tenth century the whole
-land won back its freedom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1030-1101.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the eleventh it came
-under the Polish power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1134-1157.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last, the reign of Albert
-the Bear finally added to Germany the land which
-was to contain the latest German capital, and made
-Brandenburg a German <i>mark</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the land lying on that narrow part of the
-Baltic which bore the special name of the <i>Slavonic
-Gulf</i>, the alternations of revolt and submission, from
-the ninth century to the twelfth, were endless. Here
-we can trace out native dynasties, one of which has
-lasted to our own day.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Sclavinia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The mark of the Billungs<a name="FNanchor_60" id="FNanchor_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>
-alternates with the <i>kingdom of Sclavinia</i>, and the kingdom
-of Sclavinia alternates between heathen and
-Christian princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Przemyslaf.
-1161.<br />
-House of
-Mecklenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At last, in the twelfth century, the
-last heathen King of the Wends became the first
-Christian Duke, the founder of the house of Mecklenburg.
-Part of this region, Western Pomerania and
-the island of <i>Rügen</i>, became, both in this and in
-later times, a special borderland of Germany and
-Scandinavia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rügen
-under
-Denmark.
-1168-1325.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Rügen and the neighbouring coast became
-a Danish possession in the twelfth century, and
-so remained into the fourteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1214-1223.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom of
-Sclavinia itself became Danish for a short season. A
-Scandinavian power appeared again in the same region
-in the seventeenth century. With these exceptions,
-the history of these lands from the twelfth century
-onward, is that of members of the German kingdom.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p2 pb2">It was otherwise with the second group, with the
-Slaves who dwelled within the fence of the Giant Mountains,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">{477}</a></span>
-and with their neighbours to the north-east, on
-the upper course of the Oder as well as on the Wag and
-the northern Morava.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Bohemia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Here a Slavonic kingdom has
-lived on to this day, though it early passed under German
-supremacy, and though it has been for ages ruled
-by German kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>928.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Bohemia</i>, the land of the <i>Czechs</i>,
-tributary to Charles the Great, part of the kingdom of
-Sviatopluk, became definitely a German fief through
-the wars of the Saxon kings. But this did not hinder
-Bohemia from becoming, later in the century, an advancing
-and conquering power, the seat of a short-lived
-dominion, like those of Samo and Sviatopluk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Moravians
-and
-Slovaks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the
-east of the Czechs of Bohemia lie the <i>Moravians</i> and
-<i>Slovaks</i>, that branch of the Slavonic race which formed
-the centre of the kingdom of Sviatopluk, and which bore
-the main brunt of the Magyar invasion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Magyar
-conquest of
-Moravia.
-906-955.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A large part of
-the Slaves of this region fell permanently under Magyar
-rule; so did Moravia itself for a season. Since then
-Bohemia and Moravia have usually had a common
-destiny.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of Bohemia.
-973-999.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the century the Czechish dominion
-reached to the Oder, and took in the Northern <i>Chrobatia</i>
-on the upper Vistula. This dominion passed away
-with the great growth of the Polish power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia
-and
-Moravia
-under
-Poland.
-1003-1004.<br />
-1003-1029.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Bohemia
-itself for a moment, Moravia for a somewhat longer
-time, became Polish dependencies, and the Magyar won
-a further land between the Wag and the Olzava.
-Later events led to another growth of Bohemia, in more
-forms than one, but always as a member of the Roman
-Empire and the German kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Polish
-kingdom.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While our second group thus passed under German
-dominion without ceasing to be Slavonic, among the
-third group a great Slavonic power arose whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">{478}</a></span>
-adhesion to the Western Church made it part of the
-general Western world, but which was never brought
-under the lasting supremacy of the Western Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its relations
-to
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Large parts of the old Polish lands have passed under
-German rule; some parts have been largely Germanized.
-But Poland, as a whole, has never been either
-Germanized or brought under lasting German rule.
-Holding the most central position of any European
-state, Poland has had to struggle against enemies from
-every quarter, against the Swede from the Baltic and
-the Turk from the Danube.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rivalry of
-Poland and
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the distinguishing
-feature of its history has been its abiding rivalry with
-the Slavonic land to the east of it. The common
-history of Poland and Russia is a history of conquest
-and partition, wrought by whichever power was at the
-time the stronger.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Lechs
-or Poles.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Our first glimmerings of light in these parts show us
-a number of kindred tribes holding the land between
-Oder and Vistula, with the coast between the mouths
-of those rivers. East of the Vistula they are cut off
-from the sea by the Prussians; but in the inland region
-they stretch somewhat to the east of that river. To
-the west the Oder and Bober may be taken as their
-boundary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>White
-Chrobatia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the upper course of these rivers is the
-home of another kindred people, the northern branch
-of the Chrobatians or Croats, whose land of <i>White
-Chrobatia</i> stretched on both sides of the Carpathians.
-These Slaves of the central and lower Oder
-and Vistula would seem to be best distinguished as
-<i>Lechs</i>; <i>Poland</i> is the name of the land rather than of
-the people.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Polish
-tribes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Mazovia</i>, <i>Cujavia</i>, <i>Silesia</i>—the German
-<i>Schlesien</i>—with the sea land, <i>Pomore</i>, <i>Pommern</i>, or
-<i>Pomerania</i>, mark different districts held by kindred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">{479}</a></span>
-tribes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of the
-Polish
-kingdom
-at Gnesen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the tenth century a considerable power arose
-for the first time in these regions, having its centre
-between the Warta and the Vistula, at <i>Gniezno</i> or
-<i>Gnesen</i>, the abiding metropolitan city of Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>931-992.
-Conversion
-of Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-extent of the new power under the first Christian
-prince Mieczïslaf answered nearly to the later Great
-Poland, Mazovia, and Silesia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tributary
-to the
-Empire.
-963.<br />
-973.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the Polish duke
-became a vassal of the Empire for his lands west of
-Warta, and suffered some dismemberments to the advantage
-of Bohemia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Boleslaf.
-996-1025.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under his son Boleslaf, Poland
-rose to the same kind of momentary greatness as
-Moravia and Bohemia had already done. The dominions
-of Boleslaf took in, for longer or shorter
-times, Bohemia, Moravia, Lusatia, Silesia, Pomerania,
-Prussia, part of Russia, and part of that middle Slavonic
-land which became the mark of Brandenburg, the districts
-of <i>Barnim</i> and <i>Custrin</i>. Of this great dominion
-some parts fell away during the life of Boleslaf, and
-other parts at his death.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-his reign.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But he none the less established
-Poland as a power, and some of his conquests
-were abiding.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chrobatia
-becomes
-<i>Little
-Poland</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Western Pomerania, Silesia, Barnim and
-Custrin, were kept for a longer or shorter time; and
-Chrobatia north of the Carpathians—the southern part
-fell to the Magyar at his death—remained, under the
-name of <i>Little Poland</i>, as long as Poland lasted at all.
-It supplied the land with its second capital, <i>Cracow</i>.
-From this time Poland ranked sometimes as a kingdom,
-sometimes as a duchy.<a name="FNanchor_61" id="FNanchor_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Internal
-divisions.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Constant divisions among members
-of the ruling house, occasional admissions of the
-outward supremacy of the Empire, did not destroy its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">{480}</a></span>
-national unity and independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Polish
-state
-survives.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A Polish state always
-lived on. And from the end of the thirteenth century,
-it took its place as an important European kingdom,
-holding a distinctive position as the one Slavonic power
-at once attached to the Western Church and independent
-of the Western Empire.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-of Russia
-to the
-Eastern
-Church.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>To the east of the Lechs and Chrobatians lay that
-great group of Slavonic tribes whose distinctive historical
-character is that they stood in the same relation to
-Eastern Christendom in which Poland stands to Western.
-Disciples of the Eastern Church, they were never vassals
-of the Eastern Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Teutonic
-influence
-among
-eastern and
-western
-Slaves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Western Slaves were
-brought under Christian and under Teutonic influences
-by the same process, a process which implied submission,
-or attempted submission, to the Western Empire
-or to some of its princes. The Eastern Slaves were also
-brought under both Christian and Teutonic influences,
-but in wholly different shapes. The Teutonic influence
-came first.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia
-created by
-the Scandinavian
-settlement.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It did not take the form of submission to
-any existing Teutonic power; it was the creation of a
-new Slavonic power under Teutonic rulers. Christianity
-did not come till those Teutonic influences had
-died away, except in their results, and, coming from
-the Eastern centre of Christendom, it had the effect of
-keeping its disciples aloof from both the Christian and
-the Teutonic influences of the West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The name
-<i>Russian</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A group of Slavonic
-tribes, without losing their Slavonic character,
-grew up to national unity, and took up a national name
-from Scandinavian settlers and rulers, the Warangians
-or <i>Russians</i> of the Swedish peninsula.<a name="FNanchor_62" id="FNanchor_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">{481}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Origin of
-Russia.
-862.<br />
-First
-seat at
-Novgorod.
-Russian
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Russian power began by the Scandinavian
-leaders obtaining, in the latter half of the ninth century,
-the dominion of the most northern members of the
-Slavonic race, the Slaves of <i>Novgorod</i> on the Ilmen.
-Thence they pushed their dominion southwards.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the eastern
-Slavonic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-East
-and north-east of the Lechs and Chrobatians lay a
-crowd of Slavonic tribes stretching beyond the Dnieper
-as far as the upper course of the Oka. Cut off from
-the Baltic by the Fins and Letts, they were cut off from
-the Euxine by various Turanian races in turn, first
-Magyars, then Patzinaks. To the south-east, from the
-Dnieper to the Caspian, lay the <i>Chazar</i> dominion, to
-which the Slaves east of Dnieper were tributary. To
-the north-east lay a crowd of Finnish tribes, among
-which is only one Finnish power of historic name, the
-kingdom of <i>Great</i> or <i>White Bulgaria</i> on the Volga.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the eastern
-Slaves.
-862-912.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Within this region, in the space of fifty years, the
-various Slavonic tribes joined in different degrees of
-unity to form the new power, called <i>Russian</i> from its
-Scandinavian leaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-against
-Chazars
-and Fins.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The tribes who were tributary
-to the Chazars were set free, and the Russian power
-was spread over a certain Finnish area on the Upper
-Volga and its tributaries, nearly as far north as Lake
-Bielo.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-centre at
-Kief.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The centres of the new power were, first <i>Novgorod</i>,
-and then <i>Kief</i> on the Dnieper.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The rulers
-of Russia
-become
-Slavonic.<br />
-957-972.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>How early the Scandinavian rulers of the new
-Slavonic power became themselves practically Slavonic
-is shown by the name of the prince Sviatoslaf, of
-whom we have already heard in the Danubian Bulgaria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-enterprise.
-Euxine.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Already had Russian enterprise taken the direction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">{482}</a></span>
-which it took in far later days. It was needful for the developement
-of the new Russian nation to have free access
-to the Euxine. From this they were cut off by a strange
-fate for nine hundred years. But from the very beginning
-more than one attempt was made on Constantinople,
-though the <i>Tzargrad</i>, the Imperial city, could
-be reached only by sailing down the Dnieper through an
-enemy’s country.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-on the
-Caspian.<br />
-Vladimir
-takes
-Cherson.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Sviatoslaf also appears as a conqueror
-in the lands by the Caucasus and the Caspian, and
-Vladimir, the first Christian prince, won his way to
-baptism by an attack on the Imperial city of Cherson.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Isolation
-of Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The oldest Russia was thus, like the oldest Poland,
-emphatically an inland state; but it was far more
-isolated than Poland. Its ecclesiastical position kept it
-from sharing the history of the Western Slaves. Its
-geographical position kept it from sharing the history
-of the Servians and Bulgarians.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-lands west
-of Dnieper.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And it must not be
-forgotten that the oldest Russia was formed mainly of
-lands which afterwards passed under the rule of Poland
-and Lithuania. <i>Little Russia</i>, <i>Black Russia</i>, <i>White
-Russia</i>, <i>Red Russia</i>, all came under foreign rule. The
-Dnieper, from which Russia was afterwards cut off,
-was the great central river of the elder Russia; of the
-Don and the Volga she held only the upper course. The
-northern frontier barely passed the great lakes of Ladoga
-and Onega, and the Gulf of Finland itself. It seems not
-to have reached what was to be the Gulf of Riga, but
-some of the Russian princes held a certain supremacy
-over the Finnish and Lettish tribes of that region.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-principalities.
-1054.<br />
-Supremacy
-of Kief;<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the course of the eleventh century, the Russian
-state, like that of Poland, was divided among princes of
-the reigning family, acknowledging the superiority of
-the great prince of <i>Kief</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of the
-Northern
-Vladimir,
-1169.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century the chief
-power passed from Kief to the northern <i>Vladimir</i> on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">{483}</a></span>
-the Kiasma.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Susdal
-Russian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the former Finnish land of <i>Susdal</i>
-on the upper tributaries of the Volga became the cradle
-of the second Russian power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Commonwealths
-at
-Novgorod
-and Pskof.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Novgorod the Great</i>
-meanwhile, under elective princes, claimed, like its
-neighbour <i>Pskof</i>, to rank among commonwealths. Its
-dominion was spread far over the Finnish tribes to the
-north and east; the White Sea, and, far more precious,
-the Finnish Gulf, had now a Russian seaboard. It was
-out of Vladimir and Novgorod that the Russia of the
-future was to grow.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The principalities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile a crowd of principalities,
-<i>Polotsk</i>, <i>Smolensk</i>, the <i>Severian Novgorod</i>,
-<i>Tchernigof</i>, and others, arose on the Duna and Dnieper.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Commonwealth
-of
-Viatka.
-1174.<br />
-Halicz or
-Galicia.
-1186.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Far to the east across the commonwealth of <i>Viatka</i>, and
-on the frontiers of Poland and Hungary arose the principality
-of <i>Halicz</i> or <i>Galicia</i>, which afterwards grew for
-a while into a powerful kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Cumans.
-1114.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Meanwhile in the lands on the Euxine the old
-enemies, Patzinaks and Chazars, gave way to the
-<i>Cumans</i>,<a name="FNanchor_63" id="FNanchor_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> known in Russian history as <i>Polovtzi</i> and
-<i>Parthi</i>. They spread themselves from the Ural river to
-the borders of Servia and Danubian Bulgaria, cutting
-off Russia from the Caspian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1223.<br />
-Mongol
-invasion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century
-Russians and Cumans—momentary allies—fell before
-the advance of the <i>Mongols</i>, commonly known in
-European history as <i>Tartars</i>. Known only as ravagers
-in the lands more to the west, over Russia they become
-overlords for two hundred and fifty years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia
-tributary
-to the
-Mongols.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All that
-escaped absorption by the Lithuanian became tributary
-to the Mongol.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1240.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Still the relation was only a tributary
-one; Russia was never incorporated in the
-Mongol dominion, as Servia and Bulgaria were incorporated
-in the Ottoman dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia
-represented
-by Novgorod.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Kief was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">{484}</a></span>
-overthrown; Vladimir became dependent; Novgorod
-remained the true representative of free Russia in the
-Baltic lands.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The earlier
-races on
-the Baltic.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">But besides the Slaves of Poland and Russia, our
-survey takes in also the ancient races by which both
-Poland and Russia were so largely cut off from the
-Baltic. Down to the middle of the twelfth century,
-notwithstanding occasional Polish or Scandinavian
-occupations, those races still kept their hold of the
-whole Baltic north-eastwards from the mouth of the
-Vistula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fins in
-Livland
-and
-Esthland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The non-Aryan Fins, besides their seats to
-the north, still kept the coast of <i>Esthland</i> and <i>Lifland</i>,
-in Latin shape <i>Esthonia</i> and <i>Livonia</i>, from the Finnish
-Gulf to the Duna and slightly beyond, taking in a small
-strip of the opposite peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Lettic
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The inland part of the
-later Livland was held by the <i>Letts</i>, the most northern
-branch of the ancient Aryan settlers in this region.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Curland.<br />
-Samogitia.<br />
-Lithuania.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of
-this family were the tribes of <i>Curland</i> in their own
-peninsula, of <i>Samigola</i> or <i>Semigallia</i>, the <i>Samaites</i> of
-<i>Samogitia</i> to the south, the proper <i>Lithuanians</i> south
-of them, the <i>Jatwages</i>, <i>Jatwingi</i>—in many spellings—forming
-a Lithuanian wedge between the Slavonic lands
-of Mazovia and Black Russia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Lithuanians, strictly
-so called, reached the coast just north of the Niemen;
-from the mouth of the Niemen to the mouth of the
-Vistula the coast was held by the <i>Prussians</i>. Of these
-nations, Aryan and non-Aryan, the Lithuanians alone
-founded a national dominion in historic times. The
-history of the rest is simply the history of their bondage,
-sometimes of their uprooting.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Survey in
-the twelfth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Taking a general survey of the lands round the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">{485}</a></span>
-Baltic about the middle of the twelfth century, we see
-the three Scandinavian kingdoms, the first fully formed
-states in these regions, all living and vigorous powers,
-but with fluctuating boundaries. Their western colonies
-are still Scandinavian. East and south of the Baltic
-they have not got beyond isolated and temporary
-enterprises. The Slavonic nations on the middle Elbe
-have fallen under German dominion; to the south
-Bohemia and its dependencies keep their Slavonic
-nationality under German supremacy. Poland, often
-divided and no longer conquering, still keeps its
-frontier, and its position as the one independent Slavonic
-power belonging to the Western Church. Russia, the
-great Eastern Slavonic power, has risen to unity and
-greatness under Scandinavian masters, and has again
-broken up into states connected only by a feeble tie.
-The submission of Russia to barbarian invaders comes
-later than our immediate survey; but the weakening of
-the Russian power both by division and by submission is
-an essential element in the state of things which now
-begins.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Teutonic
-advance,
-German
-and Scandinavian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This is the spread in different ways of Teutonic
-dominion, German and Scandinavian, over the
-southern and eastern coasts of the Baltic, largely at the
-expense of the Slaves, still more largely at the expense
-of the primitive nations, Aryan and non-Aryan.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The German Dominion on the Baltic.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Time of
-Teutonic
-conquest.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the first half of the twelfth century, no Teutonic
-power, German or Scandinavian, had any lasting hold
-on any part of the eastern coast of the Baltic or its gulfs,
-nor had any such power made any great advances on the
-southern coast. Early in the fourteenth century the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">{486}</a></span>
-whole of these coasts had been brought into different
-degrees of submission to several Teutonic powers,
-German and Scandinavian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-influence
-stronger
-than
-Scandinavian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of the two influences the
-German has been the more abiding. Scandinavian dominion
-has now wholly passed away from these coasts,
-and it is only in the lands north of the Finnish Gulf
-that it can be said to have ever been really lasting.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-German
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But German influence has destroyed, assimilated, or
-brought to submission, the whole of the earlier inhabitants,
-from Wagria to Esthland. In our own day
-the whole coast, from the isle of Rügen to the head of
-the gulf of Bothnia, is in the possession of two powers,
-one German, one Slavonic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-influence
-abiding.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But German influence
-abides beyond the bounds of German rule. Not only
-have Pomerania and Prussia become German in every
-sense, but Curland, Livland, and Esthland, under the
-dominion of Russia, are still spoken of as German
-provinces.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">This great change was brought about by a singular
-union of mercantile, missionary, and military enterprise.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of Swedish
-conquest in
-Finland.
-1155.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The beginning came from Scandinavia, when the
-Swedish King Saint Eric undertook the conquest and
-conversion of the proper Finland, east of the Gulf of
-Bothnia. Here, in the space of about a century, a
-great province was added to the Swedish kingdom, a
-province whose eastern boundary greatly shifted, but
-the greater part of which remained Swedish down to
-the present century. To the south of the Gulf of Finland
-the changes of possession have been endless. The
-settled dominion of Sweden in those lands comes later;
-Danish occupation, though longer, was only temporary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-conquest
-in Livland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Soon after the beginning of Swedish conquest in Finland
-began the work of German mercantile enterprise,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">{487}</a></span>
-followed fifty years later by German conquest and
-conversion, in Livland and the neighbouring lands.
-This hindered the growth of any native power on those
-coasts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its effect on
-Lithuania
-and Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Even Lithuania in the days of its greatness was
-cut off from the sea. Whatever tendencies towards
-Russian supremacy had arisen in those parts were hindered
-from growing into Russian dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Military
-Orders.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Knights
-of the Sword in Livland were followed by the Teutonic
-Knights in Prussia, and the two orders became one.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danish
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Further west, the latter part of the twelfth and the beginning
-of the thirteenth century saw a great, but mostly
-short-lived, extension of Danish power over both German
-and Slavonic lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Scandinavian
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While the coasts are thus changing
-hands, the relations of Scandinavian kingdoms to one
-another are ever shifting.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Polish
-gains and
-losses.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Poland is ever losing territory
-to the west, and, still more after the beginning of
-its connexion with Lithuania, ever gaining it to the east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-<i>Hansa</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, alongside of princes and sovereign orders, this
-time is marked by the appearance of the first germs
-of the great German commercial league, which, without
-becoming a strictly territorial power, exercised the
-greatest influence on the disposal of power among all
-its neighbours.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scania
-Swedish.
-1332-1360.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In Scandinavia itself the chief strictly geographical
-change was a temporary transfer to Sweden in the
-fourteenth century of the Danish lands within the
-northern peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Calmar.
-1396.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the end of that century came
-the union of Calmar, the principle of which was that
-the three kingdoms, remaining separate states, should
-be joined under a common sovereign. But this union
-was never firmly established, and the arrangements of
-the three crowns were shifting throughout the fifteenth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">{488}</a></span>
-century; a lasting state of things came only with the
-final breach of the union in the sixteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden
-separated,
-Denmark
-and Norway
-united.
-1520.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From that time, Sweden, under the house of Vasa,
-forms one power; Denmark and Norway, under the
-house of Oldenburg, form another.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-oceanic
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>With regard to the more distant relations of the
-three kingdoms, this period is marked by the gradual
-withdrawal of Scandinavian power from the oceanic
-lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Iceland
-and Greenland
-united
-to Norway.
-1261-1262.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of Iceland and Greenland with Norway
-was the union of one Scandinavian land with
-another. But Greenland, the most distant Scandinavian
-land, vanishes from history about the time of the
-Calmar union. The Scandinavian settlements in and
-about the British Islands all passed away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ireland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ostmen
-of Ireland were lost in the mass of the Teutonic
-settlers who passed from England into Ireland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Western
-Isles.
-Man.
-1264.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Western Isles were sold to Scotland; Man passed under
-Scottish and English supremacy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Orkney
-pledged.
-1468.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Orkney and Shetland
-were pledged to the Scottish crown; and, though never
-formally ceded, they have become incorporated with
-the British kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Swedish
-advance in
-Finland.<br />
-1248-1293.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>East of the Gulf of Bothnia Swedish rule advanced.
-Attempts at conquest both in Russia and in Esthland
-failed, but <i>Finland</i> and <i>Carelia</i> were fully subdued, and
-the Swedish power reached to Lake Ladoga.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Esthland
-Danish.
-1238-1346.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark
-made a more lasting, but still short-lived, settlement in
-Esthland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Short-lived
-greatness
-of Denmark.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The growth of Denmark at the other end
-of the Baltic lands began earlier and was checked
-sooner. But at the beginning of the thirteenth century
-things looked as if Denmark was about to become the
-chief power on all the Baltic coasts.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holstein.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>South of the boundary stream of the Eider the
-lands which make up the modern Holstein formed three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">{489}</a></span>
-settlements, two Teutonic and one Slavonic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ditmarschen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the west
-lay the free Frisian land of <i>Ditmarschen</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holstein.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the middle
-were the lands of the Saxons beyond the Elbe—the
-<i>Holtsætan</i>—with <i>Stormarn</i> immediately on the Elbe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wagria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the Baltic side lay the Slavonic land of <i>Wagria</i>,
-which at the beginning of the twelfth century formed
-part of the kingdom of <i>Sclavinia</i>, a kingdom stretching
-from the haven of Kiel to the islands at the mouth of
-the Oder.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danish
-conquest of
-Sclavinia.
-1168-1189.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In these lands began the eastern advance of
-Denmark in the latter half of the twelfth century. All
-Sclavinia was won, with at least a supremacy over the
-Pomeranian land as far as the Riddow. Thus far the
-Danish conquests, won mainly over Slaves, continue the
-chain of occasional Scandinavian occupation on those
-coasts, from the tenth century to the nineteenth. In
-another point of view, the Christian advance, the overthrow
-of the chief centre of Slavonic heathendom in
-Rügen, carries on the work of the Saxon Dukes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danish
-advance in
-Germany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-in the first years of the next century began a Danish
-occupation of German ground. Holstein, and Lübeck
-itself, were won; a claim was set up to the free land of
-Ditmarschen; and all these conquests were confirmed
-by an Imperial grant.<a name="FNanchor_64" id="FNanchor_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1214.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Danish kings now took the
-title of <i>Kings of the Slaves</i>, afterwards of the <i>Vandals</i>
-or <i>Wends</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fall of the
-Danish
-power.
-1223-1227.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this dominion was soon broken up
-by the captivity of the Danish king Waldemar. The
-Eider became again the boundary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Denmark
-keeps
-Rügen,
-till ceded
-1325,
-1438.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of her Slavonic
-dominion Denmark kept only an outlying fragment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">{490}</a></span>
-the isle of Rügen and the neighbouring coast. This
-remained Danish for a hundred years longer, nominally
-for a hundred years longer still.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">The next changes tended to draw the lands immediately
-on each side of the Eider into close connexion
-with one another.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-South
-Jutland.
-1232.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The southern part of the Danish
-peninsula, from the Eider to the Aa, became a distinct fief
-of the Danish crown, held by a Danish prince under the
-name of the duchy of <i>South-Jutland</i>—<i>Jutia</i> or <i>Sunder-Jutia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>United with
-Holstein.
-1325.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the next century this duchy and the county
-of Holstein are found in the hands of the same prince,
-and it is held that his grant of the Danish duchy contained
-a promise that it should never be united with
-the Danish crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Sleswick.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Henceforth South-Jutland begins
-to be spoken of as the <i>duchy of Sleswick</i>. But of the
-lands held together, Sleswick remained a fief of Denmark,
-while Holstein remained a fief of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-of
-Sleswick
-and
-Holstein.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy was several times united to the crown and
-again granted out.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1424.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At one moment of union the
-Roman King Sigismund expressly confirmed the union,
-and acknowledged Sleswick as a Danish land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1448.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the
-next grant of the duchy, its perpetual separation from
-the crown is alleged to have been again confirmed
-by Christian the First.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1460.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Yet Christian himself, already
-king of the three kingdoms, was afterwards elected
-Duke of Sleswick and Count of Holstein. The election
-was accompanied by a declaration that the two principalities,
-though the one was held of the Empire and
-the other of the Danish crown, should never be separated.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Holstein.
-1474.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the same reign an Imperial grant raised the
-counties of Holstein and Stormarn with the land of
-Ditmarsh to the rank of a duchy. But the dominions of
-its duke were not a continuous territory stretching from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">{491}</a></span>
-sea to sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Freedom
-in Ditmarschen.<br />
-Bishopric
-of Lübeck.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the west, <i>Ditmarschen</i>—notwithstanding
-a renewed Imperial grant—remained free;
-to the east,
-some districts of the old Wagria formed the <i>bishopric of
-Lübeck</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Denmark,
-Sleswick,
-and
-Holstein
-under
-Christian.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But now for the first time the same prince
-reigned in the threefold character of King of Denmark,
-Duke of the Danish fief of Sleswick, and Duke of the
-Imperial fief of Holstein. Endless shiftings, divisions, and
-reunions of various parts of the two duchies followed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Royal and
-Ducal
-lines.
-1580.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the partitions between the <i>royal</i> and <i>ducal</i> lines
-of the house of Oldenburg, the several portions of
-the Kings of Denmark and of the Dukes of Gottorp
-paid no regard to the boundary of the Eider, but each
-was made up of detached parts of both duchies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Ditmarschen.
-1559.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile
-the freedom of Ditmarschen came to an end,
-and the old Frisian land became part of the royal share
-of the duchy of Holstein.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Acquisition
-of Dago
-and Oesel.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, as we began our story
-of Danish advance with the settlement in Esthland, we
-have to end it for the present with the acquisition of
-the islands of <i>Dago</i> and <i>Oesel</i> off the same coasts.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effect of
-the Danish
-advance on
-the Slavonic
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>After the loss of Rügen, Denmark had little to do
-with the Slavonic lands, except so far as the possession of
-Holstein carried with it the possession of the old Slavonic
-land of Wagria. Still the advance of Denmark
-at the end of the twelfth century had a lasting effect
-on the Slavonic lands by altogether shaking the Polish
-dominion on the Baltic. But it shook it to the advantage,
-not of Scandinavia, but of Germany. Between the
-twelfth century and the fourteenth Poland lost all its
-western dominions.
-<i>Pomore</i>, <i>Pommern</i>, <i>Pomerania</i>, the
-seaboard of the Lechish Slaves, is strictly the land between
-the mouth of the Vistula and the mouth of the
-Oder; but the name had already spread further to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">{492}</a></span>
-West.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pomerania
-falls away
-from
-Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After the fall of the Danish power on this coast,
-Pomerania west of the Riddow altogether fell away
-from Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Slavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the duchy of <i>Slavia</i>, it became,
-like Mecklenburg, a land of the Empire, though ruled
-by Slavonic princes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1298-1305.
-Loss of
-western
-territory
-by Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the eastern part of Pomerania,
-<i>Cassubia</i> and the mark of <i>Gdansk</i> or <i>Danzig</i>,
-remained under Polish superiority till the beginning
-of the fourteenth century. Then the greater part
-fell away, partly for ever, to the Pomeranian duchy
-of <i>Wolgast</i>, partly, for a season only, to the Teutonic
-Knights.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1220-1260.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south <i>Barnim</i> and <i>Custrin</i> passed,
-after some shiftings, to the mark of Brandenburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Silesia.
-1289-1327.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Further to the south, Silesia, divided among princes of
-the house of Piast, gradually fell under Bohemian
-supremacy. Thus the whole western part of the Polish
-kingdom passed into the hands of princes of the Empire,
-and was included within the bounds of the German
-realm.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p2">The fate of Silesia brings us again to the history of
-the inland Slavonic land of the Czechs. <i>Bohemia</i> went
-on, as duchy and kingdom,<a name="FNanchor_65" id="FNanchor_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> ruled by native princes
-as vassals of the Empire. Moravia was a fief of
-Bohemia. In the end Bohemia passed to German
-kings, but not till it had become again the centre of
-a dominion which recalls the fleeting powers of Samo
-and Sviatopluk.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia
-and
-Ottocar.
-1269-1278.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Ottocar the Second united the long-severed
-branches of the Slavonic race by annexing
-the German lands which lay between them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>His
-German
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lord of
-Bohemia, Moravia, Austria, Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">{493}</a></span>
-the Czech king reigned on the upper Oder and
-the middle Danube as far as the Hadriatic. The same
-lands were in after times to be again united, but from
-the opposite side.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Luxemburg
-kings
-of
-Bohemia.
-1308.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The successors of Ottocar reigned only over
-Bohemia and Moravia. Early in the next century the
-Bohemian crown passed to the house of Luxemburg.
-Under them Bohemia became a powerful state, but a state
-becoming more and more German, less and less Slavonic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Silesia,
-1355.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The gradual extension of Bohemian superiority over
-Silesia led to its formal incorporation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lusatia.
-1320-1370.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the same
-century <i>Lusatia</i>, High and Low, was won from Brandenburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Brandenburg.
-1373-1417.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The mark of Brandenburg itself became for
-a while a Bohemian possession, before it passed to the
-burgraves of Nürnberg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1353.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Bohemian possession of
-the Upper Palatinate lies out of our Slavonic range.
-Among the revolutions of the fifteenth century, we find
-the Bohemian crown at one time held conjointly with
-that of Hungary, at another time held by a Polish
-prince.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Matthias
-Corvinus,
-1478-1490.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the century the victories of Matthias
-Corvinus took away Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia, from
-the Bohemian crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bohemia
-and
-Austria.<br />
-Its losses.
-1635.<br />
-1740.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was the fourfold dominion
-of Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia, which finally
-passed to the House of Austria, to be shorn of its
-northern and eastern lands to the profit, first of Saxony,
-and then of Brandenburg or Prussia.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Thus far the Teutonic advance, both on the actual
-Baltic coast and on the inland Slavonic region, had
-been made to the profit, partly of the Scandinavian
-kingdoms, partly of the princes of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>German
-corporations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-there were two other forms of Teutonic influence and
-dominion, which fell to the share, not of princes, but of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">{494}</a></span>
-corporate bodies, mercantile and military or religious.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Hansa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Hanseatic League was indeed a power in these
-regions, but it hardly has a place on the map.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-foundation
-of Lübeck.
-1158.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Even
-before the second foundation of Lübeck by Henry the
-Lion, German mercantile settlements had begun at
-Novgorod, in Gotland, and in London.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the League.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Gradually, in
-the course of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
-the League into which the union of the merchant
-towns of Germany grew spread itself over the
-Baltic, the Westfalian, and the Netherlandish lands.
-A specially close tie bound together the five <i>Wendish</i>
-towns, <i>Lübeck</i>, <i>Rostock</i>, <i>Wismar</i>, <i>Stralsund</i>, and
-<i>Greifswald</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nature of
-the union.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the union of a town with the
-Hansa did not necessarily affect its political position.
-It might, at least in the later stages of the
-League, be a free city of the Empire, a town subject
-to some prince of the Empire, or a town subject
-to a prince beyond its bounds. Not only the Pomeranian
-and Prussian cities under the rule of the Knights,
-but Revel in Esthland under Danish rule formed part
-of the League.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Hansa
-not a
-territorial
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The League waged wars, made peace,
-overthrew and set up kings, as suited its interests; but
-territorial dominion, strictly so called, was not its
-object. Still in some cases privileges grew into something
-like dominion; in others military occupation
-might pass for temporary dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Hansa
-in Gotland
-and
-Scania.<br />
-1361.<br />
-1368-1385.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus in the isle
-of <i>Gotland</i> the Hansa had an ascendency which was
-overthrown by the conquest of the island by the Danish
-king Waldemar, a conquest avenged by a temporary
-Hanseatic occupation of Scania. In fact the nature of
-the League, the relations of the cities to one another,
-geographical as well as political, hindered the Hansa
-from ever becoming a territorial power like Switzerland<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">{495}</a></span>
-and the United Provinces. In the history of the Baltic
-lands it takes for some ages a position at least equal
-to that of any kingdom. But it is only casually and
-occasionally that its triumphs can be marked on the
-map.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The other great German corporation was not commercial,
-but military and religious.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Swordbearers
-and the
-Teutonic
-Order.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquests of
-the Order of Christ and of the Order of Saint Mary—better
-known as the <i>Sword-brothers</i> and the <i>Teutonic
-Order</i>—were essentially territorial. These orders became
-masters of a great part of the Baltic coast, and
-wherever they spread their dominion, Christianity and
-German national life were, by whatever means, established.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their
-connexion
-with the
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As both the chiefs of the Order and the
-Livonian prelates ranked as princes of the Empire, the
-conquests of the Knights were in some sort an extension
-of the bounds of the Empire. Yet we can hardly look
-on Livonia and Prussia as coming geographically
-within the Empire in the same sense as Pomerania
-and Silesia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-their rule.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But whether strictly an extension of the
-Western Empire or not, the conquests of the Knights
-were an extension of the Western Church, the Western
-world, and the German nation, as against both heathendom
-and Eastern Christianity, as against all the other
-Baltic nationalities, non-Aryan and Aryan.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Swordbearers
-in Livland.
-1201.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The first settlement began in <i>Livland</i>. In the
-beginning of the thirteenth century, the Knights of the
-Order of Christ were called in as temporal helpers by
-Bishop Albert of Riga, and they gradually won the
-dominion of the lands on the gulf called from his city.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Danes in
-Esthland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For a while they had a partner in the Danish crown,
-which held part of <i>Esthland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent
-of their
-dominion.<br />
-Dago and
-Oesel.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the rest of Esthland,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">{496}</a></span>
-Livland in the narrower sense, Curland, Semigola, the
-special Lettish land, and the Russian territory on the
-Duna, made up this Livonian dominion, which was
-afterwards enlarged by the isles of Dago and Oesel and
-by the Danish portion of Esthland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Esthland.
-1346.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Riga</i> and <i>Revel</i>
-became great commercial cities, and Riga became an
-ecclesiastical metropolis under a prince-archbishop.
-The natives were reduced to bondage, and the Russian
-powers of Novgorod and Polotsk were effectually kept
-away from the gulf.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Teutonic
-Order in
-Prussia.
-1226.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The dominion of the Knights of Saint Mary, the
-Teutonic Order, in Prussia and in a small part of
-Lithuania, began a little later than that of the Sword-brothers
-in Livland. Invited by a Polish prince, Conrad
-of Mazovia, they received from him their first Polish
-possession, the palatinate of <i>Culm</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-the Orders.
-1237.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Eleven years later
-the Prussian and Livonian orders were united. Their
-dominion grew.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Purchase of
-Pomerelia.
-1311.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The acquisition of <i>Pomerelia</i>, the
-eastern part of the old <i>Pomore</i>, immediately west of
-the lower Vistula, cut off Poland from the sea.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Samogitia.
-1384.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later
-in the century, Lithuania was equally cut off by the
-cession of <i>Samogitia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occupation
-of Gotland.
-1398-1408.<br />
-The New
-Mark
-pledged to
-the Order.
-1402.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The isle of <i>Gotland</i> was held
-for a while; the <i>New Mark</i> of Brandenburg was
-pledged by King Sigismund.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Their coast
-line.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The whole coast from
-Narva on the Finnish gulf to the point where the
-Pomeranian coast trends south-west formed the unbroken
-sea-board of the Order.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Losses
-of the
-Prussian
-Knights.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of the two seats of the Order the northern one
-proved the stronger and more lasting. Livland remained
-untouched long after Poland had won back
-her lost ground from the Prussian Knights.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Samogitia
-restored to
-Lithuania.
-1410.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The battle
-of Tannenberg won back Samogitia for Lithuania, and
-again parted the Livonian and Prussian lands of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">{497}</a></span>
-Order.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Peace of
-Thorn.
-1646.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the peace of Thorn its Prussian dominion
-was altogether cut short.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cessions of
-the Order
-to Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Culm</i> and <i>Pomerelia</i>, with
-the cities of <i>Danzig</i> and <i>Thorn</i>, went back to Poland.
-And a large part of Prussia itself, the bishopric of
-<i>Ermeland</i>, a district running deep into the land still
-left to the knights, was added to Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Vassalage
-of the
-Order.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The rest of
-Prussia was left to the Order as a Polish fief.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p2">The thirteenth century was the special time when
-Teutonic dominion spread itself over the Baltic lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of Christianity.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was also the time when heathendom gave way to
-Christianity at nearly every point of those lands where
-it still held out. But, while the old creeds and the old
-races were giving way, a single one among them stood
-forth for a while as an independent and conquering
-state, the last heathen power in Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lithuania
-the last
-heathen
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-While all
-their kinsfolk and neighbours were passing under the
-yoke, the <i>Lithuanians</i>, strictly so called, showed themselves
-the mightiest of conquerors in all lands from
-the Baltic to the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Lithuania.
-c. 1220.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From their own land on
-the Niemen they began, under their prince Mendog,
-to advance at the expense of the Russian lands to
-the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mendog
-king.
-1252.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Mendog embraced Christianity, and was
-crowned King of Lithuania, a realm which now
-stretched from the Duna to beyond the Priepetz. But
-heathendom again won the upper hand, and the next
-century saw the great advance of the Lithuanian
-power, the momentary rule of old Aryan heathendom
-alike over Christendom and over Islam.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-from
-Russia.
-1315-1340.
-1345-1377.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under two
-conquering princes, Gedymin and Olgierd, further conquests
-were made from the surrounding Russian lands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1315-1360.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Lithuanian dominion was extended at the expense
-of Novgorod and Smolensk; the Lithuanian frontier<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">{498}</a></span>
-stretched far beyond both the Duna and the Dnieper;
-Kief was a Lithuanian possession.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Volhynia
-and
-Podolia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The kingdom of
-Galicia lost <i>Volhynia</i> and <i>Podolia</i>, which became a
-land disputed between Lithuania and Poland. These
-last conquests carried the Lithuanian frontier to the
-Dniester, and opened a wholly new set of relations
-among the powers on the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Perekop.
-1363.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the conquest
-of the Tartar dominion of <i>Perekop</i>, Lithuania, cut off
-from the Baltic, reached to the Euxine.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Consolidation
-of
-Poland.
-1295-1320.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Poland, from a collection of duchies
-under a nominal head, had again grown into a consolidated
-and powerful kingdom. The western frontier had
-been cut short by various German powers, and the Teutonic
-Order shut off the kingdom from the sea. Mazovia
-and Cujavia remained separate duchies; but Great and
-Little Poland remained firmly united, and were ready
-to enlarge their borders to the eastward.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Casimir
-the Great.
-1333-1370.<br />
-Red
-Russia.
-1340.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Casimir the
-Great added <i>Podlachia</i>, the land of the <i>Jatvingi</i>, and in
-the break-up of the Galician kingdom, he incorporated
-<i>Red Russia</i> as being a former possession of Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexed
-to Hungary.
-1377.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But,
-as it had also been a former possession of Hungary,<a name="FNanchor_66" id="FNanchor_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>
-Lewis the Great, the common sovereign of Hungary and
-Poland, annexed it to his southern kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Poland and
-Lithuania.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">The two powers which had thus grown up were
-now to be gradually fused into one.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1386.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The heathen
-Lithuanian prince Jagiello became, by marriage and
-conversion, a Christian King of Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Volhynia
-and
-Podolia
-added to
-Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-He enlarged
-the kingdom at the expense of the duchy, by incorporating
-<i>Podolia</i> and <i>Volhynia</i> with Poland, making
-Poland as well as Lithuania the possessor of a large extent
-of Russian soil.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of Red
-Russia.
-1392.<br />
-Moldavia.<br />
-Pledge of
-Zips.
-1412.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The older Russian territory of Poland,
-Red Russia, was won back from Hungary;
-<i>Moldavia</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">{499}</a></span>
-began to transfer its fleeting allegiance from Hungary to
-Poland; within Hungary itself part of the county of <i>Zips</i>
-was pledged to the Polish crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of the
-Polish
-duchies.
-1401.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Polish duchies
-now began to fall back to the kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1463-1476.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cujavia</i> came in
-early in the fifteenth century, and parts of <i>Mazovia</i> in its
-course. Of the relation of the kingdom to the Teutonic
-order we have already spoken. Lithuania meanwhile, as
-part of Western Christendom, remained, under its separate
-grand dukes of the now royal house, the rival both
-of Islam and of Eastern Christendom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquests
-of Witold.
-1392-1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Witold
-the advance on Russian ground was greater than ever.
-<i>Smolensk</i> and all <i>Severia</i> became Lithuanian; Kief was
-in the heart of the grand duchy; Moscow did not seem
-far from its borders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-Perekop,
-1474.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lithuania was presently cut
-short further to the south by the loss of its Euxine
-dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Closer
-union of
-Poland and
-Lithuania.
-1501.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the beginning of the sixteenth century
-Poland and Lithuania were united as distinct states
-under a common sovereign. But by that time a new
-state of things had begun in the lands on the Duna
-and the Dnieper.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revival of
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>While the military orders had thus established
-themselves on the Baltic coast, and had already largely
-given way to the combined Polish and Lithuanian
-power behind them, a new <i>Russia</i> was growing up
-behind them all.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Power of
-Moscow.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Cut off from all dealings with
-Western Europe, save with its immediate western
-neighbours, cut off from its own ecclesiastical centre
-by the advance of Mussulman dominion, the new power
-of <i>Moscow</i> was schooling itself to take in course of
-time a greater place than had ever been held by the
-elder power of Kief. The Mongol conquest had placed
-the Russian principalities in much the same position<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">{500}</a></span>
-as that through which most of the south-eastern
-lands passed before they were finally swallowed up
-by the Ottoman.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Russian
-princes dependent
-on the
-Golden
-Horde.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The princes of Russia were dependent
-on the Tartar dominion of <i>Kiptchak</i>, which
-stretched from the Dniester north-eastwards over
-boundless barbarian lands as far as the lower course of
-the Jenisei. Its capital, the centre of the <i>Golden
-Horde</i>, was at <i>Sarai</i> on the lower course of the Volga.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Homage of
-Novgorod.
-1252-1263.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Even Novgorod, under its great prince Alexander
-Nevsky, did homage to the Khan. But this dependent
-relation did not, like the Lithuanian conquests to
-the west, affect the geographical frontiers of Russia.
-The Russian centre at the time of the Mongol conquest
-was the northern Vladimir.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Moscow
-the new
-centre,
-c. 1328.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Towards the end of the
-thirteenth century, <i>Moskva</i>, on the river of that name,
-grew into importance, and early in the next century
-it became the centre of Russian life.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Name of
-<i>Muscovy</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From <i>Moskva</i>
-or <i>Moscow</i> comes the old name of <i>Muscovy</i>, a name
-which historically describes the growth of the second
-Russian power. Muscovy was to Russia what France
-in the older sense was to the whole land which came
-to bear that name. Moscow was to Russia all, and
-more than all, that Paris was to France. It was to
-Moscow as the centre that the separate Russian principalities
-fell in; it was from Moscow as the centre that
-the lost Russian lands were won back.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Other
-Russian
-states.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Besides Novgorod,
-there still were the separate states of <i>Viatka</i>, <i>Pskof</i>,
-<i>Tver</i>, and <i>Riazan</i>. Disunion and dependence lasted till
-late in the fifteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline of
-the Mongol
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the Tartar power had
-already begun to grow weaker before the end of the
-fourteenth, and the invasion of Timour, while making
-Russia for a moment more completely subject, led to
-the dissolution of the dominion of the older Khans.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">{501}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up
-of the
-Mongol
-power.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the course of the fifteenth century the great
-power of the Golden Horde broke up into a number
-of smaller khanats.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Khanat of
-Crim;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The khanat of <i>Crim</i>—the old
-Tauric Chersonêsos—stretched from its peninsula inwards
-along the greater part of the course of the Don.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Kazan,
-1438;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The khanat of <i>Kazan</i> on the Volga supplanted the
-old kingdom of White Bulgaria.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Siberia;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Far to the east, on
-the lower course of the Obi, was the khanat of
-<i>Siberia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Astrakhan.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Golden Horde itself was represented by
-the khanat of <i>Astrakhan</i> on the lower Volga, with its
-capital at the mouth of that river. Of these Crim and
-Kasan were immediate neighbours of the Muscovite
-state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Deliverance
-of Russia.
-1480.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The yoke was at last broken by Ivan the Great.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1487.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Seven years later he placed a tributary prince on the
-throne of Kazan, and himself took the title of <i>Prince
-of Bulgaria</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Crim dependent
-on
-the Ottoman.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By this time the khans of Crim had
-become dependents of the Ottoman Sultans, the beginning
-of the long strife between Russia and the Turk
-in Europe.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of Moscow
-in Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But before Muscovy thus became an independent
-power, it had taken the greatest of steps towards growing
-into Russia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-of
-Novgorod.
-1470;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Novgorod the Great, the only Russian
-rival of Moscow, first lost its northern territory, and
-then itself became part of the Muscovite dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Viatka,
-1478;<br />
-of Tver,
-1493.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-commonwealth of <i>Viatka</i>, the principality of <i>Tver</i>, and
-some small appanages of the house of Moscow followed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reign of
-Basil
-Ivanovitch,
-1505-1533.<br />
-Annexation
-of
-Pskof and
-Riazan.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The annexation of what remained, as <i>Pskof</i> and <i>Riazan</i>,
-was only a question of time, and it came in the next
-reign. Of the three works which were needful for the
-full growth of the new Russia, two were accomplished.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia
-united and
-independent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Russian state was one, and it was independent.
-And the third work, that of winning back the lost
-Russian lands, had already begun.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">{502}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Survey at
-the end
-of the
-fifteenth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus, at the end of the fifteenth century, five powers
-held the Baltic coast. Sweden held the west coast
-from the Danish frontier northward, with both sides
-of the gulf of Bothnia and both sides of the gulf of
-Finland. Denmark held the extreme western coast
-and the isle of Gotland. Poland and Lithuania had a
-small seaboard indeed compared to their inland extent.
-Poland had only the Pomeranian and Prussian coast
-which she had just won from the Knights. Lithuania
-barely touched the sea between Prussia and Curland.
-To the west of the Polish coast lay the now Germanized
-lands of Pomerania and Mecklenburg. To the north-west
-lay the coast of the German military Order, under
-Polish vassalage in Prussia, independent in its northern
-possessions. Thus almost the whole Baltic coast was
-held by Teutonic powers; the Slavonic powers still
-lie mainly inland. The Polish frontier towards the
-Empire has been cut down to the limit which it kept
-till the end. Pomerania, Silesia, a great part of the
-mark of Brandenburg, have fallen away from the Polish
-realm. On the other hand, that realm and its confederate
-Lithuania have grown wonderfully to the east at the
-cost of divided and dependent Russia, and have begun
-to fall back again before Russia one and independent.
-Bohemia, enlarged by Silesia and Lusatia, has entered so
-thoroughly into the German world as almost to pass
-out of our sight.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>The Growth of Russia and Sweden.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes of
-the last
-four centuries.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The work of the last four centuries on the Baltic
-coast has been to drive back the Scandinavian power,
-after a vast momentary advance, wholly to the west of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">{503}</a></span>
-the Baltic—to give nearly the whole eastern coast to Russia—to
-make the whole southern coast German. These
-changes involve the wiping out, first of the German
-military Order, and then of Poland and Lithuania.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Russia and
-creation of
-Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-last change involves the growth of Russia, and the creation
-of Prussia in the modern sense, a sense so strangely
-different from its earlier meaning. These two have been
-the powers by which Sweden and Denmark have been
-cut short, by which Poland and Lithuania have been
-swallowed up. In this last work they indeed had a
-third confederate. Still the share of Austria in the
-overthrow of Poland was in a manner incidental. But
-the existence of such a Polish and Lithuanian state
-as stood at the end of the fifteenth, or even of the
-seventeenth, century was inconsistent with the existence
-of either Russia or Prussia as great European powers.</p>
-
-<p>The period with which we have now to deal takes
-in only the former stage of this process. Russia advances;
-Prussia in the modern sense comes into being.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatness
-of Sweden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Sweden is still the most advancing power of all;
-and, if Denmark falls back, it is before the power of
-Sweden. The Hansa too and the Knights pass away;
-Sweden is the ruling power of the Baltic.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The sixteenth century saw the fall of both branches
-of the Teutonic Order. Out of the fall of one of
-them came the beginnings of modern <i>Prussia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Separation
-of the
-Prussian
-and Livonian
-knights.
-1515.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-two branches of the Order were separated; the
-Livonian lands had an independent Master.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of the
-Duchy of
-Prussia.
-1525.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before
-long the Prussian Grand Master, Albert of Brandenburg,
-changed from the head of a Catholic religious
-order into a Lutheran temporal prince, holding the
-hereditary <i>duchy of Prussia</i> as a Polish fief.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-position
-of Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">{504}</a></span>
-duchy had so strange a frontier towards the kingdom
-that it could not fail sooner or later either to be swallowed
-up by the kingdom which hemmed it in, or else
-to make its way out of its geographical bonds.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Prussia and
-Brandenburg.
-1611.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-When
-the Prussian duchy and the mark of Brandenburg came
-into the hands of one prince, when the dominions of
-that prince were enlarged by the union of Brandenburg
-and Pomerania, the second of these solutions became
-only a question of time.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussia
-independent
-of
-Poland.
-1647.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first formal step towards
-it was the release of the duchy from all dependence on
-Poland. Prussia became a distinct state, one now
-essentially German, but lying beyond the bounds of
-the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>As the rights of the Empire had been formally cut
-short when Prussia passed under Polish vassalage, they
-were also formally cut short by the dissolution of the
-northern branch of the Teutonic order.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fall of the
-Livonian
-Order.
-1558-1561.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The rule of
-the Livonian Knights survived the secularization of the
-Prussian duchy by forty years; their dominion then fell
-asunder.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Curland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As in the case of Prussia, part of their territory,
-<i>Curland</i> and <i>Semigallia</i>, was kept by the Livonian
-Master Godhard Kettler, as an hereditary duchy under
-Polish vassalage. The rest of the lands of the order
-were parted out among the chief powers of the Baltic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Momentary
-kingdom
-of Livonia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A Livonian kingdom under the Danish prince Magnus
-was but for a moment.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Denmark
-takes Dago
-and Oesel.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark in the end received
-the islands of <i>Dago</i> and <i>Oesel</i>, her last conquests east
-of the Baltic.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden
-takes
-Esthland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Sweden advanced south of the Finnish
-gulf, taking the greater part of Esthland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Livland
-goes to
-Poland and
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Northern
-Livland fell to Russia, the southern part to Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>All Livland
-Polish.
-1582.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Twenty years later all Livland became a Polish possession.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatest
-Baltic extent of
-Poland and
-Lithuania.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This acquisition of Livland and of the superiority<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">{505}</a></span>
-over Prussia and Curland raised the united power of
-Poland and Lithuania to its greatest extent on the
-Baltic coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Lublin,
-1569.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile the union of <i>Lublin</i> joined
-the kingdom and the grand duchy yet more closely
-together. But, long before this time, the eastern frontier
-of Lithuania had begun to fall back.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The central
-advance of Russia to the west had begun.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its causes.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A revived
-state, such as Russia was at the end of the fifteenth
-century, must advance, unless it be artificially hindered;
-and the new Russian state was driven to advance if it
-was to exist at all. It had no sea-board, except on the
-White Sea; it did not hold the mouth of any one of its
-great rivers, except the Northern Dvina, a stream thoroughly
-cut off from European life. The dominions of
-Sweden, Lithuania, and the Knights cut Russia off from
-the Baltic and from central Europe. To the south and
-east she was cut off from the Euxine and the Caspian,
-from the mouths of the Don and the Volga, by the
-powers which represented her old barbarian masters.
-Russia was thus not only driven to advance, but
-driven to advance in various directions. She had to
-win back her lost lands; she had, if she was really to
-become an European power, to win her way to the
-Baltic and to the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-to the
-north-east.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Her position made it almost
-equally needful to win her way to the Caspian, and
-made it unavoidable that she should spread her power
-over the barbarian lands to the north-east. Of these
-several fields of advance the path to the Euxine was
-the longest barred.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Order of
-Russian
-advances.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First, at the end of the fifteenth
-century, began the recovery of the lost lands, a work
-spread over the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth
-centuries. Then, in the sixteenth, came the eastern
-extension at the cost of the now weakened Mongol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">{506}</a></span>
-enemy. Strictly Baltic extension was in the sixteenth
-century merely momentary; it did not become lasting
-till the beginning of the eighteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Euxine
-reached
-last.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Russia had
-been established on the Caspian for more than two
-centuries, she had become a Baltic power for more than
-two generations, before she made her way to the oldest
-scene of her seafaring enterprise.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of the
-lands conquered
-by
-Lithuania.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The recovery of the lands which had been lost to
-Lithuania began before the end of the fifteenth century.
-Ivan the Great won back <i>Severia</i>, with <i>Tchernigof</i> and
-the Severian <i>Novgorod</i> and part of the territory of
-<i>Smolensk</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1514.<br />
-1563.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Basil Smolensk itself followed; under Ivan the Terrible Polotsk again became Russian.
-Then the tide turned for a season. Russia first lost her
-newly-won territory in Livland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of Smolensk
-by
-Poland.
-1582.<br />
-Polish
-conquest of
-Russia,
-1606.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The recovery of
-Smolensk by Poland was followed by the momentary
-Polish conquest of independent Russia, and the occupation
-of the throne of Moscow by a Polish prince.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-revival of
-Russia, and
-second
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Muscovite state came again to life; but it was shorn of
-a large part of the national territory, which had to be
-won again by a second advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cessions to
-Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Smolensk, Tchernigof,
-and the greater part of the Lithuanian conquests beyond
-the Dnieper, were again surrendered to the united
-Polish and Lithuanian state. In the middle of the century
-came the renewed Russian advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lands recovered
-by
-the Peace
-of Andraszovo,
-1667.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Treaty
-of Andraszovo gave back to Russia most of the lands
-which had been surrendered fifty years before.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of Kief.
-1686.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By
-the last advance in the seventeenth century Russia won
-back a small territory west of the Dnieper, including her
-ancient capital of Kief.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Superiority
-over the
-Ukraine
-Cossacks.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the same time Poland finally
-gave up to Russia the superiority over the Cossacks
-of Ukraine, between the Bug and the Lower Dnieper.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-lands still
-kept by
-Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, with this exception, Poland and Lithuania still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">{507}</a></span>
-kept all the Russian lands south of Duna and west
-of Dnieper, with some districts beyond those rivers.
-Nor was Russia the only power to which Poland had
-to give way on her south-eastern frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Podolia
-lost to the
-Turk.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In this
-quarter the Ottoman for the last time won a new
-province from a Christian state by the acquisition of
-<i>Kamienetz</i> and all <i>Podolia</i>.<a name="FNanchor_67" id="FNanchor_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p2">But Poland had during this period to give way
-at other points also. This was the time of the great
-growth of the Swedish power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Sweden
-and Russia
-compared.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The contrast between
-the growth of Sweden and the contemporary growth
-of Russia is instructive. The revived power of Moscow
-was partly winning back its own lost lands, partly advancing
-in directions which were needful for national
-growth, almost for national being. The growth of
-Sweden in so many directions was almost wholly a
-growth beyond her own borders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-advance
-lasting.<br />
-Swedish
-advance
-temporary.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hence doubtless it
-came that the advance of Russia has been lasting, while
-the advance of Sweden was only for a season. Sweden
-has lost by far the greater part of her conquests; she
-has kept only those parts of them which went to complete
-her position in her own peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>On the Swedish conquest of Esthland followed a
-series of shiftings of the frontiers of Sweden and Russia
-which lasted into the present century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-under and
-after
-Gustavus
-Adolphus.
-1611-1660.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the
-reign of Gustavus Adolphus, and the period which we
-might almost call the continuation of his reign after his
-death, Sweden advanced both in her own peninsula and
-east of the Baltic, while she also gained a wholly new
-footing on German ground, both on the Baltic and on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">{508}</a></span>
-the Ocean.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars between
-Sweden
-and
-Russia.
-1576-1617.<br />
-Peace of
-Stalbova.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A long period of alternate war and peace,
-a time in which Novgorod the Great passed for a
-moment into Swedish hands, was ended, as far as
-Sweden and Russia were concerned, by the peace of
-Stalbova.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden
-gains
-Ingermanland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Swedish frontier thus fixed took in all
-<i>Carelia</i> and <i>Ingermanland</i>, and wholly cut off Russia
-from the Baltic and its gulfs. Such an advance could
-not fail to lead to further advance, though at the
-expense of another enemy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars between
-Sweden
-and Poland.
-1619-1660.<br />
-Swedish
-conquest of
-Livland,
-1621-1625;<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The long war between
-Sweden and Poland gave to Sweden Riga and the greater
-part of Livland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>of Dago
-and Oesel,
-1645.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Her conquests in this region were
-completed by winning the islands of Dago and Oesel
-from Denmark.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Sweden
-against
-Denmark
-and
-Norway.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>This last acquisition, geographically connected with
-the Swedish conquests from Russia and Poland, was
-politically part of an equally great advance which
-Sweden was making at the cost of the rival Scandinavian
-power, the united realms of Denmark and Norway.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Gotland
-and
-Bornholm.
-1645.<br />
-Of Jämteland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Along with the two eastern islands, Denmark lost the isle
-of <i>Gotland</i> for ever and that of <i>Bornholm</i> for a moment,<a name="FNanchor_68" id="FNanchor_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a>
-and the Norwegian provinces east of the mountains,
-<i>Jämteland</i> and <i>Hertjedalen</i>. The treaty of Roskild yet
-further enlarged Sweden at the expense of Norway.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Trondhjemlän.
-1658.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the cession of <i>Trondhjemlän</i> the Norwegian kingdom
-was split asunder; the ancient metropolis was lost,
-and Sweden reached to the Ocean.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Bohuslän,
-and
-Scania, &amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-With Trondhjem
-Sweden also received <i>Bohuslän</i>, the southern province
-of Norway, and, more than all, the ancient possessions
-of Denmark in the northern peninsula, with her old
-metropolis of <i>Lund</i>. Here comes in the application of
-the rule.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Trondhjem
-restored to
-Norway.
-1660.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In annexing Trondhjem Sweden had overshot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">{509}</a></span>
-her mark; it was restored within two years. It was
-otherwise with Bohuslän, Scania, and her other conquests
-within what might seem to be her natural
-borders; they have remained Swedish to this day.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lands held
-by Sweden
-in Germany,
-Pomerania
-and Rügen,
-Bremen
-and
-Verden.
-1648.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Swedish acquisition of the eastern lands of
-Denmark was made more necessary by the position
-which Sweden had now taken on the central mainland.
-The peace of Westfalia had confirmed her in the
-possession of <i>Rügen</i> and <i>Western Pomerania</i> on the
-Baltic, and of the bishoprics of <i>Bremen</i> and <i>Verden</i>
-which made her a power on the Ocean. These lands
-were not strictly an addition to the Swedish realm; they
-were fiefs of the Empire held by the Swedish king. Here
-again comes in the geographical law. The Swedish
-possession of the German lands on the Ocean was short;
-part of the German lands on the Baltic was kept into
-the present century.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p2">The peace of Roskild, which cut short the kingdoms
-of Denmark and Norway in the northern peninsula, also
-marks an epoch in the controverted history of the
-duchies of Sleswick and Holstein.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Denmark
-gives up
-the sovereignty
-of
-the Gottorp
-lands.
-1658.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Danish king
-gave up the <i>sovereignty</i> of the Gottorp districts of the
-duchies. Even if that cession implied the surrender of
-his own feudal superiority over the Gottorp districts of
-Sleswick, he could not alienate any part of the Imperial
-rights over Holstein.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuations
-in
-the duchies.
-1675-1700.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This sovereignty, in whatever it
-consisted, was lost and won several times between king
-and Duke before the end of the century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danish
-possession
-of Oldenburg.
-1678.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile
-the Danish crown became possessed of the outlying
-duchies of <i>Oldenburg</i> and <i>Delmenhorst</i>, which in some
-sort balanced the Swedish possession of Bremen and
-Verden.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">{510}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden
-after the
-peace of
-Oliva.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The wars and treaties which were ended by the
-peace of Oliva fixed the boundaries of the Baltic lands
-for a season. They fixed the home extent of Sweden
-down to the present century. They cut off Denmark,
-save its one outpost of <i>Bornholm</i>, from the Baltic itself,
-as distinguished from the narrow seas which lead to it.
-They fixed the extent of Poland down to the partitions.
-What they failed to do for any length of time was to
-cut off Russia from the Baltic, and to establish Sweden
-on the Ocean. But for the present we leave Sweden
-ruling over the whole western and the greater part of
-the eastern coast of the Northern Mediterranean, and
-holding smaller possessions both on its southern coast
-and on the Ocean. The rest of the eastern and southern
-coast of the Baltic is divided between the Polish fief
-of Curland, the dominions of the common ruler of Pomerania
-and Prussia,—now an independent prince in
-his eastern duchy,—and the small piece of Polish
-coast placed invitingly between the two parts of
-his dominions. In her own peninsula Sweden has
-reached her natural frontier, and has given back what
-she won for a moment beyond it. While Sweden has
-this vast extent of coast with comparatively little
-extent inland, the vast inland region of Poland and
-Lithuania has hardly any seaboard, and the still vaster
-inland region of Russia has none at all in Europe, except
-on the White Sea. Thus the most striking feature of
-this period is the advance of Sweden; but we have
-seen that it was also a time of great advance on the
-part of Russia. It was a time of yet greater advance
-on that side of her dominion where Russia had no
-European rivals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">{511}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-advance of
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the case of Russia, the only European power
-which could conquer and colonize by land in barbarian
-regions,<a name="FNanchor_69" id="FNanchor_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> her earlier barbarian conquests were absolutely
-necessary to her existence. No hard line can be drawn
-between her earliest and her latest conquests, between
-the first advance of Novgorod and the last conquests in
-Turkestan. But the advance which immediately followed
-the deliverance from the Tartar yoke marks a great epoch.
-The smaller khanats into which the dominion of the
-Golden Horde had been broken up still kept Russia
-from the Euxine and the Caspian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Kazan
-and Astrakhan.
-1552-1554.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The two khanats
-on the Volga, <i>Kazan</i> and <i>Astrakhan</i>, were subdued by
-Ivan the Terrible. The coast of the Caspian was now
-reached. But the khans of <i>Crim</i> remained, unsubdued
-and dangerous enemies, still cutting off Russia
-from the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Superiority
-over the
-Don Cossacks.
-1577.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Yet, even in this direction an
-advance was made when the Russian supremacy was
-acknowledged by the Cossacks of the Don.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of Siberian
-conquest.
-1581.<br />
-1592-1706.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquest
-of the Siberian khanat, with its capital <i>Tobolsk</i>,
-next followed, and thence, in the course of the next
-century, the boundless extent of northern Asia was
-added to the Russian dominion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The Decline of Sweden and Poland.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In the last section we traced out the greatest
-advance of Sweden and a large advance of Russia, both
-made at the cost of Poland, that of Sweden also at the
-cost of Denmark. We saw also the beginnings of a
-power which we still called <i>Brandenburg</i> rather than
-<i>Prussia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the present section, describing the work
-of the eighteenth century, we have to trace the growth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">{512}</a></span>
-of this last power, which now definitely takes the
-Prussian name, and which we have to look at in its
-Prussian character.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline of
-Sweden.<br />
-Extinction
-of Poland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The period is marked by the
-decline of Sweden and the utter wiping out of Poland
-and Lithuania, Russia and Prussia in different degrees
-being chief actors in both cases.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Prussia.
-1701.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the beginning of the
-period Prussia becomes a kingdom—a sign of advance,
-though not accompanied by any immediate increase
-of territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Empire of
-Russia.
-1721.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A little later the ruler of Russia, already
-Imperial in his own tongue,<a name="FNanchor_70" id="FNanchor_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> more definitely takes the
-Imperial style as <i>Emperor of all the Russias</i>. This
-might pass as a challenge of the Russian lands, Black,
-White, and Red, which were still held by Poland.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia on
-the Baltic.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But more pressing than the recovery of these lands
-was the breaking down of the barrier by which Sweden
-kept Russia away from the Baltic. To a very slight
-extent this was a recovery of old Russian territory;
-but the position now won by Russia was wholly new.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Wars of
-Charles
-and Peter.
-1700-1721.<br />
-Foundation
-of Saint
-Petersburg.
-1703.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The war with Charles the Twelfth made Russia a great
-Baltic power, and Peter the Great, early in the struggle,
-set up the great trophy of his victory in the foundation
-of his new capital of Saint Petersburg on ground won
-from Sweden.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession of
-Livland,
-&amp;c., by
-Sweden.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The peace of Nystad confirmed Russia
-in the possession of Swedish Livland, Esthland, Ingermanland,
-part of Carelia, and a small part of Finland
-itself.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Further
-advance of
-Russia.
-1741-1743.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Another war, ended by the Peace of Åbo, gave
-Russia another small extension in Finland.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">At the same time Sweden was cut short in her other
-outlying possessions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sweden
-loses Bremen,
-Verden, and
-part of
-Pomerania.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of her German fiefs, the duchies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">{513}</a></span>
-of Bremen and Verden passed, first to Denmark, then
-to Hannover. But her Baltic possessions were only
-partly lost, to the profit of Brandenburg. The frontier
-of Swedish Pomerania fell back to the north-west, losing
-Stettin, but keeping Stralsund, Wolgast, and Rügen.
-Denmark meanwhile advanced in the debateable land
-on her southern frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danish
-conquest of
-the Gottorp
-lands.
-1713-1715.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Danish occupation
-of Bremen and Verden was only momentary; but
-the Gottorp share of Sleswick and Holstein was conquered,
-and the possession of all Sleswick was guaranteed
-to Denmark by England and France.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Gottorp
-lands in
-Holstein
-restored.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But
-the Gottorp share of Holstein, as an Imperial fief,
-was given back to its Duke.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>They pass
-to Denmark
-in
-exchange
-for Oldenburg.
-1767-1773.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Lastly, when the house
-of Gottorp had mounted the throne of Russia, the
-Gottorp portion of Holstein was ceded to Denmark
-in exchange for Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, which
-were at once given to another branch of the family.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>First partition
-of
-Poland.
-1772.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the latter part of the eighteenth century the
-three partitions of Poland brought about the all but
-complete recovery of the lands which the Lithuanian
-dukes had won from Russia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-share.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first partition
-gave Russia Polish Livland, and all the lands which
-Poland still kept beyond Duna and Dnieper. The
-greater part of <i>White Russia</i> was thus won back.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussian
-share.<br />
-Brandenburg
-and
-Prussia
-geographically
-united.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the same time the house of Hohenzollern gained
-its great territorial need, the geographical union of
-the kingdom of Prussia with the lands of Brandenburg
-and Pomerania, now increased by nearly all
-Silesia. This union was made by Poland giving up
-<i>West Prussia</i>—Danzig remaining an outlying city of
-Poland—and part of <i>Great Poland</i> and <i>Cujavia</i>, known<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">{514}</a></span>
-as the <i>Netz District</i>.<a name="FNanchor_71" id="FNanchor_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austrian
-share.<br />
-Kingdom
-of Galicia
-and Lodomeria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Austrian share, the new
-kingdom of <i>Galicia and Lodomeria</i>, was a kind of
-commemoration of the conquests of Lewis the Great:<a name="FNanchor_72" id="FNanchor_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>
-but, while it did not take in all <i>Red Russia</i>, it took in
-part of <i>Podolia</i> and of <i>Little Poland</i> south of the Vistula,
-making Cracow a frontier city.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-territory
-held by
-Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Austria thus became
-possessed of a part of the old Russian territory, most
-of which she has kept ever since.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-partition.
-1793.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Polish state was thus maimed on all sides; but
-it still kept a considerable territorial extent. The
-second partition, the work of Russia and Prussia only,
-could only be a preparation for the final death-blow.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-share.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It gave to Russia the rest of <i>Podolia</i> and <i>Ukraine</i>, and
-part of <i>Volhynia</i> and <i>Podlasia</i>. <i>Little Russia</i> and <i>White
-Russia</i> were thus wholly won back, and the Russian
-frontier was advanced within the old Lithuanian duchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussian
-share.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Prussia took nearly all that was left of the oldest Polish
-state, the rest of <i>Great Poland</i> and <i>Cujavia</i>, and part
-of <i>Mazovia</i>, forming the <i>South Prussia</i> of the new
-nomenclature. Gnesen, the oldest Polish capital, the
-metropolis of the Polish Church, now passed away from
-Poland.</p>
-
-<p>The remnant that was left to Poland took in the
-greater part of <i>Little Poland</i>, part of <i>Mazovia</i>, the
-greater part of the old <i>Lithuania</i> with the fragment
-still left of its Russian territory, <i>Samogitia</i> and the
-fief of <i>Curland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Third partition.
-1795.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The final division was delayed only
-two years. This time all three partners joined.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-share.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Russia took all <i>Lithuania</i> east of the Niemen, with
-its capital <i>Vilna</i>, also <i>Curland</i> and <i>Samogitia</i> to
-the north, and the old Russian remnant to the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Austrian
-share.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Austria took <i>Cracow</i>, with nearly all the rest of <i>Little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">{515}</a></span>
-Poland</i>, as also part of <i>Mazovia</i>, by the name of <i>New
-Galicia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Prussian
-share.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Prussia took <i>Danzig</i> and <i>Thorn</i>, as also a
-small piece of <i>Little Poland</i> to improve the frontiers of
-South Prussia and Silesia, perhaps without thinking
-that this last process was an advance of the Roman
-Terminus. The capital <i>Warsaw</i>, with the remnant of
-<i>Mazovia</i> and the strip of <i>Lithuania</i> west of the Niemen,
-also fell to Prussia. The names of Poland and Lithuania
-now passed away from the map.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>No original
-Polish
-territory
-gained by
-Russia in
-the partitions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">It is important to remember that the three partitions
-gave no part of the original Polish realm to Russia.
-Russia took back the Russian territory which had been
-long before won by Lithuania, and added the greater
-part of Lithuania itself, with the lands immediately to
-the north.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The old
-Poland
-divided between
-Prussia
-and Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The ancient kingdom of Poland was divided
-between Prussia and Austria, and the oldest Poland of all
-fell to the lot of Prussia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Poland
-passes to
-Prussia,<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Great Poland, Silesia, Pomerania,
-the Polish lands which had passed to the mark
-of Brandenburg, once united under Polish rule, were
-again united under the power to which they had gradually
-fallen away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Chrobatia
-to Austria.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Austria or Hungary meanwhile took
-the rest of the northern Chrobatia, seven hundred years
-after the acquisition of the former part, and also the
-Russian land which had been twice before added to
-the Magyar kingdom.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance to
-the Euxine.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Russia made advances in other quarters
-of nearly equal extent. As the remnant of the Saracen at
-Granada cut off the Castilian from his southern coast or
-the Mediterranean, for more than two hundred years, so
-did the remnant of the Tartar in <i>Crim</i> cut off the Russian
-for as long a time from his southern coast on the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Occupation
-of Azof.
-1696-1711.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Peter the Great first made his way, if not to the Euxine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">{516}</a></span>
-at least to its inland gulf, by the taking of <i>Azof</i>. But the
-new conquest was only temporary. After seventy
-years more the work was done.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-Crim
-1774.<br />
-Annexation
-of
-Crim.
-1783.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First came the
-nominal independence of the Crimean khanat, then
-its incorporation with Russia. The work at which
-Megarian and Genoese colonists had laboured was
-now done; the northern coast of the Euxine was won
-for Europe.<a name="FNanchor_73" id="FNanchor_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> The road through which so many
-Turanian invaders had pressed into the Aryan continent
-was blocked for ever.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Jedisan.
-1791.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The next advance, the
-limit of Russian advance made strictly at the expense
-of the barbarian as distinguished from his Christian
-vassals, carried the Russian frontier from the Bug to
-the Dniester.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-conquests
-from
-Persia.
-1727-1734.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The chief Asiatic acquisition of Russia in the
-eighteenth century took a strange form. It was conquest
-beyond the sea, though only beyond the inland
-Caspian. Turk and Russian joined to dismember
-Persia, and for some years Russia held the south coast
-of that great lake, the lands of <i>Daghestan</i>, <i>Ghilan</i>, and
-<i>Mazanderan</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Superiority
-over
-Georgia.
-1783.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the century the ancient Christian
-kingdom of <i>Georgia</i> passed under Russian superiority,
-the earnest of much Russian conquest on both sides of
-Caucasus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Superiority
-over the
-Kirghis.
-1773.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And nearly at the same time as the first
-steps towards the acquisition of Crim, the Russian
-dominion was spread over the <i>Kirghis</i> hordes west of
-the river Ural, winning a coast on the eastern Caspian,
-the sea of Aral, and the Baltash lake.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">{517}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Survey at
-the end of
-the eighteenth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus, by the end of the eighteenth century, the
-Swedish power has fallen back. Its territory east of
-the Baltic is less than it was at the beginning of the
-sixteenth century. Denmark, on the other hand, has
-grown by an advance in the debateable southern
-duchies. All Sleswick is added to the Danish crown;
-all Holstein is held by the Danish king. Poland has
-vanished. The anomalous power on the middle
-Danube, whose princes, it must be remembered, still
-wore the crown of the Empire, has thrust itself into the
-very heart of the old Polish land. But the power
-which has gained most by the extinction of Poland has
-been the new kingdom of Prussia. If part of her annexations
-lasted only a few years, she made her Baltic
-coast continuous for ever. But Prussia and Austria
-alike, by joining to wipe out the central state of the
-whole region, have given themselves a mighty neighbour.
-Russia has wholly cast aside her character as a
-mere inland power, intermediate between Europe and
-Asia. She has won her way, after so many ages, to
-her old position and much more. She has a Baltic and
-an Euxine seaboard. Her recovery of her old lands
-on the Duna and the Dnieper, her conquest of new
-lands on the Niemen, have brought her into the heart
-of Europe. And she has opened the path which was
-also to lead her into the heart of Asia, and to establish
-her in the intermediate mountain land between the
-Euxine and the Caspian.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>The Modern Geography of the Baltic Lands.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The French
-revolutionary
-wars.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The territorial arrangements of Northern and
-Eastern Europe were not affected by the French revolutionary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">{518}</a></span>
-wars till after the fall of the Western Empire.
-At that moment the frontier of Germany and Denmark
-was still what it had been under Charles the Great;
-“Eidora Romani terminus Imperii.” Only now the
-Danish king ruled to the south of the boundary stream
-in the character of a prince of the Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holstein
-incorporated
-with
-Denmark,
-and Swedish
-Pomerania
-with
-Sweden.
-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The fall
-of the Empire put an end to this relation, and the
-duchy of Holstein was incorporated with the Danish
-realm. In the like sort, the Swedish kingdom was
-extended to the central mainland of Europe, by the
-incorporation of the Pomeranian dominions of the
-Swedish king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-conquest of
-Finland,
-1809.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Before long, the last war between Sweden
-and Russia was ended by the peace of Friderikshamn,
-when Sweden gave up all her territory east of the
-gulf as far as the river Tornea, together with the isles
-of <i>Aland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grand
-Duchy of
-Finland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These lands passed to the Russian Emperor
-as a separate and privileged dominion, the <i>Grand Duchy
-of Finland</i>. Thus Sweden withdrew to her own side
-of the Baltic, while Russia at last became mistress of
-the whole eastern coast from the Prussian border
-northward.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Sweden
-and Norway.
-1814-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The general peace left this arrangement
-untouched, but decreed the separation of Norway from
-Denmark and its union with Sweden. This was carried
-out so far as to effect the union of Sweden and Norway
-as independent kingdoms under a single king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Swedish
-Pomerania
-passes to
-Denmark.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark
-got in compensation, as diplomacy calls it, a
-scrap of its old Slavonic realm, Rügen and Swedish
-Pomerania.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Exchanged
-with
-Prussia for
-Lauenburg.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These detached lands were presently exchanged
-with Prussia for a land adjoining Holstein, the
-duchy of <i>Lauenburg</i>, the representative of ancient
-Saxony.<a name="FNanchor_74" id="FNanchor_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Heligoland
-passes to
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Denmark kept Iceland, but the Frisian island
-of <i>Heligoland</i> off the coast of Sleswick passed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">{519}</a></span>
-England. Thus the common king of Sweden and
-Norway reigns over the whole of the northern peninsula
-and over nothing out of it. No such great change
-had affected the Scandinavian kingdoms since the
-union of Calmar.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Holstein
-and Lauenburg
-join
-the German
-Confederation.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Meanwhile the king of Denmark, remaining the
-independent sovereign of Denmark, Iceland, and Sleswick,
-entered the German Confederation for his duchies
-of Holstein and Lauenburg.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Disputes
-and wars in
-the Duchies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Disputes and wars made
-no geographical change till the war which followed the
-accession of the present king. The changes which
-then followed have been told elsewhere.<a name="FNanchor_75" id="FNanchor_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Transfer of
-Sleswick
-and Holstein,
-with
-Lauenburg
-to Prussia.
-1864-1866.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They amount
-to the transfer to Prussia of Lauenburg, Holstein, and
-Sleswick, with a slight change of frontier and a redistribution
-of the smaller islands. A conditional engagement
-for the restoration of northern Sleswick to Denmark
-was not fulfilled, and has been formally annulled.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Losses of
-Prussia.
-1806.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the lands which had been Poland and Lithuania,
-the immediate result of the French wars was the
-creation of a new Polish state; their final result was a
-great extension of the dominion of Russia. Prussia had
-to surrender its whole Polish territory, save West
-Prussia.<a name="FNanchor_76" id="FNanchor_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bialystok
-added to
-Russia.<br />
-Danzig a
-commonwealth.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A small Lithuanian territory, the district
-of <i>Bialystok</i>, was given to Russia;
-<i>Danzig</i> became a
-separate commonwealth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Warsaw<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The rest of the Prussian
-share of Poland formed the new <i>Duchy of Warsaw</i>.
-This state was really no bad representative of the
-oldest Poland of all. Silesia was gone; but the new
-duchy took in Great Poland and Cujavia, with parts of
-Little Poland, Mazovia, and Lithuania. It took in the
-oldest capital at Gnesen and the newest at Warsaw.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">{520}</a></span>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Enlarged
-by part of
-Austrian
-Poland.
-1810.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The new state was presently enlarged by the addition
-of the territory added to Austria by the last partition.
-Cracow, with the greater part of Little Poland, was
-again joined to Great Poland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Duchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Speaking roughly, the
-duchy took in nearly the whole of the old Polish kingdom,
-without Silesia, but with some small Lithuanian
-and Russian territory added.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Arrangements
-of
-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>It was the Poland thus formed, a state which answered
-much more nearly to the Poland of the fourteenth
-than to the Poland of the eighteenth century,
-which, by the arrangements of the Vienna Congress,
-first received a Russian sovereign.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Danzig
-and Posen
-restored to
-Prussia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Prussia now again
-rounded off her <i>West-Prussian</i> province by the recovery
-of Danzig and Thorn, and she rounded off her southern
-frontier by the recovery of Posen and Gnesen,
-which had been part of her <i>South-Prussian</i> province.
-The <i>Grand Duchy of Posen</i> became again part of
-the Prussian state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cracow a
-commonwealth.
-Annexed
-by Austria.
-1846.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cracow</i> became a republic, to be
-annexed by Austria thirty years later.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Poland
-united to
-Russia.
-1831-1863.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The remainder
-of the Duchy of Warsaw, under the style of the
-<i>Kingdom of Poland</i>, became a separate kingdom, but
-with the Russian Emperor as its king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russia
-takes old
-Polish
-territory
-for the first
-time.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later events
-have destroyed, first its constitution, then its separate
-being; and now all ancient Poland, except the part of
-Great Poland kept by Prussia and the part of Little
-Poland kept by Austria, is merged in the Russian
-Empire. Thus the Russian acquisition of strictly
-Polish, as distinguished from old-Russian and Lithuanian
-territory, dates, not from the partitions, but from
-the Congress of Vienna. It was to the behoof of
-Prussia and Austria, not of Russia, that the old
-kingdom of the Piasts was broken in pieces.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">{521}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The changes of the nineteenth century with regard
-to the lands on the European coasts of the Euxine
-have been told elsewhere.<a name="FNanchor_77" id="FNanchor_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fluctuation
-of the
-Russian
-frontier towards
-Moldavia.
-1812-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They amount, as far as
-the geographical boundaries of Russia are concerned,
-to her advance to the Pruth and the Danube, her
-partial withdrawal, her second partial advance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-in the
-Caucasus.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile the Russian advance in the nineteenth
-century on the Asiatic shores of the Euxine and in
-the lands on and beyond the Caspian has been far
-greater than her advance during the eighteenth. It
-is in our own century that Russia has taken up her
-commanding position between the Euxine and the
-Caspian seas, one which in some sort amounts to an enlargement
-of Europe at the expense of Asia. The old
-frontier on the Caspian, which had hardly changed
-since the conquest of Astrakhan, reached to the <i>Terek</i>.
-The annexation of Crim made the <i>Kuban</i> the boundary
-on the side of the Euxine.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Incorporation
-of
-Georgia.
-1800.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The incorporation of the
-<i>Georgian</i> kingdom gave Russia an outlying territory
-south of the Caucasus on the upper course of the <i>Kur</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-on the
-Caspian.
-1802.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Next came the acquisition of the Caspian coast from
-the mouth of the Terek to the mouth of the Kur, the
-land of <i>Daghestan</i> and <i>Shirwan</i>, including part of the
-territory which had been held for a few years in the
-eighteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-Armenia
-and Circassia.
-1829.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Persian and Turkish wars
-gave Russia the Armenian land of <i>Erivan</i> as far as the
-<i>Araxes</i>, <i>Mingrelia</i> and <i>Immeretia</i>, and the nominal
-cession of the Euxine coast between them and the
-older frontier.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1859.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was thirty years before the
-mountain region of <i>Circassia</i> was fully subdued.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-last changes have extended the Trans-Caucasian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">{522}</a></span>
-frontier of Russia to the south by the addition of
-<i>Batoum</i> and <i>Kars</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-Turkestan.
-1853-1868.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the lands east of the Caspian the new province
-of Turkestan gradually grew up in the lands on the
-Jaxartes, reaching southward to Samarkand.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1875.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Khokand</i>
-to the south-east followed, while <i>Khiva</i> and <i>Bokhara</i>,
-the lands on the Oxus, have passed under Russian
-influence. The Turcoman tribes immediately east of
-the Caspian have also been annexed. The Caspian
-has thus nearly become a Russian lake. Hardly anything
-remains to Persia except the extreme southern
-coast which was once for a moment Russian.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance in
-Eastern
-Asia.
-1858.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Far again to the east, Russia has added a large
-territory on the Chinese border on the river Amoor.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent and
-character
-of the
-Russian
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All these conquests form the greatest continuous
-extent of territory by land which the world has ever
-seen, unless during the transient dominion of the old
-Mongols. No other European power in any age has, or
-could have had, such a continuous dominion, because
-no other European power has ever had the unknown
-barbarian world lying in the same way at its side. Nowhere
-again has any European power held a dominion
-so physically unbroken as that which stretches from
-the gulf of Riga to the gulf of Okhotsk. The greater
-part of the Asiatic dominion of Russia belongs to
-that part of Asia which has least likeness to Europe.
-It is only on the Frozen Ocean that we find a kind
-of mockery of inland seas, islands, and peninsulas.
-Massive unbroken extent by land is its leading character.
-And as this character extends to a large part
-of European Russia also, Russia is the only European
-land where there can be any doubt where Europe
-ends. The barbarian dominion of other European<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">{523}</a></span>
-states, a dominion beyond the sea, has been a dominion
-of choice. The barbarian dominion of Russia in lands
-adjoining her European territory is a dominion forced
-on her by geographical necessity. The annexation of
-Kamtschatka became a question of time when the first
-successors of Ruric made their earliest advance towards
-the Finnish north.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Russian
-America.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">Alongside of this continuous dominion in Europe
-and Asia, the Russian occupation of territory in a third
-continent, an occupation made by sea after the manner
-of other European powers, has not been lasting. The
-Russian territory in the north-west corner of America,
-the only part of the world where Russia and England
-marched on one another, has been sold to the United
-States.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final
-Survey.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>To return to Europe, the events of the nineteenth
-century have, in the lands with which we are dealing,
-carried on the work of the eighteenth by the further
-aggrandizement of Russia and Prussia. The Scandinavian
-powers have withdrawn into the two Scandinavian
-peninsulas and the adjoining islands, and in the
-southern peninsula the power of Denmark has been
-cut short to the gain of Prussia. The Prussian power
-meanwhile, formed in the eighteenth century by the
-union of the detached lands of Prussia and Brandenburg,
-has in the nineteenth grown into the imperial
-power of Germany, and has, even as a local kingdom,
-become, by the acquisition of Swedish Pomerania,
-Holstein, and Sleswick, the dominant power on the
-southern Baltic. The acquisition of the duchies too, not
-only of Sleswick and Holstein, but of Bremen and Verden
-also, as parts of the annexed kingdom of Hannover, have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">{524}</a></span>
-given her a part of the former oceanic position both of
-Denmark and Sweden. Russia has acquired the same
-position on the gulfs of the Baltic which Prussia has on
-the south coast of the Baltic itself. The acquisition of
-the new Poland has brought her frontier into the very
-midst of Europe; it has made her a neighbour, not
-merely of Prussia as such, but of Germany. The third
-sharer in the partition has drawn back from her
-northern advance, but she has increased her scrap of
-Russia, her scrap of Little Poland, her scrap of Moldavia,<a name="FNanchor_78" id="FNanchor_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>
-by the suppression of a free city. The southern
-advance of Russia on European ground has been
-during this century an advance less of territory than
-of influence. The frontier of 1878 is the restored
-frontier of 1812. It is in the lands out of Europe that
-Russia has in the meanwhile advanced by strides which
-look startling on the map, but which in truth spring
-naturally from the geographical position of the one
-modern European power which cannot help being
-Asiatic as well.</p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">{525}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE SPANISH PENINSULA AND ITS COLONIES.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogy
-between
-Spain and
-Scandinavia.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> great peninsula of the West has much in common
-with the great peninsula of the North.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slight relations
-with
-the Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Save Sweden
-and Norway, no part of Western Europe has had so
-little to do with the later Empire as Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break between
-earlier and
-later history.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And in no
-land that formed part of the earlier Empire, save our
-own island, is the later history so completely cut off
-from the earlier history. The modern kingdoms of
-Spain have still less claim to represent the West-Gothic
-kingdom than the modern kingdom of France had to
-represent the Frankish kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern
-Spanish
-history
-begins
-with the
-Saracen
-conquest.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The history of Spain,
-as an element in the European system, begins with the
-Saracen invasion. For a hundred years before that
-time all trace of dependence on the elder Empire had
-passed away. With the later Western Empire Spain
-had nothing to do after the days of Charles the Great
-and his immediate successors. Their claims over a
-small part of the country passed away from the Empire
-to the kings of Karolingia.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogy
-between
-Spain and
-South-eastern
-Europe.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">With the Eastern Empire and the states which
-grew out of it Spain has the closest connexion in the
-way of analogy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Comparison
-of the
-effects of
-conquest
-and deliverance
-in each.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Each was a Christian land conquered
-from the Mussulman. Each has been wholly or partially
-won back from him. But the deliverance of
-south-western Europe was mainly the work of its own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">{526}</a></span>
-people, and its deliverance was nearly ended when
-the bondage of south-eastern Europe was only beginning.
-Again, in south-eastern Europe the nations were
-fully formed before the Mussulman conquest, and they
-have lived through it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Spanish
-nation
-formed by
-the war
-with the
-Mussulmans.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Spain the Mussulman conquest
-cut short the West-Gothic power just as it was growing
-into a new Romance nation; the actual Romance nation
-of Spain was formed by the work of withstanding
-the invaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogy
-between
-Spain and
-Russia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The closest analogy of all is between
-Spain and Russia. Each was delivered by its own
-people. In each case, long after the main deliverance
-had been wrought, long after the liberated nation had
-begun again to take its place in Europe, the ransomed
-land was still cut off, by a fragment of its old enemies,
-from the coasts of its own southern sea.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the West-Gothic
-and
-the Saracen
-dominions.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The Saracen dominion in the West, as established
-by the first conquerors, answered very nearly to the
-West-Gothic kingdom, as it then stood: but it did not
-exactly answer to <i>Spain</i>, either in the geographical or
-in the later Roman sense.<a name="FNanchor_79" id="FNanchor_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> When the Saracen came,
-the Empire, not the Goth, still held the Balearic Isles,
-and the fortresses of <i>Tangier</i> and <i>Ceuta</i> on the Mauretanian
-side of the strait. On the other hand, the Goth
-did not hold quite the whole of the peninsula, while
-his dominion took in the Gaulish land of <i>Septimania</i>.
-Strictly speaking, the conquest was one, not of Spain
-geographically, but of the West-Gothic dominions in
-and out of Spain, and of the outlying Imperial possessions
-in their neighbourhood.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two
-centres of
-deliverance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was from the lands
-which hindered both the West-Gothic and the Saracen
-dominion from exactly answering to geographical Spain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">{527}</a></span>
-that deliverance came, and it came in two forms.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The independent
-lands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-From
-the land to the north-west, which held out against both
-Goth and Saracen, came that form of deliverance which
-was strictly native.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Frankish
-dominion.
-752-759.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-At the other end, the Frank first won
-back for Christendom the Saracen province in Gaul, and
-then carried his arms into the neighbouring corner of
-Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>778.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus we get two centres of deliverance, two
-groups of states which did the work. There are the north-western
-lands, whose history is purely Spanish, which
-simply withstood the Saracen, and the north-eastern
-lands, which were first won from the Saracen by the
-Frank, and which gradually freed themselves from their
-deliverer.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Represented
-severally
-by
-Castile and
-Portugal,
-and by
-Aragon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The former class are represented in later
-Spanish history by the kingdoms of Castile and Portugal,
-the latter by the kingdom of Aragon. Navarre lies
-between the two, and shares in the history of both.
-The former start geographically from the mountain
-region washed by the Ocean. The latter start geographically
-from the mountains which divide Gaul and
-Spain, and which stretch westward to the Mediterranean.
-The geographical position of the regions foreshadows
-their later history.<a name="FNanchor_80" id="FNanchor_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Later history
-of
-Aragon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was Aragon, looking
-to the East, which first played a great part in European
-affairs, and which carried Spanish influence and dominion
-into Gaul, Sicily, Italy, and Greece.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Castile
-and Portugal.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was
-Portugal and Castile, looking to the West, which
-established an Iberian dominion beyond the bounds of
-Europe. The fact that a Queen of Castile in the fifteenth
-century married a King of Aragon and not a
-King of Portugal has led us to speak of the peninsular
-kingdoms as ‘<i>Spain</i> and <i>Portugal</i>.’<a name="FNanchor_81" id="FNanchor_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> For some ages
-‘Spain and Aragon’ would have been a more natural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">{528}</a></span>
-division. But the very difference in the fields of action
-of Castile and Aragon hindered any such strong opposition.
-Between Castile and Portugal, on the other
-hand, a marked rivalry arose in the field which was
-common to both.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The more
-strictly
-native
-centre
-foremost in
-the work of
-deliverance.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of these two centres, one purely Spanish, the other
-brought for a long time under a greater or less degree
-of foreign influence, the more strictly native region
-was foremost in the work of national deliverance.
-How far western Spain stood in advance of eastern
-Spain is shown by the speaking fact that Toledo,
-so much further to the south, was won by Castile
-a generation before Zaragoza was won by Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-of Castile
-and Aragon
-towards
-Navarre.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But both Castile and Aragon, as powers, grew out
-of the break-up of a momentary dominion in the
-land which lay between them, and whose later history
-is much less illustrious than theirs. In the second
-quarter of the eleventh century the kingdom of
-<i>Pampeluna</i> or <i>Navarre</i> had, by the energy of a single
-man, the Sviatopluk or Stephen Dushan of his little
-realm, risen to the first place among the Christian
-powers of Spain. Castile and Aragon do not appear
-with kingly rank till both had passed under the
-momentary rule of a neighbour which in after times
-seemed so small beside either of them. And the
-name of <i>Castile</i>, whether as county, kingdom, or
-empire, marks a comparatively late stage of Christian
-advance. We must here go back for a moment to
-those early days of the long crusade of eight hundred
-years at which we have already slightly glanced.<a name="FNanchor_82" id="FNanchor_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">{529}</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Foundation of the Spanish Kingdoms.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Founding
-of the
-kingdom
-of Leon.
-753.<br />
-916.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have seen how the union of the small independent
-lands of the north, <i>Asturia</i> and <i>Cantabria</i>, grew
-into the kingdom, first of <i>Oviedo</i> and then of <i>Leon</i>.
-<i>Gallicia</i>, on the one side, representing in some sort the
-old Suevian kingdom, <i>Bardulia</i> or the oldest <i>Castile</i>,
-the land of Burgos, on the other side, were lands which
-were early inclined to fall away.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Christian
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The growth of the
-Christian powers on this side was favoured by internal
-events among the Mussulmans, by famines and revolts
-which left a desert border between the hostile powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Ommiad
-emirate.
-755.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Ommiad emirate, afterwards caliphate, was established
-almost at the moment of the Saracen loss of
-Septimania.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Spanish
-March.
-778-801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came the <i>Spanish March</i> of Charles
-the Great, which brought part of northern Spain once
-more within the bounds of the new Western Empire,
-as the conquests of Justinian had brought back part
-of southern Spain within the bounds of the undivided
-Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its extent.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This march, at its greatest extent, took in
-Pampeluna at one end and Barcelona at the other, with
-the intermediate lands of <i>Aragon</i>, <i>Ripacurcia</i>, and
-<i>Sobrarbe</i>. But the Frankish dominion soon passed
-away from Aragon, and still sooner from Pampeluna.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Its division.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The western part of the march, which still acknowledged
-the superiority of the Kings of Karolingia, split
-up into a number of practically independent counties,
-which made hardly any advance against the common
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the land of Pampeluna became, at the
-beginning of the eleventh century, an independent and
-powerful kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Navarre
-under
-Sancho the
-Great.
-1000-1035.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Navarre of Sancho the Great
-stretched some way beyond the Ebro; to the west it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">{530}</a></span>
-took in the ocean lands of <i>Biscay</i> and <i>Guipuzcoa</i>, with
-the original Castile; to the east it took in <i>Aragon</i>,
-<i>Ripacurcia</i>, and <i>Sobrarbe</i>. The two Christian kingdoms
-of Navarre and Leon took in all north-eastern
-Spain. The Douro was reached and crossed; the Tagus
-itself was not far from the Christian boundary; but
-the states which owned the superiority of the power
-which we may now call <i>France</i> were still far from the
-lower Ebro.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Break-up
-of the
-kingdom of
-Navarre
-(1035), and
-of the
-Ommiad
-caliphate
-(1028).<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>At the death of Sancho the Great his momentary
-dominion broke up. Seven years earlier the dominion
-of the Ommiad caliphs had broken up also. These two
-events, so near together, form the turning-point in the
-history of the peninsula. Instead of the one Ommiad
-caliphate, there arose a crowd of separate Mussulman
-kingdoms, which had to call for help to their Mussulman
-brethren in Africa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Invasion
-of the
-Almoravides.
-1086-1110.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This led to what was really
-a new African conquest of Mussulman Spain. The
-new deliverers or conquerors spread their dominion
-over all the Mussulman powers, save only Zaragoza.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-name
-<i>Moors</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This settlement, with other later ones of the same kind,
-gives a specially African look to the later history of
-Mahometan Spain, and has doubtless helped to give
-the Spanish Mussulmans the common name of <i>Moors</i>.
-But their language and culture remained Arabic, and
-the revolution caused by the African settlers among
-the ruins of the Western caliphate was far from being
-so great as the revolution caused by the Turkish
-settlers among the ruins of the Eastern caliphate.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>New kingdoms,
-Castile,
-Aragon,
-and Sobrarbe
-1035.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Out of the break-up of the dominion of Sancho
-came out the separate kingdom of Navarre, and the
-new kingdoms of <i>Castile</i>, <i>Aragon</i>, and <i>Sobrarbe</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Aragon
-and Sobrarbe.
-1040.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of
-these the two last were presently united, thus beginning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">{531}</a></span>
-the advance of Aragon. Thus we come to
-four of the five historic kingdoms of Spain—Navarre,
-Castile, Aragon, and Leon, whose unions and divisions
-are endless.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Shiftings
-of Castile
-and Leon.
-1037.<br />
-1065-1073.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first king Ferdinand of Castile united
-Castile and Leon;
-Castile, Leon, and Gallicia were
-again for a moment separated under his son.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1076-1134.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Aragon
-and Navarre were united for nearly sixty years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Emperor
-Alfonso
-1135.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Presently
-Spain has an Emperor in Alfonso of Castile,
-Leon, and Gallicia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1157.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Empire and kingdom were
-split asunder. Leon and Castile became separate kingdoms
-under the sons of Alfonso, and they remained
-separate for more than sixty years.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final union
-of Castile
-and Leon.
-1230.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Their final union
-created the great Christian power of Spain.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline of
-Navarre.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Navarre meanwhile, cut short by the advance of
-Castile, shorn of its lands on the Ocean and beyond
-the Ebro, lost all hope of any commanding position in
-the peninsula.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1234.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It passed to a succession of French
-kings, and for a long time it had no share in the geographical
-history of Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Growth of
-Aragon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the power of Aragon
-grew, partly by conquests from the Mussulmans, partly
-by union with the French fiefs to the east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union with
-Barcelona.
-1131.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first
-union between the crown of Aragon and the county
-of <i>Barcelona</i> led to the great growth of the power of
-Aragon on both sides of the Pyrenees and even beyond
-the Rhone.<a name="FNanchor_83" id="FNanchor_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1213.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This power was broken by the overthrow
-of King Pedro at Muret.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-with
-France.
-1258.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But by the final arrangement
-which freed <i>Barcelona</i>, <i>Roussillon</i>, and <i>Cerdagne</i>,
-from all homage to France, all trace of foreign
-superiority passed away from Christian Spain. The
-independent kingdom of Aragon stretched on both
-sides of the Pyrenees, a faint reminder of the days of
-the West-Gothic kings.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">{532}</a></span></p>
-<p>On the other side of the peninsula the lands
-between Douro and Minho began to form a separate
-state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>County of
-Portugal.
-1094.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The county of <i>Portugal</i> was held by
-princes of the royal house of France, as a fief of the
-crown of Castile and Leon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom,
-1139.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The county became a
-kingdom, and its growth cut off Leon, as distinguished
-from Castile, from any advance against the Mussulmans.
-Navarre was cut off already. But the three
-kingdoms of Castile, Aragon, and Portugal were all
-ready for the work. A restored Western Christendom
-was growing up to balance the falling away in the
-East.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Beginning
-of the great
-Christian
-advance.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The first great advance of the Christians in
-Spain began about the time of the Seljuk conquests
-from the Eastern Empire. The work of deliverance
-was not ended till the Ottoman had been for forty
-years established in the New Rome.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The Christian powers however were disunited,
-while the Mussulmans had again gained, though at a
-heavy price, the advantage of union.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Toledo.
-1085.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Alfonso the
-Sixth, commanding the powers of Castile and Leon,
-pressed far to the south, and won the old Gothic
-capital of <i>Toledo</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Zalacca.
-1086.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But his further advance was checked
-by the African invaders at the battle of Zalacca.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-of the
-Almoravides.<br />
-Advance of
-Aragon.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-Almoravide power was too strong for any present hope
-of conquests on the part of Castile;
-but the one independent
-Mussulman state at <i>Zaragoza</i> lay open to the
-Christians of the north-east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Zaragoza.
-1118.<br />
-Of Tarragona.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Zaragoza itself was taken
-by the king of Aragon, and <i>Tarragona</i> by the Count
-of Barcelona.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Tortosa.
-1148.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Both these powers advanced, and the
-conquest of <i>Tortosa</i> made the Ebro the Christian
-boundary.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Portugal.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the power of the Almoravides weakened,
-Castile and Portugal again advanced on their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">{533}</a></span>
-side.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Lisbon.
-1147.<br />
-Of Silvas.
-1191.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The latter kingdom made the great acquisition
-of its future capital <i>Lisbon</i>, and a generation later, it
-reached the southern coast by the conquest of <i>Silvas</i>
-in Algarve.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Castile.
-1147-1166.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Castile meanwhile pressed to the Guadiana
-and beyond, counting <i>Calatrava</i> and <i>Badajoz</i> among
-its cities. The line of struggle had advanced in about
-a century from the land between Douro and Tagus to
-the land between Guadiana and Guadalquivir.</p>
-
-<p>This second great Christian advance in the twelfth,
-century was again checked in the same way in which
-the advance in the eleventh century had been.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Invasion
-of the
-Almohades.
-1146.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A
-new settlement of African conquerors, the <i>Almohades</i>,
-won back a large territory from both Castile and
-Portugal.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Alarcos.
-1196.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The battle of Alarcos broke for a while
-the power of Castile, and the Almohade dominion
-stretched beyond the lower Tagus. To the east, the
-lands south of Ebro remained an independent Mussulman
-state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Decline
-of the
-Almohades.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, as the Almohades were of doubtful
-Mahometan orthodoxy, their hold on Spain was weaker
-than that of any other Mahometan conquerors.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Battle of
-Navas de
-Tolosa.
-1211.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Their
-power broke up, and the battle of Navas de Tolosa
-ruled that Spain should be a Christian land. All three
-kingdoms advanced, and within forty years the Mussulman
-power in the peninsula was cut down to a mere survival.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-the Balearic
-Isles.
-1228-1236.<br />
-Of Valencia.
-1237-1305.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Aragon won the <i>Balearic Isles</i> and formed her
-kingdom of <i>Valencia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Murcia.
-1243-1253.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But as Castile, by the incorporation
-of <i>Murcia</i>, reached to the Mediterranean, any
-further advance in the peninsula was forbidden to
-Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Portugal.
-1217-1256.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the eastern side Portugal won back her
-lost lands, reached her southern coast, kept all the
-land west of the lower Guadiana and some points to
-the east of it.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Algarve.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the kingdom of Portugal was added
-the kingdom of <i>Algarve</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">{534}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the central power of Castile pressed on faster still.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Castile
-under Saint
-Ferdinand.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Under Saint Ferdinand began the recovery of the great
-cities along the Guadalquivir.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of Cordova.
-1236.<br />
-Of Jaen.
-1246.<br />
-Of Seville.
-1248.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Cordova</i>, the city of the
-caliphs, was won;
-<i>Jaen</i> followed;
-then more famous
-<i>Seville</i>; and <i>Cadiz</i>, eldest of Western cities, passed
-again, as when she first entered the Roman world,
-from Semitic into Aryan hands.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Of Nibla.
-1257.<br />
-Of Tarifa.
-1285.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquest of
-<i>Nibla</i> and <i>Tarifa</i> at last made the completion of the
-work only a question of time.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">No one in the middle of the twelfth century could
-have dreamed that a Mussulman power would live on
-in Spain till the last years of the fifteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Granada.
-1238.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This was
-the kingdom of <i>Granada</i>, which began, amid the
-conquests of Saint Ferdinand, as a vassal state of Castile.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Reconquered
-from
-Castile.
-1298.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Yet, sixty years later, it was able to win back a considerable
-territory from its overlord.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-by Castile.
-1316.<br />
-1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Part of the land
-now gained was soon lost again; but part, with the city
-of <i>Huascar</i>, was kept by the Mussulmans far into the
-fifteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gibraltar
-lost and
-won.
-1309.
-1333.
-1344.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, on the strait between
-the ocean and the Mediterranean, <i>Gibraltar</i> was won
-by Castile, lost, and won again.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Geographical
-position
-of the four
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Thus, in the latter part of the thirteenth century,
-the peninsula of Spain was very unequally divided
-between one Mussulman and four Christian states.
-Aragon on the one side, Portugal on the other, were
-kingdoms with a coast line out of all proportion to
-their extent inwards. Aragon had become a triangle,
-Portugal a long parallelogram, cut off on each side
-from the great trapezium formed by the whole peninsula.
-Between these two lay the central power of
-Castile, with Christian Navarre still separate at one
-corner and Mussulman Granada still separate at another.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">{535}</a></span>
-Of these five kingdoms, Navarre and Aragon alone
-marched to any considerable extent on any state beyond
-the peninsula. Castile barely touched the Aquitanian
-dominions of England, while Navarre and Aragon, both
-stretching north of the Pyrenees, had together a considerable
-frontier towards Aquitaine and France.
-Navarre and Aragon again marched on one another,
-while Portugal and Granada marched only on Castile,
-the common neighbour of all. The destiny of all was
-written on the map. Navarre at one end, Granada at
-the other, were to be swallowed up by the great central
-power. Aragon, after gaining a high European position,
-was to be united with Castile under a single
-sovereign. Portugal alone was to become distinctly a
-rival of Castile, but wholly in lands beyond the bounds
-of Europe.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Title of
-‘King of
-Spain.’<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of the five Spanish powers Castile so far outtopped
-the rest that its sovereign was often spoken of in other
-lands as <i>King of Spain</i>. But Spain contained more
-kingdoms than it contained kings.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The lesser
-kingdoms.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Castile, Aragon, and
-Portugal were all formed by a succession of unions and
-conquests, each of which commonly gave their kings a
-new title. The central power was still the power of
-<i>Castile and Leon</i>, not of Castile only. <i>Leon</i> was made
-up of the kingdoms of <i>Leon</i> and <i>Gallicia</i>. Castile took
-in Castile proper or <i>Old Castile</i>, with the principality of
-the <i>Asturias</i>, and the free lands of <i>Biscay</i>, <i>Guipuzcoa</i>,
-and <i>Alava</i>. To the south it took in the kingdoms—each
-marking a stage of advance—of <i>Toledo</i> or <i>New
-Castile</i>, of <i>Cordova</i>, <i>Jaen</i>, <i>Seville</i>, and <i>Murcia</i>. The
-sovereign of Portugal held his two kingdoms of <i>Portugal</i>
-and <i>Algarve</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1262.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The sovereign of Aragon, besides his
-enlarged kingdom of <i>Aragon</i> and his counties of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">{536}</a></span>
-<i>Catalonia</i>, <i>Roussillon</i>, and <i>Cerdagne</i>, held his kingdom
-of <i>Valencia</i> on the mainland, while the Balearic
-Isles formed the kingdom of <i>Majorca</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1349.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last, first
-granted as a vassal kingdom to a branch of the royal
-house, was afterwards incorporated with the Aragonese
-state.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>Growth and Partition of the Great Spanish Monarchy.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Little geographical
-change
-after the
-thirteenth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">After the thirteenth century the strictly geographical
-changes within the Spanish peninsula were but few.
-The boundaries of the kingdoms changed but little
-towards one another, and not much towards France,
-their only neighbour from the fifteenth century onwards.
-But the five kingdoms were gradually grouped under
-two kings, for a while under one only.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Territories
-beyond the
-peninsula.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The external
-geography, so to speak, forms a longer story. We have
-to trace out the acquisition of territory within Europe,
-first by Aragon and then by Castile, and the acquisition
-of territory out of Europe, first by Portugal and then by
-Castile.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The great
-Spanish
-Monarchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The permanent union of the dominions of Castile
-and Aragon, the temporary union of the dominions
-of Castile, Aragon, and Portugal, formed that great
-<i>Spanish Monarchy</i> which in the sixteenth century was
-the wonder and terror of Europe, which lost important
-possessions in the sixteenth and in the seventeenth
-century, and which was finally partitioned in the
-beginning of the eighteenth.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>1410-1430.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Within the peninsula we have seen Castile, in the
-first half of the fifteenth century, win back the lands
-which had been lost to Granada at the end of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">{537}</a></span>
-fourteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Granada.
-1492.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The last decade of the fifteenth saw the
-ending of the struggle. Men fondly deemed that the
-recovery of Granada balanced the loss of Constantinople.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>End of
-Mussulman
-rule in
-Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the last Moorish prince still kept for a
-moment a small tributary dominion in the Alpujarras,
-and it was the purchase of this last remnant which
-finally put an end to the long rule of the Mussulman in
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p class="pb2">The conquest of Granada was the joint work of a
-queen of Castile and a king of Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1469.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the
-marriage of Ferdinand and Isabel did not at once unite
-their crowns.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Castile and
-Aragon.
-1506.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-That union may be dated from the beginning
-of Ferdinand’s second reign in Castile.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss and
-recovery of
-Roussillon.
-1462-1493.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile
-<i>Roussillon</i> and <i>Cerdagne</i> had been, after thirty years’
-French occupation, won back by Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Navarre.
-1513.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then came
-the conquest of <i>Navarre</i> south of the Pyrenees, which
-left only the small part on the Gaulish side to pass to
-the French kings of the House of Bourbon.
-Portugal
-was now the only separate kingdom in the peninsula,
-and the tendency to look on the peninsula as made up
-of <i>Spain</i> and <i>Portugal</i> was of course strengthened.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Annexation
-and
-separation
-of Portugal.
-1581-1640.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But later in the century Portugal itself was for sixty
-years united with Castile and Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Final loss
-of Roussillon.
-1659.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Portugal won
-back its independence; and the Spanish dominion was
-further cut short by the final loss of <i>Roussillon</i>. The
-Pyrenees were now the boundary of France and Spain,
-except so far as the line may be held to be broken by
-the French right of patronage over <i>Andorra</i>.<a name="FNanchor_84" id="FNanchor_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> Since
-the Peace of the Pyrenees, the peninsula itself has seen
-hardly any strictly geographical change.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Gibraltar
-lost to
-England,
-1704-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Gibraltar</i>
-has been for nearly a hundred and eighty years occupied
-by England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Oliverca.
-1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The fortress of <i>Oliverca</i> has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">{538}</a></span>
-yielded by Portugal to Spain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Minorca.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And during the last
-century <i>Minorca</i> passed to and fro between Spain and
-England more times than it is easy to remember.<a name="FNanchor_85" id="FNanchor_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a></p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance of
-Aragon beyond
-the
-peninsula.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The acquisition of territory beyond the peninsula
-naturally began with Aragon. The acquisition of the
-Balearic isles may pass as the enlargement of a peninsular
-kingdom; but before that happened, Aragon had
-won and lost what was practically a great dominion
-north of the Pyrenees. But this dominion was continuous
-with its Spanish territory.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Aragon
-and Sicily.
-1282-1285.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The real beginning
-of Aragonese dominion beyond the sea was when the
-war of the Vespers for a moment united the crowns of
-Aragon and the insular Sicily.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-union of
-Aragon
-and Sicily.
-1409.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the island crown
-was held by independent Aragonese princes, and lastly
-was again united to the Aragonese crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Aragon
-and continental
-Sicily.
-1442-1458.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The continental
-Sicily had, during the reign of Alfonso the
-Magnanimous, a common king with Aragon and the
-island.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Continental
-Sicily
-under
-Aragonese
-princes.<br />
-Final union
-of Aragon
-and the
-Sicilies.
-1503.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then the continental kingdom was—save during
-the momentary French occupations—held by Aragonese
-princes till the final union of the crowns of Aragon
-and the Two Sicilies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>War of
-Sardinia.
-1309-1428.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile a war of more
-than a hundred years gave to Aragon the island of
-<i>Sardinia</i> as a new kingdom. Thus, at the final union
-of Castile and Aragon, Aragon brought with it the
-outlying crowns of the Two Sicilies and of Sardinia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1530.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The insular Sicilian kingdom was slightly lessened by
-the grant of <i>Malta</i> and <i>Gozo</i> to the Knights of Saint
-John.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1557.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The continental kingdom was increased by the
-addition of a small Tuscan territory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">{539}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Difference
-between
-the outlying
-possessions
-of
-Aragon
-and those
-of Castile.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The outlying possessions of Aragon were thus strictly
-acquisitions made by the Kings of Aragon on behalf of
-the crown of Aragon.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Burgundian
-inheritance.
-1504.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the extension of Castilian
-dominion over distant parts of Europe was due only to
-the fact that the crown of Castile passed to an Austrian
-prince who had inherited the greater part of the dominions
-of the Dukes of Burgundy. But thereby the
-<i>Netherlands</i> and the counties of <i>Burgundy</i> and <i>Charolois</i>
-became appendages to Castile, and went to swell
-the great Spanish Monarchy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Duchy of
-Milan.
-1535.<br />
-1555.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The duchy of <i>Milan</i>
-too, in whatever character the Emperor Charles held
-it, became a Spanish dependency when it passed to his
-son Philip.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extent of
-the Spanish
-Monarchy.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The European possessions of the Spanish Monarchy
-thus took in, at the time of their greatest extent, the
-whole peninsula, the Netherlands and the other Burgundian
-lands of the Austrian house, Roussillon, the Sicilies,
-Sardinia, and Milan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of the
-United
-Netherlands.
-1578-1609.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But this whole dominion was never
-held at once, unless for form’s sake we count the United
-Netherlands as Spanish territory till the Twelve Years’
-Truce. Holland and its fellows had become practically
-independent before Portugal was won.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lands lost
-to France.
-1659-1677.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it was not
-till after the loss of Portugal that Spain suffered her
-great losses on the side of France, when the conquests
-of Lewis the Fourteenth cost her Roussillon, Cerdagne,
-Charolois, the County of Burgundy, Artois, and other
-parts of the Netherlands. The remainder of the Netherlands,
-with Milan and the three outlying Aragonese
-kingdoms, were kept till the partitions in the beginning
-of the eighteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Partition
-of the
-Spanish
-Monarchy.
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The final results of so much
-fighting and treaty-making was to take away all the
-outlying possessions of both Aragon and Castile, and to
-confine the Spanish kingdom to the peninsula and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">{540}</a></span>
-Balearic isles, less Portugal and Gibraltar for ever, and
-less Minorca for a season.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovery
-of Sicily.
-1718, 1735.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Since then Spain has never
-won back any part of the lost possessions of Castile;
-but she has more than once won back the lost possessions
-of Aragon, insular Sicily twice, continental Sicily
-once.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spanish
-kings of
-the Two
-Sicilies.
-1735-1860.<br />
-Duchy of
-Parma,
-1731-1860.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And if the Sicilies were not kept as part of the
-Spanish dominions, they passed to a branch of the
-Spanish royal house, as the duchies of <i>Parma</i> and
-<i>Piacenza</i> passed to another.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>The Colonial Dominion of Spain and Portugal.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The distinction between Spain and Portugal is most
-strikingly marked in the dominion of the two powers
-beyond the bounds of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the
-Portuguese
-dominion
-out of
-Europe.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Portugal led the way
-among European states to conquest and colonization
-out of Europe. She had a geographical and historical
-call so to do. Her dominion out of Europe was not
-indeed a matter of necessity like that of Russia, but it
-stood on a different ground from that of England,
-France, or Holland. It was not actually continuous
-with her own European territory, but it began near to
-it, and it was a natural consequence and extension of
-her European advance. The Asiatic and American
-dominion of Portugal grew out of her African dominion,
-and her African dominion was the continuation of her
-growth in her own peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>When the Moor was driven out of Spain, it was
-natural to follow him across the narrow seas into a
-land which lay so near to Spain, and which in earlier
-geography had passed as a Spanish land.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Portugal
-fully
-formed in
-the thirteenth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But as far as
-Castile was concerned, the Moor was not driven out till
-late in the fifteenth century; as far as Portugal was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">{541}</a></span>
-concerned, he was driven out in the thirteenth. Portugal
-had then reached her full extent in the peninsula,
-and she could no longer advance against the misbelievers
-by land. One is tempted to wonder that her advance
-beyond sea did not begin sooner.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Her
-African
-conquests,
-1415-1471.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It came in the fifteenth
-century, when fifty years of conquest gave to
-Portugal her kingdom of <i>Algarve beyond the Sea</i>, an
-African dominion older than the Castilian conquest of
-Granada.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Algarves.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The king of <i>Portugal and the Algarves</i> thus
-held the southern pillar of Hercules, while Castile held
-the northern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Loss of
-African
-dominion,
-1578.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greater part of this African kingdom
-was lost after the fall of Sebastian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ceuta
-Spanish.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Ceuta</i> remained
-a Spanish possession after the dominion of Portugal, so
-that Spain now holds the southern pillar and England
-the northern.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tangier
-English,
-1662-1683.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Tangier</i> too once passed from Portugal
-to England as a marriage gift, and was presently forsaken
-as useless.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Advance
-in Africa
-and the
-islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But before the kingdom of Algarve beyond the sea
-had passed away, its establishment had led to the discovery
-of the whole coast of the African continent, and
-to the growth of a vast Portuguese dominion in various
-parts of the world.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Madeira,
-1419.<br />
-Azores and
-Cape Verde
-Islands.
-1448-1454.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Madeira</i> was the first insular possession,
-followed by the <i>Azores</i> and <i>Cape Verde Islands</i>.
-Gradually, under the care of Don Henry, the Portuguese
-power spread along the north-west coast of Africa.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cape of
-Good Hope,
-1497.<br />
-Dominion
-of Arabia
-and India.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The work went on: Vasco de Gama made his great
-discovery of the Cape of Good Hope; the road to India
-was opened; dominion on the coasts of Arabia and
-India, and even in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
-was added to dominion on the coast of Africa. This
-dominion perished through the annexation of Portugal
-by Spain. Since the restoration of Portuguese independence,
-only fragments of this great African and Indian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">{542}</a></span>
-dominion have been kept.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Modern
-extent of
-Portuguese
-dominion
-abroad.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But Portugal still holds the
-Atlantic islands, various points and coasts in Africa,
-and a small territory in India and the Eastern islands.</p>
-
-<p>But Portuguese enterprise led also to a more lasting
-work, to the creation of a new European nation
-beyond the Ocean, the single European monarchy
-which has taken root in the New World.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Discovery
-of Brazil,
-1500.<br />
-1531.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Brazil</i> was
-discovered by Portuguese sailors at the end of the
-fifteenth century; it was settled as a Portuguese possession
-early in the sixteenth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1624-1654.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-During the union of
-Portugal with Spain the Dutch won for a while a large
-part of the country, but the whole was won back
-by independent Portugal. The peculiar position of
-Portugal, ever threatened by a more powerful neighbour,
-gave her great Transatlantic dominion a special
-importance.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1807.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was looked to as possible place for
-shelter, which it actually became during the French
-invasion of Portugal.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-of Portugal
-and Brazil,
-1813.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Portuguese dominions took
-the style of ‘the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil,
-and Algarve.’ Nine years later these kingdoms were
-separated, and Brazil became an independent state.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Empire
-of Brazil,
-1822.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But it remains a monarchy with the title of Empire,
-and it is still ruled by the direct representative of the
-Portuguese royal house, while Portugal itself has passed
-away from the native line by the accidents of female
-succession.</p>
-
-<p>In the sixteenth century Brazil held a wholly
-exceptional position. It was the only settlement of
-Portugal, it was the only considerable settlement of
-any European power, in a region which Spain claimed
-as her exclusive dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Division of
-the Indies
-between
-Spain and
-Portugal.
-1494.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By Papal authority Spain
-was to have all the newly found lands that lay to the
-west, and Portugal all that lay to the east, of a line<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">{543}</a></span>
-on the map, drawn at 370 leagues west of the Cape
-Verde Islands. Spain thus held the whole South
-American continent, with the exception of Brazil, together
-with that part of the North American continent
-which is most closely connected with the southern.
-While the non-European dominion of Portugal was
-primarily African and Indian, the non-European dominion
-of Spain was primarily American. It did not
-in the same way spring out of the European history of
-the country; it was rather suggested by rivalry of
-Portugal.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Oran,
-1516-1708.
-1732-1791.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Africa the Spanish dominion hardly went
-beyond the possession of <i>Oran</i> and the more lasting possession
-of <i>Ceuta</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tunis,
-1531.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The conquest of <i>Tunis</i> by Charles the
-Fifth<a name="FNanchor_86" id="FNanchor_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> was made rather in his Sicilian than in his Castilian
-character. Within the range of Portuguese dominion
-the settlements of Spain were exceptional. But they
-took in the <i>Canaries</i> off the Atlantic coast of Africa,
-and the <i>Philippine Islands</i> in the extreme eastern Archipelago.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Insular
-possessions
-of Spain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These insular possessions Spain still keeps.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spanish
-dominion
-in America.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the great Spanish dominion in the New
-World, in both Americas and in the adjoining islands
-of the West Indies, has risen and fallen.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Hispaniola,
-1492.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It began with
-the first conquest of Columbus, <i>Hispaniola</i> or Saint
-<i>Domingo</i>. Thus the dominion of Castile beyond the
-Ocean began at the very moment when she reached
-the full extent of her own Mediterranean coast.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1519.<br />
-1532.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-followed the great continental dominion in <i>Mexico</i>,
-<i>Peru</i>, and the other lands on or south of the isthmus
-which joins the two western continents. But into the
-body of the North American continent, the land which
-was to be disputed between France and England, Spain
-never spread. <i>New Mexico</i>, <i>California</i>, <i>Florida</i>, barely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">{544}</a></span>
-stretched along its western and southern coasts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Revolutions
-of the
-Spanish
-colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-whole of this continental dominion passed away in a
-series of revolutions within our own century. While
-Portugal and England have really founded new
-European nations beyond the Ocean, the result of
-Spanish rule in America has been to create a number
-of states of ever shifting extent and constitution, keeping
-the Spanish language, but some of which are as
-much native American as Spanish.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mexico.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of these <i>Mexico</i>
-is the one which has had most to do with the general
-history of Europe and European America.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two Mexican
-Empires,
-1822-1823.<br />
-1866-1867.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It has twice
-taken the name of Empire, once under a native, once
-under a foreign, adventurer. And vast provinces, once
-under its nominal rule, have passed to the United
-States.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cessions to
-the United
-States.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The loss of <i>Texas</i>, <i>New Mexico</i>, and <i>Upper
-California</i>, has cut down the present Mexico nearly to
-the extent of the first Spanish conquests.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Spanish
-West India
-islands.<br />
-Jamaica,
-1655.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of the Spanish West India islands, some, like
-<i>Jamaica</i> and <i>Trinidad</i>, have passed to other European
-powers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Saint
-Domingo,
-1864.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The oldest possession of all, the Spanish part
-of Hispaniola, has become a state distinct from that
-of Hayti in the same island.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Puerto
-Rico.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Puerto Rico</i> remains a
-real Spanish possession.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cuba.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The allegiance of <i>Cuba</i> is
-always doubtful. In short, the dominion of Spain out
-of Europe has followed its European dominion out of
-Spain. The eighteenth century destroyed the one;
-the nineteenth century has cut down the other to
-mere fragments.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">{545}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE BRITISH ISLANDS AND COLONIES.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have now gone, first through that great mass of
-European lands which formed part either of the
-Eastern or of the Western Empire, and then through
-those more distant, and mainly peninsular, lands which
-so largely escaped the Imperial dominion.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The British
-islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We end by
-leaving the mainland of Europe, by leaving the world of
-either Empire, for that great island, or rather group of
-islands, which for ages was looked on as forming a world
-of its own.<a name="FNanchor_87" id="FNanchor_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Late Roman
-conquest
-and
-early loss
-of Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Western Europe Britain was the last land
-to be won, and the first to be lost, in the days of the
-elder Empire. And, after all, Britain itself was only
-partly won, while the conquest of Ireland was never
-tried at all.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-Britain in
-the later
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-After the English Conquest, Britain had
-less to do with the revived Western Empire than any
-Western land except Norway. The momentary dealings
-of Charles the Great with Scotland and Northumberland,
-the doubtful and precarious homage done by
-Richard the First to Henry the Sixth, are the only exceptions,
-even in form, to its complete independence
-on the continental Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Britain
-another
-world and
-another
-Empire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The doctrine was that
-Britain, the other world, formed an Empire of its own.
-That Empire, being an island, was secured against the
-constant fluctuations of its external boundary to which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">{546}</a></span>
-continental states lie open.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Changes
-within
-Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For several centuries the
-boundaries, both of the Celtic and Teutonic occupants
-and of the Teutonic kingdoms among themselves, were
-always changing. But these changes hardly affect
-European history, which is concerned only with the
-broad general results—with the establishment of the
-Teutonic settlers in the island—with the union of those
-settlers in one kingdom under the West-Saxon house—with
-the extension of the imperial power of the West-Saxon
-kings over the whole island of Britain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Slight
-change in
-the internal
-divisions of
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And,
-from the eleventh century onwards, there has been
-singularly little change of boundaries within the island.
-The boundaries of England towards Scotland and Wales
-changed much less than might have been looked for
-during ages of such endless warfare. Even the lesser
-divisions within the English kingdom have been singularly
-lasting. The land, as a whole, has never been
-mapped out afresh since the tenth century. While a map
-of France or Germany in the eleventh century, or even in
-the eighteenth, is useless for immediate practical objects,
-a map of England in the days of Domesday practically
-differs not at all from a map of England now. The
-only changes of any moment, and they are neither
-many nor great, are in the shires on the Welsh and
-Scottish borders.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the historical geography of the isle of Britain
-comes to little more than a record of these border
-changes, down to the incorporation of England, Scotland,
-and Wales into a single kingdom. In the other
-great island of Ireland there is little to do except
-to trace how the boundary of English conquest advanced
-and fell back, a matter after all of no great
-European concern. The history of the smaller outlying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">{547}</a></span>
-islands, from Scandinavian Shetland to the insular
-Normandy, has really more to do with the general
-history of Europe. The dominion of the English kings
-on the continent is of the highest European moment,
-but, from its geographical side, it is Gaul and not
-Britain which it affects.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>English
-settlements
-beyond sea.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The really great geographical
-phænomenon of English history is that which
-it shares with Spain and Portugal, and in which it
-surpasses both. This is the vast extent of outlying
-English dominion and settlement, partly in Europe, but
-far more largely in the distant lands of Asia, Africa,
-America, and Australia. But it is not merely that
-England has become a great power in all quarters of
-the world; England has been, like Portugal, but on a far
-greater scale, a planter of nations.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>English
-nations.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-One group of her
-settlements has grown into one of the great powers of
-the world, into a third England beyond the Ocean,
-as far surpassing our insular England in geographical
-extent as our insular England surpasses the first England
-of all in the marchland of Germany and Denmark.
-The mere barbaric dominion of England concerns
-our present survey but little; but the historical
-geography of Europe is deeply concerned in the
-extension of England and of Europe in lands beyond
-the Western and the Southern Ocean.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">In tracing out the little that we have to say of the
-geography of Britain itself, it will be well to begin
-with that northern part of the island where changes
-have been both more numerous and more important
-than they have been in England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">{548}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 1. <i>The Kingdom of Scotland.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Historical
-position of
-Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">In Northern Britain, as in some other parts of
-Europe, we see a land which has taken its name from
-a people to which it does not owe its historic importance.
-<i>Scotland</i> has won for itself a position in Britain
-and in Europe altogether out of proportion to its size
-and population. But it has not done this by virtue of
-its strictly Scottish element.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greatness
-of Scotland
-due to its
-English
-element.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Irish settlers who
-first brought the Scottish name into Britain<a name="FNanchor_88" id="FNanchor_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> could
-never have made Scotland what it really became. What
-founded the greatness of the Scottish kingdom was the
-fact that part of England gradually took the name of
-Scotland and its inhabitants took the name of Scots.
-The case is as when the Duke of Savoy and Genoa
-and Prince of Piedmont took his highest title from that
-Sardinian kingdom which was the least valuable part
-of his dominions. It is as when the ruler of a mighty
-German realm calls himself king of the small duchy of
-Prussia and its extinct people.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two
-English
-kingdoms
-in Britain.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The truth is that, for
-more than five hundred years, there were two English
-kingdoms in Britain, each of which had a troublesome
-Celtic background which formed its chief difficulty.
-One English king reigned at Winchester or London,
-and had his difficulties in Wales and afterwards in
-Ireland. Another English king reigned at Dunfermline
-or Stirling, and had his difficulties in the true
-Scotland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extension
-of the Scottish
-name.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the southern kingdom, ruled by kings
-of native English or of foreign descent, but never by
-kings of British or Irish descent,<a name="FNanchor_89" id="FNanchor_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> always kept the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">{549}</a></span>
-English name, while the northern kingdom, ruled by
-kings of Scottish descent, adopted the Scottish name.
-The English subjects of the King of Scots gradually
-took the Scottish name to themselves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Analogy of
-Switzerland.<br />
-Threefold
-elements in
-the later
-Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-As the present
-Swiss nation is made up of parts of the German, Burgundian,
-and Italian nations which have detached
-themselves from their several main bodies, so the
-present Scottish nation is made up of parts of the
-English, Irish, and British nations which have detached
-themselves from their several main bodies. But in
-both cases it is the Teutonic element which forms the
-life and strength of the nation, the kernel to which the
-other elements have attached themselves.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>True position
-of the
-Kings of
-Scots.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-We cannot
-read the mediæval history of Britain aright, unless we
-remember that the King of Scots was in truth the
-English king of Teutonic Lothian and Teutonized
-Fife.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Enmity of
-the true
-Scots.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The people from whom he took his title were at
-most his unwilling subjects; they were often his open
-enemies, the allies of his southern rival.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lothian,
-Strathclyde,
-and
-Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The modern kingdom of Scotland was made up of
-English <i>Lothian</i>, British <i>Strathclyde</i>, and Irish <i>Scotland</i>.
-The oldest Scotland is Ireland, whence the Scottish
-name, long since forgotten in Ireland itself, came into
-Britain and there spread itself. These three elements
-stand out plainly.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Picts.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the Scottish or Irish element
-swallowed up another, that of the <i>Picts</i>, of whom there
-can be no doubt that they were Celts, like the Scots
-and Britons, but about whom it may be doubted
-whether their kindred was nearer to the Scots or to
-the Britons. For our purpose the question is of little
-moment. The Picts, as far as geography is concerned,
-either vanished or became Scots.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">{550}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Position of
-the Picts
-and Scots
-in the ninth
-century.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Early in the ninth century the land north of the
-firths of Clyde and Forth was still mainly Pictish. The
-second Scotland (the first Scotland in Britain) had not
-spread far beyond the original Irish settlement in the
-south-west.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-Picts and
-Scots,
-843.<br />
-The Celtic
-Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The union of Picts and Scots under a
-Scottish dynasty created the larger Scotland, the true
-Celtic Scotland, taking in all the land north of the
-firths, except where Scandinavian settlers occupied the
-extreme north.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Bernicia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-South of the firths, English <i>Bernicia</i>,
-sometimes a separate kingdom, sometimes part of <i>Northumberland</i>,
-stretched to the firth of Forth, with <i>Edinburgh</i>
-as a border fortress.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Strathclyde
-or
-Cumberland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the west of Bernicia,
-south and east of the firth of Clyde, lay the British kingdom
-of <i>Cumberland</i> or <i>Strathclyde</i>, with <i>Alcluyd</i> or
-<i>Dumbarton</i> as its border fortress.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Galloway.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south-west
-again lay the outlying Pictish land of <i>Galloway</i>, which
-long kept up a separate being. Parts of Bernicia, parts
-of Strathclyde, were one day to join with the true
-Scotland to make up the later Scottish kingdom. As
-yet the true Scotland was a foreign and hostile land
-alike to Bernicia and to Strathclyde.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlements
-of
-the Northmen.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the next century we see the Scottish power cut
-short to the north and west, but advancing towards the
-south and east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Caithness.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The Northmen have settled in the
-northern and western islands, in those parts of the
-mainland to which they gave the names of <i>Caithness</i>
-and <i>Sutherland</i>, and even in the first Scottish land in
-the west.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scotland
-acknowledges
-the
-English
-supremacy,
-924.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Scotland itself has also admitted the external
-supremacy of the English overlord.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Taking of
-Edinburgh,
-c. 954.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the other
-hand, the Scots have pressed within the English border,
-and have occupied Edinburgh, the border fortress of
-England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cession of
-Lothian,
-966 or
-1018.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later in the same century or early in the
-next, the Kings of Scots received Northern Bernicia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">{551}</a></span>
-the land of <i>Lothian</i>, as an English earldom. On the
-other side, <i>Strathclyde</i> or <i>Cumberland</i>—its southern
-boundary is very uncertain—had become in a manner
-united to England and Scotland at once.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Grant of
-Cumberland,
-945.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-An English
-conquest, it was granted in fief to the King of Scots,
-and was commonly held as an appanage by Scottish
-princes.<a name="FNanchor_90" id="FNanchor_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Different
-tenures of
-the dominion
-of
-the King
-of Scots.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Thus the King of Scots held three dominions
-on three different tenures. Scotland was a kingdom
-under a merely external English supremacy; Cumberland
-was a territorial fief of England; Lothian was an
-earldom within the English kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The distinctions
-forgotten in
-later controversies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In after times
-these distinctions were forgotten, and the question now
-was whether the dominions of the King of Scots, as a
-whole, were or were not a fief of England. When the
-question took this shape, the English king claimed more
-than his ancient rights over Scotland, less than his
-ancient rights over Lothian.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Effects of
-the grant
-of Lothian.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The acquisition of Lothian made the Scottish
-kingdom English. Lothian remained English; Cumberland
-and the eastern side of Scotland itself, the
-Lowlands north of the firth of Forth, became practically
-English also. The Scottish kings became English
-princes, whose strength lay in the English part of their
-dominions.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Fate of
-southern
-Cumberland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But late in the eleventh century it would
-seem that the southern part of Cumberland had
-become a separate principality ruled by a refugee
-Northumbrian prince under Scottish supremacy.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Carlisle
-and its district
-added
-to England
-by William
-Rufus,
-1092.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This
-territory, the city of <i>Carlisle</i> and its immediate district,
-the old diocese of Carlisle, was added to England
-by William Rufus.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cumberland
-and
-Northumberland
-granted to
-David,
-1136.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the other hand, in the troubles
-of Stephen’s reign, the king of Scots received as
-English earldoms, Cumberland—in a somewhat wider<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">{552}</a></span>
-sense—and <i>Northumberland</i> in the modern sense, the
-land from the Tweed to the Tyne. Had these earldoms
-been kept by the Scottish kings, they would doubtless
-have become Scottish lands in the same sense in
-which Lothian did; that is, they would have become
-parts of the northern English kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Recovered
-by England,
-1157.<br />
-The boundary
-permanent,
-except as
-to Berwick.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But these
-lands were won back by Henry the Second; and the
-boundary has since remained as it was then fixed, save
-that the town of <i>Berwick</i> fluctuated according to the
-accidents of war between one kingdom and the other.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Relations
-between
-England
-and Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">But though the boundaries of the kingdoms were
-fixed, their relations were not.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1292.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Scotland in the modern
-sense—that is, Scotland in the older sense, Lothian,
-and Strathclyde—was for a moment held strictly as a
-fief of England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1296.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was then for another moment
-incorporated with England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1327.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It was then acknowledged
-as an independent kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1333.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It again fell under
-vassalage for a moment, and again won its independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1603.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then, at the beginning of the seventeenth
-century, England and Scotland, as distinct, independent,
-and equal kingdoms, passed under a common king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1649.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-They were separated again for a moment when Scotland
-acknowledged a king whom England rejected.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1652.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For
-another moment Scotland was incorporated with an
-English commonwealth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1660.<br />
-1707.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Again Scotland and England
-became independent kingdoms under a common king,
-till the two kingdoms were, by common consent, joined
-in the one kingdom of <i>Great Britain</i>.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Struggle
-with the
-Northerners.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Scottish kings had, like those of
-England somewhat earlier, to struggle against Scandinavian
-invaders.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Scandinavian
-advance,
-1014-1064.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The settlements of the Northmen
-advanced, and for some years in the eleventh century<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">{553}</a></span>
-they took in <i>Moray</i> at one end and <i>Galloway</i> at the
-other. But it was only in the extreme north and in the
-northern islands that the land really became Scandinavian.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Sudereys,
-and Man.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the <i>Sudereys</i> or <i>Hebrides</i>—the southern
-islands as distinguished from Orkney and Shetland—and
-in <i>Man</i>, the Celtic speech has survived.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Caithness
-submits,
-1203.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Caithness</i>
-was brought under Scottish supremacy early in the
-thirteenth century.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Galloway
-incorporated,
-1235.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Galloway</i> was incorporated.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Sudereys
-and Man
-submit,
-1263-1266.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Later
-again, after the battle of Largs, the Sudereys and Man
-passed under Scottish supremacy. But the authority of
-the Scottish crown in the islands was for a long time very
-precarious.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>History of
-Man.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Man, the most central of the British isles,
-lying at a nearly equal distance from England, Scotland,
-Ireland, and Wales, remained a separate kingdom,
-sometimes under Scottish, sometimes under English,
-superiority. Granted to English subjects, the kingdom
-sank to a lordship.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1764-1826.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The lordship was united to
-the crown of Great Britain, and Man, like the Norman
-islands, remains a distinct possession, forming no part
-of the United Kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Orkney.
-1469.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The earldom of Orkney
-meanwhile remained a Norwegian dependency till it
-was pledged to the Scottish crown. Since then it has
-silently become part, first of the kingdom of Scotland,
-and then of the kingdom of Great Britain.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 2. <i>The Kingdom of England.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Harold’s
-conquests
-from
-Wales,
-1063.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The changes of boundary between England and
-<i>Wales</i> begin, as far as we are concerned with them,
-with the great Welsh campaign of Harold.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Enlargement
-of the
-border
-shires.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All the
-border shires, Cheshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire,
-Gloucestershire, seem now to have been enlarged; the
-English border stretched to the <i>Conway</i> in the north,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_554" id="Page_554">{554}</a></span>
-and to the <i>Usk</i> in the south.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Marches.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But part of this territory
-seems to have been recovered by the Welsh princes,
-while part passed into the great <i>march</i> district of England
-and Wales, ruled by the Lords Marchers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-South
-Wales,
-1070-1121.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The gradual
-conquest of South Wales began under the Conqueror
-and went on under his sons; but it was more largely
-the work of private adventurers than of the kings
-themselves. The lands of <i>Morganwg</i>, <i>Dyfed</i>, <i>Ceredigion</i>,
-and <i>Breheiniog</i>, answering nearly to the modern
-South Wales, were gradually subdued.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Flemish
-settlement
-in Pembrokeshire,
-1111.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In some districts,
-especially in the southern part of the present
-Pembrokeshire, the Britons were actually driven out,
-and the land was settled by Flemish colonists, the latest
-of the Teutonic settlements in Britain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Character
-of the conquest
-of
-South
-Wales.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Elsewhere Norman
-lords, with a Norman, English, and Flemish following,
-held the towns and the more level country, while
-the Welsh kept on a half independence in the mountains.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Princes of
-North
-Wales.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile in North Wales native princes—<i>Princes
-of Aberffraw</i> and <i>Lords of Snowdon</i>—still
-ruled, as vassals of the English king, till the conquest
-by Edward the First.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cessions to
-England,
-1277.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the first stage the vassal
-prince was compelled again to cede to his overlord the
-territory east of the Conway.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest
-of North
-Wales,
-1282.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Six years later followed
-the complete conquest. But complete incorporation
-with England did not at once follow.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Principality
-of
-Wales.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Wales, North
-and South, remained a separate dominion, giving the
-princely title to the eldest son of the English king.<a name="FNanchor_91" id="FNanchor_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a>
-Some shires were formed; some new towns were
-founded; the border districts remained under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">{555}</a></span>
-anomalous jurisdiction of the Marchers.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Full incorporation.
-1535.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The full incorporation
-of the principality and its marches dates
-from Henry the Eighth. Thirteen new counties were
-formed, and some districts were added or restored to
-the border shires of England. One of the new counties,
-<i>Monmouthshire</i>, was, under Charles the Second,
-added to an English circuit, and it has since been
-reckoned as an English county.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Domesday
-shires.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Setting aside these new creations, all the existing
-shires of England were in being at the time of the
-Norman Conquest, save those of <i>Lancaster</i>, <i>Cumberland</i>,
-<i>Westmoreland</i>, and <i>Rutland</i>. The boundaries were
-not always exactly the same as at present; but the
-differences are commonly slight and of mere local interest.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Two classes
-of shires.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The shires, as they stood at the Conquest, were
-of two classes.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ancient
-kingdoms
-and principalities.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Some were old kingdoms or principalities,
-which still kept their names and boundaries as shires.
-Such were the kingdoms of <i>Kent</i>, <i>Sussex</i>, and <i>Essex</i>, and
-the East-Anglian, West-Saxon, and Northumbrian shires.
-Most of these keep old local or tribal names; a few
-only are called from a town.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Mercian
-shires
-mapped out
-in the
-tenth century.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Mercia on the other
-hand, the shires seem to have been mapped out afresh
-when the land was won back from the Danes. They
-are called after towns, and the town which gives the
-name commonly lies central to the district, and remains
-the chief town of the shire, except when it has
-been outstripped by some other in modern times.<a name="FNanchor_92" id="FNanchor_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a>
-Both classes of shires survived the Conquest, and both
-have gone on till now with very slight changes.</p>
-
-<p>On the Welsh border, all the shires, for reasons
-already given, stretch further west in Domesday than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">{556}</a></span>
-they do now.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cumberland
-and
-Westmoreland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-On the Scottish border <i>Cumberland</i> and
-<i>Westmoreland</i> were made out of the Cumbrian conquest
-of William Rufus, enlarged by districts which
-in Domesday appear as part of Yorkshire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lancashire.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Lancashire</i>
-was made up of lands taken from Yorkshire
-and Cheshire, the Ribble forming the older boundary
-of those shires. The older divisions are marked by the
-boundaries of the dioceses of <i>York</i>, <i>Carlisle</i>, and <i>Lichfield</i>
-or <i>Chester</i>, as they stood down to the changes
-under Henry the Eighth.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Rutland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In central England the only
-change is the formation of the small shire of <i>Rutland</i>
-out of the Domesday district of Rutland (which, oddly
-enough, appears as an appendage to <i>Nottinghamshire</i>),
-enlarged by a small part of what was then <i>Northamptonshire</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 3. <i>Ireland.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Ireland
-the first
-Scotland.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The second great island of the British group, <i>Ireland</i>,
-the original <i>Scotia</i>, has had less to do with the general
-history of the world than any other part of Western
-Europe. Its ancient divisions have lived on from the
-earliest times.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The five
-provinces.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The names of its five great provinces,
-<i>Ulster</i>, <i>Meath</i>, <i>Leinster</i>, <i>Munster</i>, and <i>Connaught</i>, are all
-in familiar use, though <i>Meath</i> has sunk from its old
-rank alongside of the other four. The Celtic inhabitants
-of the island remained independent of foreign
-powers till the days of Scandinavian settlement. Just
-like the English kingdoms in Britain, the great divisions
-of Ireland were sometimes independent, sometimes
-united under the supremacy of a head king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Settlement
-of the
-Ostmen.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Gradually
-the Northmen, called in Ireland <i>Ostmen</i>, settled on
-the eastern coast, and held the chief ports, as <i>Dublin</i>,
-<i>Waterford</i>, <i>Wexford</i>, two of which names bear witness to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">{557}</a></span>
-Teutonic occupation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Irish victory
-at
-Clontarf.
-1012.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great Irish victory at Clontarf
-weakened, but did not destroy, the Scandinavian power.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Increasing
-connexion
-with
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And, from the latter half of the tenth century onward,
-the eastern coast of Ireland shows a growing connexion
-with England. Any actual English supremacy seems
-doubtful; but both commercial and ecclesiastical ties became
-closer during the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-English
-conquest,
-1169-1652.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This led to the actual English conquest of Ireland,
-begun under Henry the Second, but really finished only
-by Cromwell.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1171.<br />
-Fluctuations
-of
-the Pale.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-All Ireland admitted for a moment the
-supremacy of Henry; but, till the sixteenth century,
-the actual English dominion, called the <i>Pale</i>, with
-Dublin for its centre, was always fluctuating, and for a
-while it fell back rather than advanced.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Kingdom
-and Lordship
-of
-Ireland.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>In the early days of the conquest Ireland is spoken
-of as a kingdom; but the title soon went out of use.
-The original plan seems to have been that Ireland, like
-Wales afterwards, should form an appanage for a son
-of the English King. It became instead, so far as it
-was an English possession at all, a simple dependency
-of England, from which the King took the title of <i>Lord
-of Ireland</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1542.<br />
-Relations
-of Ireland
-to England.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Henry the Eighth took the title of <i>King
-of Ireland</i>; but the kingdom remained a mere dependency,
-attached to the crown, first of England and then
-of Great Britain.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1652.<br />
-1689.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This state of things was diversified
-by a short time of complete incorporation under the
-Commonwealth, and a short time of independence
-under James the Second.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1782-1800.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But for the last eighteen
-years of the last century, Ireland was formally acknowledged
-as an independent kingdom, connected with
-Great Britain only by the tie of a common king.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1801.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Since
-that time it has formed an integral part of the United
-Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">{558}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 4. <i>Outlying European Possessions of England.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Ireland, the sister island of Britain, has thus been
-united with Britain into a single kingdom. Man, lying
-between the two, remains a distinct dependency.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Norman
-Islands.
-1205.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-This last is also still the position of that part of the
-Norman duchy which clave to its own dukes, which
-never became French, but always remained Norman.
-It might be a question what was the exact position of
-<i>Guernsey</i>, <i>Jersey</i>, <i>Alderney</i>, <i>Sark</i>, and their smaller
-neighbours, when the English kings took the titles of the
-French kingdom and actually held the Norman duchy.
-Practically the islands have, during all changes, remained
-attached to the English crown; but they have
-never been incorporated with the kingdom.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Other
-European
-dependencies,
-Aquitaine,
-&amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Other
-more distant European lands have been, some still are,
-in the same position. Such were <i>Aquitaine</i>, <i>Ponthieu</i>,
-and <i>Calais</i>, as fixed by the Peace of Bretigny. Since
-the loss of Aquitaine, England has had no considerable
-continental dominion in Europe, but she has from time
-to time held several islands and detached points.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Outposts
-and
-islands.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such
-are <i>Calais</i>, <i>Boulogne</i>, <i>Dunkirk</i>, <i>Gibraltar</i>, <i>Minorca</i>,
-<i>Malta</i>, <i>Heligoland</i>, all of which have been spoken of
-in their natural geographical places. To these we may
-add <i>Tangier</i>, which has more in common with the
-possession of Gibraltar and Minorca than with the English
-settlements in the further parts of Africa. Of these
-points, Gibraltar, Heligoland, and Malta, are still held
-by England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Greek
-possessions,
-Ionian
-Islands,
-1814-1864.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The virtual English possession of the
-<i>Ionian Islands</i> made England for a while a sharer in
-the fragments of the Eastern Roman Empire.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Cyprus,
-1878.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And
-later still she has again put on the same character by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_559" id="Page_559">{559}</a></span>
-the occupation, on whatever terms, of another Greek
-and Imperial land, the island of <i>Cyprus</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 5. <i>The American Colonies of England.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies of
-England.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>England, like France and Holland, became a colonizing
-power by choice. Extension over barbarian
-lands was not a necessity, as in the case of Russia, nor
-did it spring naturally out of earlier circumstances, as
-in the case of Portugal. But the colonizing enterprise
-of England has done a greater work than the colonizing
-enterprise of any other European power. The
-greatest colony of England—for in a worthier use of
-language the word <i>colony</i> would imply independence
-rather than dependence<a name="FNanchor_93" id="FNanchor_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a>—is that great Confederation
-which is to us what Syracuse was to Corinth, what
-Milêtos was to Athens, what Gades and Carthage were
-to the cities of the older Canaan.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The United
-States.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>United States
-of America</i>, a vaster England beyond the Ocean, an
-European power, on a level with the greatest European
-powers, planted beyond the bounds of Europe,
-form the great work of English and European enterprise
-in non-European lands.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>First
-English
-settlements
-in North
-America,
-1497.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The settlements which grew into the United States
-were not the first English possessions in North America,
-but they were the first which really deserved to be
-called colonies. The first discoveries of all led only
-to the establishment of the <i>Newfoundland</i> fisheries.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Attempts
-of Raleigh,
-1585-1587.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Raleigh’s attempts at real colonization ninety years
-later only pointed the way to something more lasting.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The Thirteen
-Colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In the seventeenth century began the planting of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_560" id="Page_560">{560}</a></span>
-thirteen settlements which won their independence.
-Of these the earliest and the latest, the most southern
-and the most northern, began through English colonization
-in the strictest sense.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Virginia,
-1607.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First came <i>Virginia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The New
-England
-States,
-1620-1638.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then
-followed the Puritan colonization much further to the
-north which founded the <i>New England</i> states. The
-shiftings among these settlements, from <i>Plymouth</i> to
-<i>Maine</i>, the unions, the divisions, the colonies of colonies—the
-Epidamnos and the Sinôpê of the New World—the
-various and varying relations between the different
-settlements, read like a piece of old Greek or of Swiss
-history.<a name="FNanchor_94" id="FNanchor_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a>
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1629-1692.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-By the end of the seventeenth century they
-had arranged themselves into four separate colonies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1820.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-These were <i>Massachusetts</i>, formed by the union of <i>Massachusetts</i>
-and <i>Plymouth</i>, with its northern dependency
-of <i>Maine</i>, which became a separate State long after the
-Revolution; <i>New Hampshire</i>, annexed by Massachusetts
-and after a while separated from it; <i>Connecticut</i>, formed
-by the union of <i>Connecticut</i> and <i>Newhaven</i>; <i>Rhode Island</i>,
-formed by the union of <i>Rhode Island</i> and <i>Providence</i>.
-These New England States form a distinct geographical
-group, with a marked political and religious character
-of their own.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Southern
-Colonies.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile, at some distance to the
-south, around Virginia as their centre, grew up another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_561" id="Page_561">{561}</a></span>
-group of colonies, with a history and character in many
-ways unlike those of New England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Maryland.
-1646.<br />
-Carolina.
-1650-1663.<br />
-Divided,
-1720.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the north
-of Virginia arose the proprietary colony of <i>Maryland</i>;
-to the south arose <i>Carolina</i>, afterwards divided into
-<i>North and South</i>. South Carolina for a long while
-marked the end of English settlement to the south, as
-Maine did to the north.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Intermediate
-space occupied
-by the
-United
-Provinces
-and
-Sweden.<br />
-English
-Conquest
-of New
-Netherlands,
-1664.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>But between these two groups of English colonies in
-the strictest sense lay a region in which English settlement
-had to take the form of conquest from another
-European power. Earlier than any English settlement
-except Virginia, the great colony of the United Provinces
-had arisen on Long Island and the neighbouring mainland.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New
-Netherlands,
-1614.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It bore the name of <i>New Netherlands</i>, with its
-capital of <i>New Amsterdam</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New
-Sweden,
-1658.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-To the south, on the shores
-of Delaware Bay, the other great power of the seventeenth
-century founded the colony of <i>New Sweden</i>.
-Three European nations, closely allied in race, speech,
-and creed, were thus for a while established side by
-side on the eastern coasts of America.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Union of
-New Sweden
-with
-New
-Netherlands,
-1655.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But the three
-settlements were fated to merge together, and that by
-force of arms. A local war added New Sweden to New
-Netherlands; a war between England and the United
-Provinces gave New Netherlands to England.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New York.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-New
-Amsterdam became <i>New York</i>, and gave its name to
-the colony which was to become the greatest State of
-the Union.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>1674.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Ten years later, in the next war between
-the two colonizing powers, the new English possession
-was lost and won again.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the gap which was still left began to be
-filled up by other English settlements.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Jerseys.
-1665.<br />
-1702.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>East</i> and <i>West
-Jersey</i> began as two distinct colonies, which were afterwards
-united into one.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Pennsylvania,
-1682.<br />
-Delaware,
-1703.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The great colony of <i>Pennsylvania</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_562" id="Page_562">{562}</a></span>
-next arose, from which the small one of <i>Delaware</i>
-was parted off twenty years later. Pennsylvania was
-thus the last of the original settlements of the seventeenth
-century, which in the space of nearly eighty
-years had been formed fast after one another.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Georgia,
-1733.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Fifty
-years after the work of the benevolent Penn came the
-work of the no less benevolent Oglethorpe; <i>Georgia</i>,
-to the south of all, now filled up the tale of the famous
-Thirteen, the fitting number, it would seem, for a
-Federal power, whether in the Old World or in the
-New.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Independence
-of
-the United
-States,
-1783.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">By the Peace of Paris the Thirteen Colonies were
-acknowledged as independent States. The great work
-of English settlement on foreign soil was brought to
-perfection. The new and free English land beyond the
-Ocean took in the whole temperate region of the North
-American coast, all between the peninsula of <i>Acadia</i> to
-the north and the other peninsula of <i>Florida</i> to the south.
-Both of these last lands were English possessions at the
-time of the War of Independence, but neither of them
-had any share in the work.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Nova
-Scotia,
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Acadia, under the name of
-<i>Nova Scotia</i>, had been ceded by France in the interval
-between the settlement of Pennsylvania and the settlement
-of Georgia.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-Canada,
-1759-1763.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Next came the conquest of <i>Canada</i>,
-in which the men of the colonies played their part.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The French
-barrier at
-Alleghany.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Hitherto the English colonies had been shut in to the
-West by the French claim to the line of the Alleghany
-mountains. The Treaty of Paris took away this bugbear,
-and left the whole land as far as the Mississippi
-open to the enterprise of the English colonists. Thus,
-when the Thirteen States started on their independent
-career, the whole land between the great lakes, the
-Ocean, and the Mississippi, was open to them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Florida
-again
-Spanish,
-1781-1821.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Florida<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_563" id="Page_563">{563}</a></span>
-indeed, first as an English, then again as a Spanish possession,
-cut them off from the Gulf of Mexico. The
-city of <i>New Orleans</i> remained, first a Spanish, then a
-French, outpost east of the Mississippi, and the possessions
-still held by England kept them from the mouth
-of the Saint Lawrence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Extension
-to the
-West.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But within these limits, such
-of the old States as were allowed by their geographical
-position might extend themselves to the west, and
-new States might be formed. Both processes went on,
-and two of the barriers formed by European powers
-were removed.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Louisiana,
-1803.<br />
-Florida,
-1821.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The purchase of <i>Louisiana</i> from France,
-the acquisition of <i>Florida</i> from Spain, gave the States
-the sea-board of the Gulf of Mexico, and allowed their
-extension to the Pacific. The details of that extension,
-partly by natural growth, partly at the expense of the
-Spanish element in North America, it is hardly needful
-to go through here.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>A new
-English
-nation.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-But, out of the English settlements
-on the North-American coast, a new English
-nation has arisen, none the less English, in a true view
-of history, because it no longer owes allegiance to the
-crown of Great Britain. But the power thus formed,
-exactly like earlier confederations in Europe, lacks a
-name.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Lack of a
-name.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>United States of America</i> is hardly a geographical
-or a national name, any more than the names
-of the <i>Confederates</i> and the <i>United Provinces</i>. In the two
-European cases common usage gave the name of a single
-member of the Union to the whole, and in the case of
-Switzerland the popular name at last became the formal
-name. In the American case, on the other hand,
-popular usage speaks of the Confederation by the name
-of the whole continent of which its territory forms part.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Use of the
-word
-<i>America</i>.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-For several purposes, the words <i>America</i> and <i>American</i>
-are always understood as shutting out Canada and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_564" id="Page_564">{564}</a></span>
-Mexico, to say nothing of the southern American continent.
-For some other purposes, those names still take
-in the whole American continent, north and south. But
-it is easier to see the awkwardness of the usual nomenclature
-than to suggest any improvement on it.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Second
-English
-nation in
-North
-America.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">While one set of events in the eighteenth century
-created an independent English nation on North
-American soil, another set of events in the same century,
-earlier in date but later in their results, has led
-to the formation in its immediate neighbourhood of
-another English nation which still keeps its allegiance
-to the English crown.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Dependent
-confederacy.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-A confederation of states, practically
-independent in their internal affairs, but remaining
-subjects of a distant sovereign, is a novelty in political
-science.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>British
-North
-America.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Such is the <i>Confederation of British North
-America</i>. But this dependent Confederation did not
-arise out of colonization in the same sense as the independent
-Confederation to the south of it. The central
-land which gives it its character is the conquered
-land of <i>Canada</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New Brunswick,
-&amp;c.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Along with Canada came the possession
-of the smaller districts which received the
-names of <i>New Brunswick</i> and <i>Prince Edward’s Island</i>,
-districts which were at first joined to Nova Scotia, but
-which afterwards became distinct colonies.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>The
-Dominion,
-1867.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Now they
-are joined with the <i>Dominion of Canada</i>, which, like
-the United States, grows by the incorporation of new
-states and territories.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>British
-Columbia,
-1871.<br />
-Rupertsland.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The addition of <i>British Columbia</i>
-has carried the Confederation to the Pacific; that of
-<i>Rupertsland</i> carries it indefinitely northward towards
-the pole. This second English-speaking power in
-North America, stretches, like the elder one, from
-Ocean to Ocean.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Newfoundland,
-1713.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-<i>Newfoundland</i> alone, a possession<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_565" id="Page_565">{565}</a></span>
-secured to England after many debates at the same
-time as Nova Scotia, remains distinct.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>The West
-Indies.
-Barbadoes,
-1605.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>Of the British possessions in the <i>West Indies</i> a few
-only, among them <i>Barbadoes</i>, the earliest of all, were
-colonies in the same sense as Virginia and Massachusetts.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Jamaica,
-1655.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The greater number, <i>Jamaica</i> at their head,
-were won by conquest from other European powers.
-No new English nation, like the American and the
-Canadian, has grown up in them.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Smaller
-settlements.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Still less is there any
-need to dwell on the <i>Bahamas</i>, the <i>Falkland Islands</i>,
-or the South-American possession of <i>British Guiana</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>§ 6. <i>Other Colonies and Possessions of England.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies
-in the
-southern
-hemisphere.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>The story of the North-American colonies may be
-both compared and contrasted with the story of two
-great groups of colonies in the southern hemisphere.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Australia.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In Australia and the other great southern islands, a
-body of English colonies have arisen, the germs at
-least of yet another English nation, but which have
-not as yet reached either independence or confederation.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>South
-Africa.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-In South Africa, another group of possessions
-and colonies, beginning, like Canada, in conquest from
-another European power, seems to be feeling its way
-towards confederation, while one part has in a manner
-stumbled into independence.</p>
-
-<p>The beginning of English settlement in the greatest
-of islands began in the years which immediately followed
-the establishment of American independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>New South
-Wales,
-1787.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-First
-came <i>New South Wales</i>, on the eastern coast, designed
-originally as a penal settlement.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Western
-Australia,
-1829.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It outgrew this stage,
-and another penal settlement was founded in <i>Western
-Australia</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>South
-Australia,
-1836.<br />
-Victoria,
-1837.<br />
-Queensland,
-1859.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Then colonization spread into the intermediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_566" id="Page_566">{566}</a></span>
-region of <i>Southern Australia</i> (which however
-stretches right through the island to its northern
-coast) into the district called <i>Victoria</i>, south-west of the
-original settlement, and lastly, into <i>Queensland</i> to the
-north-east.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Colonies
-Act,
-1850.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Since the middle of the present century
-all these colonies have gradually established constitutions
-which give them full internal independence.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Tasmania,
-1804.<br />
-1839.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-South of the great island lies one smaller, but still
-vast, that of <i>Van Diemen’s</i> Land, now <i>Tasmania</i>,
-which was settled earlier than any Australian settlement
-except New South Wales.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Six
-colonies,
-1852.<br />
-United,
-1875.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-And to the east lie
-the two great islands of <i>New Zealand</i>, where six
-English colonies founded at different times have been
-united into one.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>South
-Africa.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">While the Australian settlements were colonies in
-the strictest sense, the English possessions in South
-Africa began, like New York, in a settlement first planted
-by the United Provinces.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Conquest of
-the Cape,
-1806.<br />
-1815.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The <i>Cape Colony</i>, after some
-shiftings during the French revolutionary wars, was
-conquered by England, and its possession by England
-was confirmed at the general peace.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Eastern
-Colony and
-Natal,
-1820-1836.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Migration northward,
-both of the English and Dutch inhabitants, has
-produced new settlements, as the <i>Eastern Colony</i> and
-<i>Natal</i>.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Orange
-River State,
-1847-1856.<br />
-Transvaal,
-1861-1877.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Meanwhile independent Dutch states have arisen,
-as the <i>Orange River Republic</i>, annexed by England,
-then set free, and lastly dismembered, and the <i>Transvaal</i>,
-more lately annexed after sixteen years of independence.
-Lastly a scheme of confederation for
-all these settlements awaits some more peaceful time
-to be carried into effect.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Europe extended
-by
-colonization.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p class="pb2">In all these cases of real colonization, of real
-extension of the English or any other European<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_567" id="Page_567">{567}</a></span>
-nation, it is hardly a figure to say that the bounds of
-Europe have been enlarged. All that makes Europe
-Europe, all that parts off Europe from Africa and Asia,
-has been carried into America and Australia and
-Africa itself. The growth of this new Europe, no less
-than the changes of the old, is an essential part of
-European geography.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Barbarian
-dominion.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-It is otherwise with territories,
-great or small, which have been occupied by England
-and other European powers merely for military or
-commercial purposes. Forts, factories, or empires, on
-barbarian soil, where no new European nation is likely
-ever to grow up, are not cases of true colonization;
-they are no extension of the bounds of Europe.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>English
-dominion
-in India.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-The
-climax of this kind of barbarian dominion is found in
-those vast Indian possessions in which England has supplanted
-Portugal, France, and the heirs of Timour.
-<span class="sni"><span class="sne">♦</span>Empire of
-India.
-1876.<span class="sne">♦</span></span>
-Of that dominion the scientific frontier has yet to be
-traced; yet it has come to give an Imperial title to the
-sovereign of Great Britain and Ireland, while those two
-European islands, as perhaps befits their inferiority in
-physical size, remain content with the lowlier style of the
-United Kingdom. Whether the loftier pretensions of Asia
-do, or do not, imply any vassalage on the part of Europe,
-it is certain that the Asiatic Empire of the sovereign of
-the British kingdom is no extension of England, no
-extension of Europe, no creation of a new English or
-European nation. The Empire of India stands outside
-the European world, outside the political system
-which has gathered round the Old and the New Rome.
-But a place amongst the foremost members of that
-system belongs to the great European nation on
-American soil, where the tongue of England is kept,
-and the constitution of old Achaia is born again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_568" id="Page_568">{568}</a></span>
-in a confederation stretching from the Western to the
-Eastern Ocean.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><span class="sne">♦</span>Summary.<span class="sne">♦</span></div>
-
-<p>We have thus traced the geography, and in tracing
-the geography we have in a slighter way traced the
-history, of the various states and powers of Europe,
-and of the lands beyond the Ocean which have been
-planted from Europe. We have throughout kept
-steadily before our eyes the centre, afterwards the
-two centres, of European life. We have seen how the
-older states of Europe gradually lose themselves in the
-dominion of Rome, how the younger states gradually
-spring out of the dominion of Rome. We have
-followed, as our central subjects, the fates of those
-powers in the East and West which continued the Roman
-name and Roman traditions. We have traced out the
-states which were directly formed by splitting off from
-those powers, and the states which arose beyond the
-range of Roman power, but not beyond the range of
-Roman influence. We have seen the Western Empire
-first pass to a German prince, then gradually shrink
-into a German kingdom, to be finally dissolved into a
-German confederation. We have watched the states
-which split off at various dates from its body, the
-power of France on one side, the power of Austria on
-another, the powers of Italy on a third, the free states
-of Switzerland at one end, the free states of the Netherlands
-at the other. We have beheld the long tragedy
-of the Eastern Rome; we have told the tale of the
-states which split off from it and arose around it. We
-have seen its territorial position pass to a barbarian
-invader, and something like its position in men’s minds
-pass to the mightiest of its spiritual disciples. And we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_569" id="Page_569">{569}</a></span>
-have seen, painted on the map of our own century, the
-beginning of the great work which is giving back the
-lands of the Eastern Rome to their own people. We
-have then traced the shiftings of the powers which lay
-wholly or partly beyond the bounds of either Empire,
-the great Slavonic mainland, the Scandinavian and the
-Iberian peninsulas, ending with that which is geographically
-the most isolated land of all, the other world of
-Britain. We have seen too how Europe may be said to
-have spread herself beyond her geographical limits in the
-foundation of new European states beyond the Ocean.
-We have contrasted the different positions and destinies
-of the colonizing European powers—where, as in the
-days of Old Rome, a continuous territory has been
-extended over neighbouring barbarian lands—where
-growth beyond the sea was the natural outcome of
-growth at home—where European powers have colonized
-and conquered simply of their own free will. In
-thus tracing the historical geography of Europe, we
-have made the round of the world. But we have
-never lost sight of Europe; we have never lost sight of
-Rome. Wherever we have gone, we have carried
-Europe with us; wherever we have gone, we have
-never got beyond the power of the two influences
-which, mingling into one, have made Europe all that it
-has been. The whole of European history is embodied
-in the formula which couples together the ‘rule of
-Christ and Cæsar;’ and that joint rule still goes on, in
-the shape of moral influence, wherever the tongues and
-the culture of Europe win new realms for themselves
-in the continents of the western or in the islands of the
-southern Ocean.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_570" id="Page_570"></a><a name="Page_571" id="Page_571">{571}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX">INDEX.</a></h2>
-
-<ul class="index"><li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Aachen</span>, crowning-place of the German kings, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aargau</span>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Åbo</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">peace of, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Abruzzi</span>, the, annexed to Sicily, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Abyssinian Church</span>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Acadia</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Nova Scotia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Acciauoli</span>, Dukes of Athens, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Achaia</span>, League of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dependent on Rome, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">principality of, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Angevin overlordship of, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its dismemberment, <i><a href="#Page_418">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Savoyard counts of, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Achaians</span>, use of the name in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Acre</span>, lost and won in the Crusades, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fall of, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ægæan</span> Sea, Greek colonies on its coasts, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ælfred</span>, his treaty with Guthrum, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Æmilia</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Æquians</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their wars with Rome, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Africa</span>, Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman province of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">New, province of, <i><a href="#Page_59">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Vandal kingdom, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered to the Empire, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman conquests in, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Portuguese conquests in, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French conquests in, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">South, English possessions in, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Agram</span> (Zagrab), <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Agri Decumates</span>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Agricola</span>, his conquest of Britain, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Agrigentum</span> (Akragas), <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aigina</span>, held by Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aiolian</span> colonies in Asia, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aire</span>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aitolia</span>, geographical position of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">League of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its alliance with and dependence on Rome, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aitolians</span>, their place in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aix</span> (Aquæ Sextiæ), Roman colony, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aix-la-Chapelle</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ajaccio</span>, birthplace of Buonaparte, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Akarnania</span>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">league of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Akarnanians</span>, not in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_3">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Akerman</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Akragas</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Agrigentum</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aktê</span>, Argolic, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alans</span>, origin of, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements in Spain, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alarcos</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alaric</span>, king of the West-Goths, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alava</span>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Albania</span>, Asiatic, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Albania</span>, kings of, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolt of, under Scanderbeg, <i><a href="#Page_421">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Albanians</span>, their origin, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements in Greece, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Albanon</span> (Elbassan), <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Albigensian War</span>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Albi</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Aragon, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <i><a href="#Page_335">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alemanni</span>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Franks, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alemannia</span>, Duchy of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alessandria</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Savoy, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_572" id="Page_572">{572}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alessio</span>, taken by Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alexander the Great</span>, his conquests, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alexandria</span>, greatness of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alexios Komnênos</span>, his conquests in Asia Minor, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alexios Komnênos</span>, founds the Empire of Trebizond, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alfonso VI.</span> of Castile, Emperor, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conquests, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Algarve</span>, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Algarve-beyond-the-Sea</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Algeria</span>, character of the French conquest of, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Algiers</span>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Almohades</span>, invade Spain, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">decline of, <i><a href="#Page_533">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Almoravides</span>, invade Spain, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alps</span>, the, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Alsace</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Elsass</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amadeus VI.</span>, Count of Savoy, his Eastern expedition, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amadeus VIII.</span>, first Duke of Savoy, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his title of Prince of Piedmont, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amalfi</span>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amastris</span>, held by Genoa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ambrakia</span>, Corinthian colony, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">capital of Pyrrhos, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Arta</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">America</span>, Spanish dominion in, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the word, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">America</span>, North, French settlements in, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">English and French rivalry in, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian settlements in, <a href="#Page_523">523</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">first English settlements in, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the thirteen colonies in, <a href="#Page_560">560-562</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">colonies of the United Provinces and Sweden in, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">confederation of British North America, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>; <i>see also</i> <span class="smcap">United States</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amiens</span>, county of, added to France, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amisos</span>, held by Genoa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Amurath I.</span>, Sultan, takes Hadrianople, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anatolikon</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anchialos</span>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ancona</span> (Ankôn), <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">march of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">occupied by Manuel Komnênos, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Andalusia</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Andorra</span>, French protectorate of, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Andraszovo</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Angles</span>, their settlements in Britain, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Angora</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anhalt</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ani</span>, annexed to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <i><a href="#Page_379">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anjou</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Touraine, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to Maine and England, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Philip Augustus, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anjou</span>, House of, its growth, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its overlordship in Peloponnêsos, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ankôn</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Ancona</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Anne</span> of Britanny, effects of her marriages, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antilles</span>, French colonies in, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antioch</span>, greatness of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Chosroes, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Empire, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its later captures, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antiochos the Great</span>, his war with Rome, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Antivari</span>, Servian, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of Montenegro, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Montenegro, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aosta</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the kingdom of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Savoy, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apennines</span>, the, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apollônia</span>, its alliance with Rome, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Appenzell</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Apulia</span>, Norman conquest of, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aquæ Sextiæ</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Aix</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aquileia</span>, foundation of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed by Attila, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fluctuates between Germany and Italy, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Austria, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aquitaine</span>, south-western division of Transalpine Gaul, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its inhabitants, <i><a href="#Page_58">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Frankish conquest of, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Neustria, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Gascony, <i><a href="#Page_332">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with and separation from France, <i><a href="#Page_332">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">united with England and Normandy, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kept by England, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French designs on, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">released from homage, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its final union with France, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_573" id="Page_573">{573}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arabia</span>, attempted Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Portuguese conquests in, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arabia Petræa</span>, Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aragon</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its position in the Mediterranean, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its later history, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations towards Navarre, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Sobrarbe joined to, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Barcelona, <i><a href="#Page_531">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">advances beyond the Pyrenees and Rhone, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquers the Balearic isles and Valencia, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of in the thirteenth century, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Castile, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its second advance beyond the peninsula, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Sicily, <i><a href="#Page_538">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquests in Sardinia, <i><a href="#Page_538">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its outlying possessions compared with those of Castile, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arcadius</span>, Emperor of the East, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Archipelago</span>, Duchy of, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Argos</span>, its place in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its early greatness, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Achaian League, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won from Epeiros by the Latins, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ariminum</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Rimini</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arkadia</span>, its place in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arles</span>, later Roman capital of Gaul, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">crowning-place of the kings of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Armagh</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Armenia</span>, conquered by Trajan, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">given up by Hadrian, <i><a href="#Page_99">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">division of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Basil II., <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian advance in, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Armenia, Lesser</span>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acknowledges the Western Emperor, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its connexion with Cyprus, <i><a href="#Page_401">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">end of the kingdom, <i><a href="#Page_401">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arminius</span>, his victory over Varus, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Armorica</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Britanny</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arnulf</span>, king of the East Franks and Emperor, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arras</span>, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to France, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arta</span> (Ambrakia), won by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Arthur</span> of Britanny, possible effects of the success of his claims, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Artois</span>, added to France, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the Duchy of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its momentary annexation by Lewis XI., <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">relieved from homage, <i><a href="#Page_340">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">within the Burgundian circle, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French acquisitions in, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aryan</span> nations of Europe, order of their settlements, <a href="#Page_13">13-15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Asia</span>, its geographical character, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Macedonian kingdoms in, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman province of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Asia Minor</span>, historically connected with Europe, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdoms in, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen ravages in, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquests of, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aspledôn</span>, its place in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Astrakhan</span>, khanat of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Russia, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Asturia</span>, united to Cantabria, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grows into the kingdom of Leon, <i><a href="#Page_154">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Asturias</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Athamania</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Athaulf</span>, king of the West Goths, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Athens</span>, its position in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">nominally independent of Rome, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lordship and duchy of, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Ottoman and Venetian conquests of, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Atropatênê</span>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Attabegs</span>, their wars with the Crusaders, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Attica</span>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Attila</span>, effects of his inroads, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Auch</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Augsburg</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">free city, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Bavaria, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aurelian</span>, Emperor, gives up Dacia, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Australia</span>, English settlement in, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Austria</span>, Lombard, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Austria</span>, origin and use of the name, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">mark of, <a href="#Page_196">196-202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its position as a marchland, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_574" id="Page_574">{574}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Bohemia, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Habsburgs, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">archduchy of, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its connexion with the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">circle of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its acquisitions and divisions, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Bohemia and Hungary, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its foreign possessions, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its rivalry with Prussia, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Venice surrendered to, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">so-called Empire of, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">changes of, during the revolutionary wars, <a href="#Page_221">221-224</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its position compared with that of Prussia, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loses and recovers Hungary, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">modern extent of, <a href="#Page_321">321-324</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">cedes its rights in Sleswick and Holstein, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Bosnia and Herzegovina administered by, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Austro-Hungary</span>, dual system in, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Autun</span>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Auvergne</span>, counts of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Avars</span>, a Turanian people, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">allied with the Lombards against the Gepidæ, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">overthrown by Charles the Great, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Aversa</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Avignon</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by France, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">sold to the Pope, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Azof</span>, won and lost by Russia, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Azores</span>, conquered by Portugal, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Babylonia</span>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Badajoz</span>, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Baden</span>, mark, electorate, and duchy of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bahamas</span>, the, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bajazet</span> the Thunderbolt, Sultan, defeated by Timour, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conquest of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of his dominion, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Balearic Isles</span>, conquered by Aragon, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Balsa</span>, house of, its dominion in Albania, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Baltic Sea</span>, Scandinavian and German influence on, compared, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Baltic</span> lands, general view of, <a href="#Page_464">464-468</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bamberg</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bangor</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bar</span>, duchy of, united to Lorraine, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Lorraine, <i><a href="#Page_348">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Barbadoes</span>, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Barcelona</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Aragon, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">released from homage to France, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bardulia</span>, the original Castile, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bari</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won from the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Barnim</span>, under Poland, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes to Brandenburg, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Barrier</span> Treaty, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Basel</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Basel</span>, bishopric of, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored by France, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Basil II.</span>, Eastern Emperor, his conquests, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporates Serbia, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Basques</span>, remnant of non-Aryan people in Europe, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their independence, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Batoum</span>, annexed to Russia, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bavaria</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Franks, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">modern use of the name, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">electorate of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with the Palatinate, <i><a href="#Page_215">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bayonne</span>, diocese of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Belgium</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Belgrade</span>, taken by the Magyars, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turk, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Peace of, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Belisarius</span>, ends the Vandal kingdom in Africa, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Benevento</span>, Lombard duchy of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">papal possession of, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Berengar</span>, king of Italy, submits to Otto the Great, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Berlin</span>, its position, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Berlin</span>, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bern</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Savoyard conquests, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexes Lausanne, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restores lands north of the lake, <i><a href="#Page_273">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bernhard</span>, duke of Saxony, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bernicia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Berwick</span>, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Besançon</span>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an Imperial city, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to France, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bessarabia</span>, annexed by Russia, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Beziers</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_575" id="Page_575">{575}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bialystok</span>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bienne</span>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Billungs</span>, their mark, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Biscay</span>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bithynia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bleking</span>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Blois</span>, united to Champagne, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">purchased by Saint Lewis, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bodonitza</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bohemia</span>, whether the seat of Samo’s kingdom, <a href="#Page_473">473</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_58">note</a></i>).</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexes Austria, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Brandenburg, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its permanent union with Austria, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">sketch of its history, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bohuslän</span>, ceded to Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Boiôtia</span>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">legendary Thessalian settlement of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">league of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dissolved, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bokhara</span>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Boleslaf I.</span>, of Poland, his conquests, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">whether the first king, <a href="#Page_479">479</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_61">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bologna</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bona</span>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Boniface</span>, king of Thessalonikê, extent of his kingdom, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bormio</span>, won by Graubünden, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bornholm</span>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bosnia</span>, Hungarian conquest of, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won back by Stephen Dushan, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its greatest extent, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_427">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">administered by Austro-Hungary, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bosporos</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Boukellariôn</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Boulogne</span>, lost and won by France, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bourbon</span>, Isle of, occupied by the French, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by England but restored, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bourdeaux</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bourges</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">viscounty of, added to France, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brabant</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Braga</span>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brandenburg</span>, mark of, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grows into modern Prussia, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">New Mark of, pledged to the Teutonic knights, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Bohemia, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Prussia, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Branibor</span>, takings of, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brazil</span>, discovery of, <a href="#Page_542">542</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <i><a href="#Page_542">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Breisach</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bremen</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held and lost by Sweden, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Hannover, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bremen</span>, city, one of the Hanse towns, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its independence of the Bishop, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brescia</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Breslau</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bresse</span>, annexed to Savoy, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to France, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bretigny</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brindisi</span>, lost by Venice, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Britain</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">early position of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Celtic settlements in, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman troops withdrawn from, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Teutonic settlements in, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">English kingdoms in, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Celtic states in, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its independence of the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_545">545</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">two English kingdoms in, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Britanny</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Normandy, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporated with France, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brixen</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Bavaria, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brunswick</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Brusa</span>, Turkish conquest of, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bucharest</span>, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bugey</span>, annexed to Savoy, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to France, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bukovina</span>, annexed by Austria, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bulgaria</span>, White and Black, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, in the eighth century, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Simeon, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Sviatoslaf, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by John Tzimiskês, <i><a href="#Page_377">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, under Samuel, <i><a href="#Page_377">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Basil II., <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">third kingdom of, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, under John Asan, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its decline, <i><a href="#Page_430">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Cuman dynasty in, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">break up of, <i><a href="#Page_431">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_431">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">triple partition of, by the Treaty of Berlin, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Bulgarians</span>, a Turanian people, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_576" id="Page_576">{576}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with the Magyars and Ottomans, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Buonaparte</span>, Napoleon, his kingdom of Italy, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his feeling towards Switzerland, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">character of his conquests, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his treatment of Germany and Italy, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his scheme for the division of Europe, <i><a href="#Page_357">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of France under, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Buonaparte</span>, Louis Napoleon, his annexations, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Buondelmonte</span>, house of, in Northern Epeiros, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgos</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundians</span>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlement in Gaul, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, Frankish conquest of, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, Kingdom of, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Trans- and Cis-jurane, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">chiefly annexed by France, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">represented by Switzerland, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its language, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">importance of its acquisition by France, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, County of, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolutions of, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined with the duchy, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">momentary annexation of, by Lewis XI., <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an appendage to Castile under Charles V., <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">finally annexed by France, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, Duchy of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">escheat of, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">union of Flanders with, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its growth, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Lewis XI., <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, Lesser, Duchy of, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, circle of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Butrinto</span>, under the Angevins, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commends itself to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to the Turk, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won back by Venice, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Byzantium</span>, annexed by Vespasian, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">capital of the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Constantinople</span>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Cæsar</span>, Augustus, his conquests, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his division of Italy, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cæsar</span>, Caius Julius, his conquests in Gaul, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">forms the province of New Africa and restores Carthage, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cadiz</span>, joined to Castile, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Gades</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Caithness</span>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Calabria</span>, change of the name, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Calais</span>, English conquest of, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won back by France, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Calatrava</span>, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">California</span>, Upper, ceded by Spain to the United States, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Caliphate</span>, Eastern, extent of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Caliphate</span>, Western, beginning of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">broken up, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Calmar</span>, Union of, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cambray</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes an archbishopric, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">League of, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Camerino</span>, march of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Campo Formio</span>, treaty of, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Canada</span>, colonized by France, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by England, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the confederation of British North America, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Canali</span>, district of, originally Servian, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Canaries</span>, conquered by Spain, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Candia</span>, war of, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_409">409</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_33">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cantabria</span>, conquered by Augustus, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Asturia, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Canterbury</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cape Breton</span>, French settlement at, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cape Colony</span>, conquered by England, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cape of Good Hope</span>, discovery of, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cape Verde Islands</span>, conquered by Portugal, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Capua</span>, Archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Principality of, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Sicily by King Roger, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carcassonne</span>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carelia</span>, conquered by Sweden, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of, ceded to Russia, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carinthia</span> (Kärnthen), mark of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Duchy of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">whether the seat of Samo’s kingdom, <a href="#Page_473">473</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_58">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carlisle</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to England by William Rufus, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carlowitz</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carniola</span>, (Krain), Duchy of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">mark of, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carolina</span>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its division, <i><a href="#Page_561">ib.</a></i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_577" id="Page_577">{577}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carthage</span>, Phœnician colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">greatness of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its possessions in Sicily, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">holds Sardinia and Corsica, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its power in Spain, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored, <i><a href="#Page_59">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">capital of the Vandal kingdom, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Carthagena</span> (New Carthage), <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cashel</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Casimir the Great</span>, king of Poland, his conquests, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Caspian</span>, Russian advance on, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cassubia</span>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Castile</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the name, <i><a href="#Page_154">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Emperor, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later history of, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations towards Navarre, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">shiftings of, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its final union with Leon, <i><a href="#Page_531">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests of, under Saint Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquers Granada, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loses and recovers Gibraltar, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Aragon, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its outlying possessions compared with those of Aragon, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Catalans</span>, conquests of, in Greece, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Catalonia</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cattaro</span>, won and lost by Montenegro, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Caucasus</span>, Russian advance in, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cayenne</span>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Celts</span>, earliest Aryan settlers in western Europe, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of their settlements, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cerdagne</span>, released from homage to France, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Aragon, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loss of, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ceuta</span>, under the Empire, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Spain, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ceylon</span>, Dutch colony, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chablais</span>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chaldia</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chalkidikê</span>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Macedonia, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kept by the Empire, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Châlons</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chambéry</span>, Savoyard capital, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Champagne</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">character of its vassalage, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to France, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chandernagore</span>, a French settlement, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Channel Islands</span>, kept by the English kings, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles</span> the Great, his conquests, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquers Lombardy, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his title of Patrician, <i><a href="#Page_123">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">conquers Saxony, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">overthrows the Avars, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">crowned Emperor, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of his Empire, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his divisions of the Empire, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <i><a href="#Page_128">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">archbishoprics founded by, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles</span> the Fat, Emperor, union of the Frankish kingdoms under, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles V.</span>, Emperor, dominions of, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conquest of Tunis, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extension of Castilian dominion under, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles VI.</span>, Emperor, his Pragmatic Sanction, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles XII.</span>, of Sweden, his wars with Peter the Great, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles</span> of Anjou, his kingdom of Sicily, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Italian dominion, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his dominion in Epeiros, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">occupies Acre, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles</span> the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, his schemes for a Burgundian kingdom, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of his death, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles</span>, Duke of Leukadia, his conquests and title, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles</span> the Good, Duke of Savoy, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charles Emmanuel</span>, Duke of Savoy, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Charolois</span>, under the Dukes of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an appendage to Castile under Charles V., <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Lewis XIV., <i><a href="#Page_539">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chartres</span>, county of, united to Champagne, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">purchased by Saint Lewis, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chazars</span>, their settlements, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian advance against, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chersôn</span> (Chersonêsos), city of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Vladimir, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">not the site of modern Cherson, <a href="#Page_516">516</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_73">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chiavenna</span>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chichester</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chios</span>, early greatness of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Zaccaria and the Maona, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Turks, <i><a href="#Page_414">ib.</a></i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_578" id="Page_578">{578}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chlodwig</span>, King of the Franks, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chosroes II.</span>, his conquests, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Christian I.</span>, King of Denmark, unites Denmark, Sleswick, and Holstein, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chrobatia</span>, Northern and Southern, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <span class="smcap">Croatia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chrobatia</span>, Northern, becomes Little Poland, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes to Austria, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Chur</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Church</span>, Eastern, its relations to Russia, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cibin</span>, gives its name to Siebenbürgen, <a href="#Page_435">435</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_49">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Circassia</span>, Russian advance in, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cispadane Republic</span>, the, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Clermont</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cleve</span>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Clissa</span>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Clontarf</span>, Irish victory at, <a href="#Page_557">557</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cnut</span>, his conquest of England, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his northern Empire, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Colony</span>, meaning and use of the word, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Columbia</span>, British, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Como</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Compostella</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Confederation of the Rhine</span>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Connaught</span>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Connecticut</span>, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Conrad of Mazovia</span>, grants Culm to the Teutonic knights, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constantine</span>, French conquest of, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constantine</span> the Great, divisions of the Empire under, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his new capital, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constantine Porphyrogennêtos</span>, his description of the themes of the Empire, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constantine Palaiologos</span>, his conquests in Peloponnêsos, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constantinople</span>, foundation of, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its moral influence, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">early Russian attempts on, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Latin conquest of, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won back under Michael Palaiologos, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Constanz</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes to Austria, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cordova</span>, bishopric, of, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Caliphate of; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Caliphate</span>, Western.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Corfu</span>, Norman conquests of, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Margarito, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won from Venice by Epeiros, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">granted to Manfred, <i><a href="#Page_385">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">under Charles of Anjou, <i><a href="#Page_385">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">under Venice, <i><a href="#Page_385">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">summary of its history, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <span class="smcap">Korkyra</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Corinth</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a Dorian city, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Achaian League, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Macedonia, <i><a href="#Page_40">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">won from Epeiros by the Latins, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cornwall</span>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Coron</span> (Kôrônê), held by Venice, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost by her, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Corsica</span>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">early inhabitants of, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Genoa, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to France, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of its incorporation with France, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cosmo de’ Medici</span>, Duke of Florence and Grand Duke of Tuscany, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cottbus</span>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Courtray</span>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cracow</span>, capital of Poland, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Austria, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to the duchy of Warsaw, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">republic of, <i><a href="#Page_520">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">second Austrian annexation of, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crema</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cremona</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crete</span>, its geographical position, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">keeps its independence, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Rome, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost and recovered by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Venice, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turks, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">re-enslaved by the Treaty of Berlin, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crim</span>, khanat of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dependent on the Sultans, <i><a href="#Page_501">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Russia, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Croatia</span>, Slavonic settlement in, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Eastern and Western Empires, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Hungary, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the Illyrian Provinces, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Croja</span>, won and lost by Venice, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crotona</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Krotôn</span>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_579" id="Page_579">{579}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crusade</span>, first, its geographical result, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Crusaders</span>, take Constantinople, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests compared with those of the Normans in Sicily, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cuba</span>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cujavia</span>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Culm</span>, granted to the Teutonic knights, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Poland, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cumæ</span>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cumania</span>, king of, a Hungarian title, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cumans</span>, settlements of, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dynasty of in Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">crushed by the Mongols, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cumberland</span>, (Strathclyde), Scandinavian settlements in, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grant of, to Scotland, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">southern part united to England, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the shire, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Curland</span>, Swedish conquest of, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tribes of, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of the Sword-brothers in, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Curzola</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Korkyra, Black</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Custrin</span>, under Poland, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes to Brandenburg, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Cyprus</span>, Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Phœnician colonies in, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost and won by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Richard, <i><a href="#Page_372">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its connexion with Jerusalem and with Armenia, <i><a href="#Page_401">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Venice, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turks, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under English rule, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Czar</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Tzar</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Czechs</span>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Czepusz</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Zips</span>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Dacia</span>, wars of, with Rome, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">made a province by Trajan, <i><a href="#Page_70">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">given up by Aurelian, <i><a href="#Page_70">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its later history, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Daghestan</span>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dago</span>, under the Sword-brothers, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Denmark, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dalmatia</span>, Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its wars with Rome, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman colonies in, <i><a href="#Page_62">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Slavonic settlement in, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">history of the coast cities, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Venetian conquest in, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Croatia, <i><a href="#Page_407">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Manuel, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fluctuates between Hungary and Venice, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409-412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Lewis the Great, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken, lost, and recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Danaoi</span>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Danes</span>, the, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their invasions of England, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Danish Mark</span>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Danube</span>, Roman conquests on, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">boundary of the Empire, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Gothic settlement on, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">crossed by the Goths, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Danzig</span>, mark of, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost and recovered by Poland, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commonwealth of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Prussia, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dardanians</span>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dauphiny</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Viennois</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Deira</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Delaware</span>, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Delmenhorst</span>, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Denmark</span>, extent of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests and colonies of, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with England under Cnut, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishoprics of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquers Sclavinia, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, in Germany, <i><a href="#Page_489">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">titles of its kings, <i><a href="#Page_489">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">keeps Rügen, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of its advance on the Slavonic lands, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its settlement in Esthland, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Sweden and Norway, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with Norway only, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its wars with Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">gives up the sovereignty of the Gottorp lands, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">gets Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, <i><a href="#Page_509">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">recovers the Gottorp lands, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">gives up Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, <i><a href="#Page_513">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporation of Holstein with, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_580" id="Page_580">{580}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Desnica</span>, Zupania of, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">δεσπότης</span>, a Byzantine title, <a href="#Page_384">384</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_27">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dijon</span>, capital of the duchy of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Diocletian</span>, Emperor, division of the Empire under, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conquests, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dioklea</span>, Zupania of, the germ of the Servian kingdom, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ditmarsh</span>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Holstein, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">freedom of, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Danish conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_491">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dobroditius</span>, his dominion, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dobrutcha</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Wallachia, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Roumania, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dôdekannêsos</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Naxos</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dole</span>, capital of Franche Comté, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Domfront</span>, acquired by William of Normandy, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dorchester</span>, bishoprics of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dorian</span> settlement in Peloponnêsos, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in Asia, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Douay</span>, becomes French, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dreux</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Drusus</span>, his campaigns in Germany, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dublin</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dulcigno</span>, originally Servian, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won and lost by Montenegro, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dunkirk</span>, held by England, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">bought back by France, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Durazzo</span> (Epidamnos), taken by the Normans, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Margarito, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Venice, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won from Venice by Epeiros, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Charles of Anjou, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won by Servia, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">second Venetian conquest of, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won by the Albanians, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turks, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Durham</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dutch</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Dyrrhachion</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Durazzo</span>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Eadmund</span>, his conquest and grant of Cumberland to Scotland, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eadward</span> the Elder, extent of England under, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">East</span>, the, prefecture of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dioceses of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">East Angles</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">East India Company</span>, French, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eastern Mark</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Austria</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ecgberht</span>, king of the West-Saxons, his supremacy, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Edessa</span>, restored to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Scots, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Egypt</span> under the Ptolemies, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Selim I., <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eider</span>, boundary of Charles the Great’s empire, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eleanor of Aquitaine</span>, effects of her marriages, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Elba</span>, annexed to the kingdom of Naples, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Êlis</span>, district of, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">city of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Achaian league, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Elmham</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Elsass</span>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Germany, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ely</span>, bishoprick of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Embrun</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Emmanuel Filibert</span>, Duke of Savoy, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Emperors</span>, Eastern, position of, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Emperors</span>, Western, position of, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, Roman</span>, greatest extent of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests under, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its river boundaries, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of under Diocletian, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united under Constantine, <i><a href="#Page_75">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">division of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">reunited under Zeno, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">continuity of, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loses its eastern provinces, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">final division of, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its political tradition unbroken in the East, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, Western</span>, beginning of, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Teutonic invasions and settlements in, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">contrasted with the Eastern, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divisions of, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Germany, <a href="#Page_124">124-126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored by Otto the Great, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">position of its Emperors, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Scandinavia, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the Northern Slaves, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, Eastern</span>, wars of, with Persia, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">contrasted with the Western, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, in the eighth century, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Greek character, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_581" id="Page_581">{581}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">its themes, <a href="#Page_149">149-152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its dominion in Italy, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">position of its Emperors, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">falls mainly through foreign invasion, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its partial tendencies to separation, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">keeps the political tradition of the Roman Empire, <i><a href="#Page_363">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">distinction of races in, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its power of revival, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its loss and gain in the great islands, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations towards the Slavonic powers, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Bulgarian settlement in, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovers Greece from the Slaves, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquests of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_377">377-378</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Venice, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its fluctuations in Asia, <i><a href="#Page_378">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish invasions in, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman invasions in, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical aspect in 1085, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Komnênoi, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">act of partition, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">losses and gains, <a href="#Page_387">387-391</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Palaiologoi, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of Timour’s invasion, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its final fall, <i><a href="#Page_391">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">states formed out of, <a href="#Page_391">391-393</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">general survey of its history, <a href="#Page_455">455-460</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with the Ottoman dominion, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, Latin</span>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its end, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Nikaia</span>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Trebizond</span>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Thessalonikê</span>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, Serbian</span>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Britain</span>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Spain</span>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Russia</span>, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, French</span>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Austria</span>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Hayti</span>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empires of Mexico</span>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of Brazil</span>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire, German</span>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Empire of India</span>, <a href="#Page_567">567</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">England</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the name, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">West-Saxon supremacy in, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Danish invasions, <i><a href="#Page_161">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Scandinavia under Cnut, <i><a href="#Page_162">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman conquest of, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ecclesiastical geography, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its wars with France, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its rivalry with France in America and India, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">slight change in its internal divisions, <a href="#Page_546">546</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations with Scotland, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">changes of its boundary towards Wales, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations with Ireland, <a href="#Page_557">557</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its settlements beyond sea, <a href="#Page_547">547</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its outlying European possessions, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its American colonies, <a href="#Page_559">559-565</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">West Indian possessions, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">other colonies and possessions of, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its dominion in India, <a href="#Page_567">567</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">English</span>, character of their settlement, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the name, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Epeiros</span>, its ethnical relations to Greece, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of Pyrrhos, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">league of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman province of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman conquests in, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">granted in fief to Margarito, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">despotat of, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquest of and separation from Thessalonikê, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Manfred and Charles of Anjou, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its first dismemberment, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Servian, Albanian, and Italian rule, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Venetian and Turkish occupation of, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ephesos</span>, its early greatness, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Epidamnos</span>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its alliance with Rome, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Durazzo</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Epidauros</span> (Dalmatian), Greek colony, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Eric</span>, Saint, king of Sweden, his conquests in Finland, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Erivan</span>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ermeland</span>, bishopric of, added to Poland, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Essex</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Este</span>, house of, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Esthland</span> (Esthonia), Fins in, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Danish settlement in, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of the Swordbearers in, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Sweden, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Russia, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Etruria</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Etruscans</span>, their doubtful origin and language, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">confederation of their cities, <i><a href="#Page_45">ib.</a></i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_582" id="Page_582">{582}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Euboia</span>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its position in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Macedonian influence, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Venice, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turks, <i><a href="#Page_409">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Euphrates</span>, Asiatic boundary of the Roman Empire, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Europa</span>, Roman province of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Europe</span>, its geographical character, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its three great peninsulas, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its colonizing powers, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Aryan settlements in, <a href="#Page_12">12-15</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">non-Aryan races in, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of the modern history of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Buonaparte’s scheme for the division of, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extended by colonization, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Euxine</span>, Greek colonies on, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Evora</span>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Exeter</span>, diocese of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ezerites</span>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Falkland Islands</span>, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Famagosta</span>, under Genoa, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Faroe Islands</span>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Faucigny</span>, annexed to Savoy, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by the Dauphins of Viennois, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ferdinand</span>, Saint, king of Castile, his conquests, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fermo</span>, march of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ferrara</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Finland</span>, Swedish conquests in, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian conquests in, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fins</span>, remnant of non-Aryan people in Europe, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in Livland and Esthland, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Flaminia</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Flanders</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">within the Burgundian circle, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">released from homage to France, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French acquisitions in, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Flemings</span>, their settlement in Pembrokeshire, <a href="#Page_554">554</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Florence</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its greatness, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Pisa submits to, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">rule of the Medici in, <i><a href="#Page_245">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Florida</span>, held by England and Spain, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquired by the States, <i><a href="#Page_563">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">France</span>, effect of its geographical position, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin and use of the name, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325-327</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ecclesiastical divisions, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its annexations, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341-352</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Austria, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a nation in the fullest sense, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">great fiefs of, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">twelve peers of, <i><a href="#Page_328">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its incorporation of vassal states, <a href="#Page_329">329-341</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of the wars with England, <a href="#Page_337">337-339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of the modern kingdom, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">thorough incorporation of its conquests, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its colonial dominions, <a href="#Page_352">352-354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its rivalry with England in America and India, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its barrier towns against the Netherlands, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of the Peace of 1763 on, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its annexations under the Republic and Empire, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of under Buonaparte, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restorations made by, after his fall, <i><a href="#Page_358">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">later annexations and losses, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">character of its African conquests, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its war with Prussia, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">France</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with the kingdom of the West Franks, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Franche Comté</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Burgundy</span>, County of.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Francia</span>, meanings of the name, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Francia</span>, Eastern, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Francia</span>, Western, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Francis I.</span>, Emperor, exchanges Lorraine for Tuscany, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Francis II.</span>, Emperor, his title of ‘Emperor of Austria,’ <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Franconia</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of the circle, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Francia</span>, Eastern.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Frankfurt</span>, election and coronation of the German kings at, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a free city, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Franks</span>, the, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of their kingdom under Chlodwig, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquest of the Alemanni, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Thuringia and Bavaria, <i><a href="#Page_117">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">of Aquitaine and Burgundy, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their position, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_583" id="Page_583">{583}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">their German and Gaulish dependencies, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of their kingdom, <i><a href="#Page_120">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of united under the Karlings, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their relations with the Empire, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquest of Lombardy, <i><a href="#Page_123">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Franks</span>, East, their kingdom grows into Germany, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Franks</span>, West, kingdom of, its extent, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with the duchy of France, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grows into modern France, <i><a href="#Page_143">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Frederick II.</span>, Emperor, recovers Jerusalem, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Frederick William I.</span>, the Great Elector of Brandenburg, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Frederick I.</span>, King of Prussia, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Freiburg</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Freiburg-im-Breisgau</span>, conquered by France, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored, <i><a href="#Page_350">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">French</span> language, becomes the dominant speech of Gaul, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Friderikshamn</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Friesland</span>, East, annexed by Prussia, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the kingdom of Hannover, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Friesland</span>, West, county of, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Frisians</span>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Friuli</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Fulda</span>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Furnes</span>, Barrier Town, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Gades</span>, Phœnician colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">admitted to the Roman franchise, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Cadiz</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gaeta</span>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Galata</span>, colony of Genoa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Galicia</span> (Halicz), kingdom of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">twice annexed to Hungary, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Poland, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Austrian possession of, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Galicia</span>, New, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gallicia</span>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Galloway</span>, incorporated with Scotland, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gascony</span>, Duchy of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Aquitaine, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded by the Peace of Bretigny, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gatinois</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gattilusio</span>, family of, receives Lesbos in fief, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gaul</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical position, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">non-Aryan people in, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prefecture of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its gradual separation from the Empire, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Teutonic invasions of, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">West Gothic kingdom in, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">position of the Franks in, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of Frankish kingdom in, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Burgundian settlement in, <i><a href="#Page_93">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Hunnish invasion of, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical divisions of, <a href="#Page_172">172-174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gaul</span>, Cisalpine, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gaul</span>, Transalpine, first Roman province in, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its boundaries, <i><a href="#Page_57">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its divisions and inhabitants, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Romanization of, <i><a href="#Page_58">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">nomenclature of its northern and southern part, <i><a href="#Page_58">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gauls</span>, their settlements, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gauthiod</span>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gauts</span>, <span class="smcap">Geátas</span>, of Sweden, name confounded with Goths, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gauverfassung</span>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gdansk</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Danzig</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gedymin</span>, king of Lithuania, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Geldern</span>, <span class="smcap">Gelderland</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">United Province of, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Geneva</span>, annexed by Savoy, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">allied to Bern and Freiburg, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored by France, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Swiss Confederation, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Genoa</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">holds Smyrna, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">holds Corsica, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">cedes Corsica to France, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Piedmont, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Venice, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her settlements, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">George Akropolitês</span>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_45">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">George Kastriota</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Scanderbeg</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Georgia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Georgia</span>, state of, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gepidæ</span>, their kingdom, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Lombards, <i><a href="#Page_107">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Germans</span>, early confederacies of, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">serve within the Empire, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Germany</span>, effect of its geographical character, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman campaigns in, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Frankish dominion in, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_584" id="Page_584">{584}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188-190</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192-195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical divisions of, <a href="#Page_175">175-177</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its losses, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its changes in geography and nomenclature, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its eastern extension, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the great duchies, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">circles of, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later history of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">late beginnings of French annexation from, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Buonaparte’s treatment of, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">state of in 1811, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Confederation, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223-226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">last geographical changes in, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its war with France, <i><a href="#Page_229">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its influence on the Baltic, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gex</span>, under Savoy, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ghilan</span>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gibraltar</span>, lost and won by Castile, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">occupied by England, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Glarus</span>, joins the Swiss Confederation, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Glasgow</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gnezna</span> (Gniezno, Gnesen), ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of the Polish kingdom at, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes to Prussia, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Görz</span> (Gorizia), county of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Austria, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gothia</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Perateia</span> or <span class="smcap">Septimania</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gothland</span>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Goths</span>, their settlements in the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">defeated by Claudius, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">driven on by the Huns, <i><a href="#Page_88">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests in Spain, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">make no lasting settlement in the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Goths, East</span>, their dominion in Italy, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Goths, West</span>, extent of their dominions, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Goths, Tetraxite</span>, their settlement, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gotland</span>, power of the Hansa in, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by the military orders, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gottorp</span> lands, sovereignty of, resigned by Denmark, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Denmark, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gozo</span>, granted to the knights of Saint John, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Granada</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">final conquest of, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Graubünden</span>, League of, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loses its subject districts, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Gravelines</span>, taken by France, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Greece</span>, one of the three great European peninsulas, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical character, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its history earlier than that of Rome, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its chief divisions, <a href="#Page_19">19-21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">insular and Asiatic, <a href="#Page_19">19-23</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Homeric geography, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its cities, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">leagues in, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquests in, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Slavonic occupation of, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">war of independence, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of formed, <i><a href="#Page_452">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">Ionian Islands ceded to, <i><a href="#Page_452">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">promised extension of, <i><a href="#Page_452">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Greeks</span>, order of their coming into Europe, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their kindred with Italians and other nations, <a href="#Page_23">23-25</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their rivalry with the Phœnicians, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their colonies, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32-35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their revival of the name Hellênes, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Greenland</span>, Norwegian and Danish settlements in, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Norway, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Greifswald</span>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Guiana</span>, British, French, Dutch, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Guinea</span>, Dutch settlements in, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Guines</span>, made over to England, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Guipuzcoa</span>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Guthrum</span>, his treaty with Ælfred, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Habsburg</span>, House of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">scattered territories of, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its connexion with the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hadrian</span>, surrenders Trajan’s conquests, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hadrianople</span>, taken by the Bulgarians, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by Michael of Epeiros, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turks, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">treaty of, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_585" id="Page_585">{585}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hadriatic Sea</span>, Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hainault</span> (Hennegau), county of, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Holland, <i><a href="#Page_294">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">French acquisitions in, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Halberstadt</span>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Halicz</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Galicia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Halikarnassos</span>, held by the knights of Saint John, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Halland</span>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hamburg</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">one of the Hanse Towns, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hannover</span>, Electorate, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Great Britain, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hansa</span>, the, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent and nature of its power, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hanse Towns</span>, the, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">surviving ones annexed by France, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">join the German Confederation, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Harold</span>, his Welsh conquests, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hayti</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Saint Domingo</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hebrides</span>, Scandinavian settlement in, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">submit to Scotland, <i><a href="#Page_553">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Heligoland</span>, passes to England, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Helladikoi</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hellas</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">‘continuous,’ <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later use of the name, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hellênes</span>, use of the name in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later history of the name, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its modern revival, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Helsingland</span>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Helvetic Republic</span>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hennegau</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Hainault</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Henry II.</span>, of England, his dominions, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Henry V.</span>, of England, his conquests, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">crowned in Paris, <i><a href="#Page_338">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Henry IV.</span>, of France, unites France and Navarre, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Heraclius, Emperor</span>, his Persian campaigns, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Slavonic settlements under, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hêrakleia</span>, commonwealth of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hereford</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hertjedalen</span>, conquered by Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Herzegovina</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_427">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">administered by Austro-Hungary, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hessen-Cassel</span>, Electorate of, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hessen-Darmstadt</span>, Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hierôn</span>, king of Syracuse, his alliance with Rome, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hispaniola</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Saint Domingo</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hohenzollern</span>, House of, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Holland</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Hainault, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <i><a href="#Page_302">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">United Provinces</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Holstein</span>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">first Danish conquest of, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fluctuations of, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">made a duchy, <i><a href="#Page_490">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">under Christian I., <a href="#Page_491">491</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of the peace of Roskild on, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporated with Denmark, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the German Confederation, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">final cession of to Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Homeric Catalogue</span>, the, <a href="#Page_26">26-29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Honorius</span>, Emperor of the West, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Huascar</span>, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hugh Capet</span>, Duke of the French, chosen king, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hundred Years’ Peace</span> between Rome and Persia, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hundred Years’ War</span>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hungarians</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Magyars</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Hungary</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Western Emperors, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">whether a Bulgarian duchy existed in, <a href="#Page_376">376</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_26">note</a></i>).</li>
-<li class="isub1">its frontier towards Germany, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations with Croatia, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquires Transsilvania, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests of the Komnênoi from, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its struggles with Venice for Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mongol invasion of, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its wars with Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquest of Bosnia, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extension of under Lewis the Great, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquests in, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its kings tributary to the Turk, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered from the Turk, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquisitions of by the Peace of Passarowitz, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later losses and acquisitions of, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">separated from and recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its dual relations to Austria, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_586" id="Page_586">{586}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Huniades</span>, John, his campaign against the Turks, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Huns</span>, a Turanian people, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their invasions, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Iapodes</span>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Iapygians</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Iberia</span>, Asiatic, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Iberians</span>, a non-Aryan people, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Iceland</span>, Norwegian and Danish settlements in, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Norway, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kept by Denmark, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ikonion</span>, Turkish capital, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Illyria</span>, <span class="smcap">Illyricum</span>, Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquests in, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prefecture of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">western diocese of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Illyrian Provinces</span>, incorporated with France, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">misleading use of the name, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Illyrians</span>, their kindred with the Greeks, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">displaced by Slavonic invasions, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Immeretia</span>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">India</span>, French settlements in, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Portuguese settlements in, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">English dominion in, <a href="#Page_567">567</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <i><a href="#Page_567">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Indies</span>, division of, between Spain and Portugal, <a href="#Page_542">542</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ingermanland</span>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ionian</span> colonies in Asia, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ionian Islands</span>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to France, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the Turks, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under English protection, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to Greece, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ireland</span>, the original Scotia, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">provinces of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Scandinavian settlements in, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its increasing connexion with England, <a href="#Page_557">557</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">English conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_557">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom and lordship of, <i><a href="#Page_557">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its shifting relations with England, <i><a href="#Page_557">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Great Britain, <i><a href="#Page_557">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Isle of France</span>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Isle of France</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Mauritius</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Istria</span>, Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporated with Italy, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Slavonic settlements in, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">March of, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fluctuates between Germany and Italy, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">possessions of Venice in, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Austria, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Italians</span>, their origin, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their kindred with the Greeks, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">two branches of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Italy</span>, one of the three great European peninsulas, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical position, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">inhabitants of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth of Roman power in, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divisions of, under Augustus, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prefecture of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">invaded by the Huns, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">rule of Odoacer in, <i><a href="#Page_94">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">rule of Theodoric in, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered to the Empire, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lombard conquest of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Imperial possessions in, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">rule of Charles the Great in, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Imperial kingdom of, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ecclesiastical divisions, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">changes on the Alpine frontier, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">system of commonwealths in, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">four stages in its history, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth of tyrannies in, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a ‘geographical expression,’ <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of Spain and Austria in, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolutionary changes in, <a href="#Page_252">252-55</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French kingdom of, <a href="#Page_253">253-55</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">settlement of in 1814, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored kingdom of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extension, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part not yet recovered, <i><a href="#Page_258">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ithakê</span>, in the Homeric Catalogue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held in fief by Margarito, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ivan</span> the Great, of Russia, his conquests, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">styles himself Prince of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ivan</span> the Terrible, of Russia, his conquests, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ivrea</span>, Mark of, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Jadera</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Zara</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jaen</span>, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jägerndorf</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jagiello</span>, union of Lithuania and Poland under, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jamaica</span>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jämteland</span>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_587" id="Page_587">{587}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jatwages</span>, the, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Java</span>, Dutch settlement in, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jayce</span>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jedisan</span>, annexed by Russia, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jerseys</span>, East and West, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jerusalem</span>, patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Chosroes, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of the Latin kingdom, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Saladin, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered and lost by the Crusaders, <i><a href="#Page_400">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">crown of, claimed by the kings of Cyprus, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jezerci</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Ezerites</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jireček</span>, C. J. on Slavonic settlements, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_8">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jôannina</span>, restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">John Asan</span>, extent of Bulgaria under, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">John Komnênos</span>, Emperor, his conquests, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">John Komnênos</span>, Emperor of Trebizond, acknowledges the supremacy of Constantinople, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">John Tzimiskês</span>, Emperor, recovers Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Asiatic conquests, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jomsburg</span> Vikings, settlement of, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Judæa</span>, its relations with Rome, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jung</span>, on the Roumans, <a href="#Page_435">435</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_50">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Justinian</span>, extent of the Roman power under, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jutes</span>, their settlement in Kent, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Jutland</span>, South, duchy of, united with Holstein, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">called Duchy of Sleswick, <i><a href="#Page_490">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Kaffa</span>, colony of Genoa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kainardji</span>, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kalabryta</span>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kamienetz</span>, ceded by Poland to the Turk, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kappadokia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Rome, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Karians</span>, in the Homeric Catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Karlili</span>, why so called, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Karlings</span>, Frankish dynasty of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kärnthen</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Carinthia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Karolingia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kars</span>, joined to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Russia, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Karystos</span>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kazan</span>, Khanat of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Russia, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kent</span>, settlement of the Jutes in, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kephallênia</span>, in the Homeric Catalogue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman conquests in, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held in fief by Margarito, <i><a href="#Page_397">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">commended to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost and won by Venice, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Khiva</span>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kibyrraiotians</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kief</span>, Russian centre at, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">supremacy of, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Mongols, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Lithuanians, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Russia, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kilikia</span>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kirghis</span>, Russian superiority over, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Klek</span>, Ottoman frontier extends to, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kleônai</span>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Köln</span> (Colonia Agrippina), <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its archbishops chancellors of Italy and electors, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">chief of the Hansa, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kolocza</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kolôneia</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Korkyra</span>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">alliance of with Rome, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <span class="smcap">Corfu</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Korkyra, Black</span> (Curzola), Greek colony, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kôrônê</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Coron</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kôs</span>, Greek colony, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by the knights of St. John, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Maona, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kossovo</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Krain</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Carniola</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kresimir</span>, king of Croatia and Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Krotôn</span>, early greatness of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ktesiphôn</span>, conquered by Trajan, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kymê</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Cumæ</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Kyrênê</span>, Greek colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Lakedaimonia</span>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lakonikê</span>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Λαμπαρδοί</span>, use of the form, <a href="#Page_369">369</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_25">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lancashire</span>, formation of the shire, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Langue d’oc</span>, extent of, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of French annexations on, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_588" id="Page_588">{588}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Languedoc</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Laodikeia</span>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Laon</span>, capital of the Karlings, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Laps</span>, remnant of non-Aryan people in Europe, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Latins</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their alliance with Rome, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lauenburg</span>, represents the elder Saxony, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by the kings of Denmark, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the German confederation, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">final cession of, to Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lausanne</span>, annexed by Bern, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lausitz</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Lusatia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lazia</span>, allotment of, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lechs</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Poles</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leinster</span>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lemberg</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lêmnos</span>, becomes Greek, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leo IX.</span> Pope, grants Apulia as a fief to the Normans, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leon</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">shiftings of, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its final union with Castile, <i><a href="#Page_531">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leopol</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Lemberg</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lepanto</span> (Naupaktos) under Anjou, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the Turk, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lesbos</span>, mention of in the Iliad, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a fief of the Gattilusi, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lesina</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Pharos</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leukas</span>, <span class="smcap">Leukadia</span> (Santa Maura), <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">date of its foundation, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commended to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost and won by her, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Leuticii</span>, the, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Letts</span>, <a href="#Page_466">466</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_53">note</a></i>).</li>
-<li class="isub1">settlements of, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis I.</span> (the Pious), Emperor, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis II.</span> Emperor, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis VII.</span> of France, effects of his marriage and divorce, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis IX.</span> (Saint) of France, growth of France under, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis XII.</span> of France, effects of his marriage, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis XIV.</span> of France, effects of his reign, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conquests from Spain, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis XV.</span> of France, effects of his reign, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lewis</span> the Great, of Hungary, his conquests, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexes Red Russia, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Liburnia</span>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Libya</span>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lichfield</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Liechtenstein</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Liége</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Lüttich</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Liguria</span>, Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the kingdom of Italy, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ligurian Republic</span>, the, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ligurians</span>, non-Aryan people in Europe, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lille</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Limburg</span>, passes to the Dukes of Brabant, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, within the German confederation, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Limoges</span>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lincoln</span>, diocese of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lindisfarn</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lisbon</span>, patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Portugal, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lithuania</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of the German conquest of Livland on, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquests from Russia, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined with Poland, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lithuanians</span>, settlements of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">long remain heathen, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Livland</span>, <span class="smcap">Livonia</span>, Finnish population of, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">German conquests in, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of the Sword-brothers in, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">momentary kingdom of, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Poland, <i><a href="#Page_504">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">by Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by Russia, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Livonian Knights</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Sword-Brothers</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Llandaff</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lodi</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lodomeria</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Vladimir</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Λογγιβαρδία</span>, use of the form, <a href="#Page_369">369</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_25">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lokrians</span>, their position in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">settle on the Corinthian Gulf, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lokris</span>, league of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lombards</span>, their settlement in Italy, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">take Ravenna, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">overthrown by Charles the Great, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lombardy</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Charles the Great, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth of her cities, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Sardinia, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lombardy</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lombardy and Venice</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">London</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_589" id="Page_589">{589}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lorraine</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">seized by Lewis XIV., <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">exchanged for Tuscany, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">finally annexed to France, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Germany, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lorraine</span>, House of, Emperors of, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lothar I.</span>, Emperor, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lotharingia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lothian</span>, granted to Scotland, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of the grant, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lothringen</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Lorraine</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Louisiana</span>, colonized by France, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Spain, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered and sold to the United States, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Louvain</span> (Löwen), <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Low Countries</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Netherlands</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lübeck</span>, founded by Henry the Lion, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its independence of the bishop, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">one of the Hansa, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Denmark, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lübeck</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lublin</span>, Union of, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lucanians</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lucca</span>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Castruccio, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">remains a commonwealth, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Tuscany, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lund</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lüneburg</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Luneville</span>, peace of, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lusatia</span> (Lausitz), Mark of, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won by Bohemia, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lüttich</span> (Liége), bishopric of, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to Belgium, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French acquisitions from, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Luxemburg</span> (Lüzelburg), duchy of, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French acquisitions from, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">within the German confederation, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">neutrality of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Luxemburg</span>, House of, kings of Bohemia, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Luzern</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lydians</span>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lykandos</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lykia</span>, league of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">preserves its independence, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Rome, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lykians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Lyons</span>, in the kingdom of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Philip the Fair, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Macedonia</span>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its close connexion with Greece, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">not in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Macedonian</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Macon</span>, annexed by Saint Lewis, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Madeira</span>, colonized by Portugal, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Madras</span>, taken by the French, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Madrid</span>, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Magdeburg</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Prussia, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Magyars</span>, a Turanian people, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of their invasion on the Slaves, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">called Turks, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the name, <a href="#Page_433">433</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_48">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mahomet</span>, union of Arabia under, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mahomet I.</span>, Sultan, Ottoman power under, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mahomet the Conqueror</span>, Sultan, his conquests, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of his dominions, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maina</span>, name of Hellênes confined to, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">independence of, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maine</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by William of Normandy, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Anjou, <i><a href="#Page_332">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maine</span>, State of, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mainz</span>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its archbishops chancellors of Germany and electors, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maionians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Majorca</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Malta</span>, taken by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Normans, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">granted to the knights of Saint John, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolutions of, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by England, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Man</span>, Scandinavian settlement in, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its later history, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_590" id="Page_590">{590}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Manfred</span>, King of Sicily, his dominion in Epeiros, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">styled Lord of Romania, <i><a href="#Page_397">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mantua</span>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Manuel Komnênos</span>, his conquests, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Manzikert</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maona</span>, the, its dominions, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Marche</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Marcomanni</span>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Margarito</span>, king of the Epeirots, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maria Theresa</span>, Empress-Queen, her hereditary dominions, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of her marriage, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Marienburg</span>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Marseilles</span>, acquired by France, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mary</span> of Burgundy, effects of her marriage, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maryland</span>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Massa</span>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Massachusetts</span>, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Massalia</span>, Ionian colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Marseilles</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Matthias Corvinus</span>, king of Hungary, his conquests, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maurienne</span>, Counts of, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mauritania</span>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mauritius</span> (Isle of France), a French colony, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken and held by England, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Maximilian I.</span>, his legislation, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of his marriage, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mazanderan</span>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mazovia</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Poland, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Meath</span>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Meaux</span>, settlement of, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mechlin</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mecklenburg</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Slavonic princes continue in, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mediation</span>, act of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Medici</span>, the, rule of in Florence, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mediterranean Sea</span>, centre of the three old continents, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Megalopolis</span>, its foundation, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Megara</span>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Achaian League, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mehadia</span>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Meissen</span>, Mark of, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Meleda</span>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Melfi</span>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Melinci</span>, <span class="smcap">Melings</span>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mendog</span>, king of Lithuania, his conquests, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mentone</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mercia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mesopotamia</span>, conquest of, under Trajan, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Diocletian, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Messana</span> (Messina), receives Roman citizenship, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered and lost by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Normans, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">first Norman capital, <i><a href="#Page_395">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Messênê</span>, Dorian, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Sparta, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">foundation of the city, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Metz</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mexico</span>, Spanish conquest of, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">two Empires of, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mexico, New</span>, ceded by Spain, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Michael Palaiologos</span>, Eastern Emperor, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Michael</span>, despot of Epeiros, his conquests, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mieczïslaf</span>, first Christian prince of Poland, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Milan</span>, capital of kingdom of Italy, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Milan</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">temporary French possession of, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a Spanish dependency, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Milêtos</span>, its colonies, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Military Orders</span>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495-497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mingrelia</span>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Minorca</span>, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Misithra</span>, restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mississippi</span>, colonization at the mouth of, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">made the boundary of Louisiana, <i><a href="#Page_353">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mithridates</span>, king of Pontos, his wars with Rome, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Modena</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Piedmont, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Modon</span>, held by Venice, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost by her, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mœsia</span>, Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mohacz</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moldavia</span>, Rouman settlement, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tributary to the Turk, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fluctuations of its homage, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Wallachia, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">shiftings of the frontier, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Molossis</span>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moluccas</span>, Dutch settlements in, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Monaco</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Montbeliard</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Monembasia</span>, restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost by her, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mongols</span>, invade Europe, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russia tributary to, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of their invasion on the Ottomans, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_591" id="Page_591">{591}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">decline and break up of their power, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Monmouthshire</span>, becomes an English county, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Monopoli</span>, lost by Venice, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Montenegro</span>, origin and independence of, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Vladikas, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins England and Russia against France, <i><a href="#Page_428">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquest and loss of Cattaro, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later conquests and diplomatic concessions to, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Montferrat</span>, marquisate and duchy of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">homage claimed from by Savoy, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">partially annexed by Savoy, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Montfort</span>, Simon of, at Toulouse, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moors</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Môraia</span>, origin and use of the name, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moravia</span>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">history of, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moravia, Great</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">overthrown by the Magyars, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Morosini</span>, Francesco, his conquests, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moscow</span>, patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">centre of Russian power, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moudon</span>, granted to Savoy, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Moulins</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mülhausen</span>, in alliance with the Confederates, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Munster</span>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Münster</span>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Murcia</span>, conquered by Castile, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Muret</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Muscovy</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mykênê</span>, its position in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destruction of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mykonos</span>, held by Venice, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Mysians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Namur</span>, Mark of, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Naples</span>, cleaves to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by King Roger, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">temporary French possession of, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">title of king of, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Parthenopæan republic, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to the Bourbons, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Narbonne</span>, Roman colony, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Narses</span>, wins back Italy to the Empire, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nassau</span>, Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Natal</span>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Naupaktos</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Lepanto</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nauplia</span>, won from Epeiros by the Latins, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost by her, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Navarre</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of under Sancho the Great, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">break-up of, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its decline, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">union with, and separation from France, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">northern part united to France, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Navas de Tolosa</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Naxos</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by the Turk, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Negroponte</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_409">409</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_33">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Neopatra</span>, Epeirot dynasty of, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Catalan conquest of, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Netherlands</span>, their separation from Germany, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Imperial and French fiefs in, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">an appendage to Castile under Charles V., <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French annexations in, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">barrier towns against France, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">United Provinces</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Netherlands</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divided, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Netz District</span>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Neufchâtel</span>, allied with Bern, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes to Prussia, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">granted to Berthier, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to the Swiss Confederation, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">separated from Prussia, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Neustria</span>, Lombard, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Neustria</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Aquitaine, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Amsterdam</span>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Brunswick</span>, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New England</span>, settlements of, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">form four colonies, <i><a href="#Page_560">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New France</span>, settlement of, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Hampshire</span>, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Netherlands</span>, colony of, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to New Sweden, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by England, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Orleans</span>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_592" id="Page_592">{592}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New South Wales</span>, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Sweden</span>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to New Netherlands, <i><a href="#Page_562">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New York</span>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">New Zealand</span>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Newfoundland</span>, first settlements in, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">remains distinct from Canada, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nibla</span>, taken by Castile, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nidaros</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Trondhjem</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nikaia</span>, Turkish capital of Roum, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Alexios Komnênos, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent and growth, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nikêphoros Phôkas</span>, Eastern Emperor, his Asiatic conquests, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nikomêdeia</span>, taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nikopolis</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">battle of, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nîmes</span>, Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Aragon, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <i><a href="#Page_335">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nimwegen</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nish</span>, taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nisibis</span>, fortress of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nizza</span>, annexed by Savoy, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Buonaparte, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Savoy, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">finally annexed by France, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nogai Khan</span>, overlord of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Noricum</span>, conquest of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in the diocese of Illyricum, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Normandy</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">character of its vassalage, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">union of with Aquitaine, Anjou, and Britanny, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Philip Augustus, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Normans</span>, their conquests in Italy and Sicily, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393-395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in England, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in Epeiros, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests in Sicily compared with those of the Crusaders, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Northmen</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Northumberland</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">earldom of granted to David, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by England, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Norway</span>, its extent and settlements, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to England under Cnut, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its independence of the Empire, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Iceland and Greenland united to, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Sweden and Denmark, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its wars with Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Sweden, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Noto</span>, taken by Count Roger, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nova Scotia</span>, ceded to England, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Novara</span>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Novempopulana</span>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Novgorod</span>, beginning of, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commonwealth at, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russia represented by, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">does homage to the Mongols, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Muscovy, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Novgorod</span>, Severian, principality of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Novi-Bazar</span> (Rassa), <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Numantia</span>, Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Numidia</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nürnberg</span>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Nystad</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Obotrites</span>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ochrida</span>, taken by the Bulgarians, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, its extent, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oczakow</span>, annexed by Russia, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Odessa</span>, does not answer to Odêssos, <a href="#Page_516">516</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_73">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Odo</span>, king of the West Franks, does homage to Arnulf, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Odoacer</span>, his reign in Italy, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">overthrown by Theodoric, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oesel</span>, won by Denmark, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Sword-brothers, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ogres</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Magyars</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oldenburg</span>, united with Denmark, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes a separate duchy, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Olgierd</span>, king of Lithuania, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oliva</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_510">510</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oliverca</span>, ceded to Spain by Portugal, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Olynthos</span>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Opicans</span>, <span class="smcap">Oscans</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Opsikion</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Optimatôn</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oran</span>, conquered by Spain, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Orange</span>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Orange River State</span>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Orchomenos</span>, its position in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its secondary position in historic times, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed by the Thebans, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oreos</span>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Orkney</span>, Scandinavian colony, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">earldom of, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">pledged to Scotland, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_593" id="Page_593">{593}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Osrhoênê</span>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ostmen</span>, their settlements in Ireland, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Otho de la Roche</span>, founds the lordship of Athens, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Otranto</span>, Turkish conquest of, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Otto the Great</span>, Emperor, subdues Berengar, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">crowned at Rome, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ottocar II.</span>, king of Bohemia, his German dominion, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ottoman Turks</span>, their position in Europe, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with the Magyars and Bulgarians, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with the Saracens, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their special character as Mahometans, <i><a href="#Page_442">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">their dominion compared with the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their origin, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect on, of the Mongol invasion, <i><a href="#Page_444">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">their first settlements, <i><a href="#Page_444">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">invade Europe, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Bajazet, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests of Servia, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Thessaly and Albania, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">invade Hungary, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">overthrown by Timour, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">reunited under Mahomet I., <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Mahomet the Conqueror, <i><a href="#Page_446">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">take Constantinople, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests in Peloponnêsos, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Bosnia and Herzegovina, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Selim and Suleiman, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquest of Hungary, <i><a href="#Page_447">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">greatest extent of their dominion, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">decline of their power, <a href="#Page_448">448-450</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their wars with Russia, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oudenarde</span>, becomes French, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored, <i><a href="#Page_349">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Oviedo</span>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Paderborn</span>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Padua</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pagania</span>, originally Servian, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paionia</span>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paionians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Palaiologos</span>, House of, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">branch of at Montferrat, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Palatinate</span> of the Rhine, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Bavaria, <i><a href="#Page_215">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pale</span>, fluctuations of the, <a href="#Page_557">557</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Palermo</span> (Panormos), a Phœnician colony, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Normans, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes the capital of Sicily, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Palestine</span>, its relations to Rome, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pampeluna</span>, diocese of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Navarre</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pannonia</span>, Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in the diocese of Illyricum, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lombard kingdom in, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Bulgarian attempt on, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Panormos</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Palermo</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Papal Dominions</span>, beginning and growth of, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its overthrow and restoration, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to the kingdom of Italy, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paphlagonia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paphlagonians</span>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Parga</span>, commends itself to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">surrendered to the Turks, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paris</span> (Lutetia Parisiorum), <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">capital of the duchy of France, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">capital and centre of the kingdom of France, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes an archbishopric, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Paris</span>, treaty of, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Parma</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">given to the Spanish Bourbons, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the duchy restored, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Piedmont, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Parthenopæan Republic</span>, the, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Parthia</span>, its rivalry with Rome, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Partition</span>, crusading act of, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Passarowitz</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Patras</span>, under the Pope, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Patriarchates</span>, the, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘<span class="smcap">Patrician</span>,’ title of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Patzinaks</span>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pavia</span>, old Lombard capital, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">county of, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘<span class="smcap">Pax Romana</span>,’ <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pelasgians</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Peloponnêsos</span>, its geographical position, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Homeric divisions of, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">changes in, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united under the Achaian League, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Slavonic settlements in, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">won back to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Latin conquests in, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_594" id="Page_594">{594}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">Venetian settlements in, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes an Imperial dependency, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Turks, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Venetian losses in, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Venice, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Turks, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pembrokeshire</span>, Flemish settlement in, <a href="#Page_554">554</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pennsylvania</span>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pentedaktylos</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Taÿgetos</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Perateia</span>, meaning of the name, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Perche</span>, united to France, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Perekop</span>, conquered by Lithuania, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to Poland, <i><a href="#Page_498">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">lost by Poland, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pergamos</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Persia</span>, wars of with Greece, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with Rome, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revival of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian conquests in, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Peru</span>, Spanish conquest of, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Perugia</span>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Peter</span> the Great of Russia, his wars with Charles XII., <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Peter</span>, count of Savoy, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pharos</span> (Lesina), <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>, taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip</span>, rise of Macedonia under, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip Augustus</span>, King of France, his annexations, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip</span> the Fair, King of France, effects of his marriage, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his momentary occupation of Aquitaine, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip</span> of Valois, King of France, his attempt on Aquitaine, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip</span> the Hardy, Duke of Burgundy, duchy of Burgundy granted to, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philip</span> the Good, Duke of Burgundy, his acquisitions, <a href="#Page_296">296-298</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philippeville</span>, held by France, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philippine Islands</span>, conquered by Spain, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Philippopolis</span>, first Bulgarian occupation of, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">first Russian occupation of, <i><a href="#Page_377">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">finally becomes Bulgarian, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Phœnicians</span>, their colonies, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Phôkaia</span>, held by the Maona, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Phôkis</span>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">league of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Phrygians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Piacenza</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">given to the Spanish Bourbons, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Picts</span>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with the Scots, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Piedmont</span>, joined to France, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">reunited with Sardinia, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">union of Italy comes from, <i><a href="#Page_256">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pietas Julia</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Pola</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pinerolo</span>, occupied by France, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pippin</span>, king of the Franks, conquers Septimania, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pisa</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">position of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquers Sardinia, <i><a href="#Page_238">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">subject to Florence, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Plataia</span>, destroyed by Thebes, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Podlachia</span>, conquered by Poland, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Podolia</span>, lost by Galicia, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to Poland, <i><a href="#Page_498">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to the Turks, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Poland, <i><a href="#Page_507">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Poitou</span>, annexed by Philip Augustus, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pola</span> (Pietas Julia), Roman colony, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Polabic</span> branch of the Slaves, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Poland</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ecclesiastical relations, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Empire, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">wars of, with Russia, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">various tribes in, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conversion, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent under Boleslaf, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">internal divisions of, <i><a href="#Page_478">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">consolidation of, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Pomerania falls away from, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests of, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined with Lithuania, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Red Russia restored to, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Zips pledged to, <i><a href="#Page_437">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its acquisitions from the Teutonic knights, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquires Livland, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations with Wallachia and Moldavia, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its wars with Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">cedes Podolia to the Turk, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">partitions of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the new kingdom, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Russia, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Poland, Little</span>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Poles</span> (Lechs), their settlements, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Polizza</span>, independence of, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Polotsk</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_595" id="Page_595">{595}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pomerania</span>, <span class="smcap">Pomore</span>, <span class="smcap">Pommern</span>, its extent, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its early relations to Poland, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Danish conquests in, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">falls away from Poland, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its divisions, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divided between Brandenburg and Sweden, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its western part incorporated with Sweden, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Denmark and then to Prussia, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pomerelia</span>, purchased by the Teutonic knights, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Poland, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pondicherry</span>, a French settlement, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests and restorations of, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ponthieu</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquired by William of Normandy, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">made over to England in 1<a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pontos</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of the Eastern Prefecture, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Portugal</span>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its growth, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of Algarve added to, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, in the thirteenth century, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>, <a href="#Page_540">540</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its African conquests, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its colonies, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divides the Indies with Spain, <i><a href="#Page_542">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to and separated from Spain, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Posen</span>, Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Potidaia</span>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prag</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prefectures</span>, of the Roman Empire, <a href="#Page_75">75-79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pressburg</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prevesa</span>, held by Venice, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to the Turk, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Primorie</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Herzegovina</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Provençal</span> language, its fall, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Provence</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of Theodoric’s kingdom, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to the Franks, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the kingdom of Burgundy, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Angevin counts of, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Provinces</span>, Roman, nature of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Eastern and Western, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prussia</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">long remains heathen, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of the Teutonic Knights in, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of the duchy, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical position, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Brandenburg, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">independent of Poland, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth of, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its acquisition of Silesia, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of East Friesland, <i><a href="#Page_211">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its share in the partition of Poland, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513-515</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">losses of, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovery and increase of its territory, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">head of North German confederation, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexes Sleswick, Holstein, and Lauenburg, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">war with France, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prussia</span> Western, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prussia</span> South, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Prussia</span> New East, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Przemyslaf</span>, king of the Wends, founds the house of Mecklenburg, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pskof</span>, commonwealth of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Muscovy, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Puerto Rico</span>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Punic</span> Wars, the, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pyrenees</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Pyrrhos</span>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Quadi</span>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Quebec</span>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Queensland</span>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Rætia</span>, conquest of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ragusa</span>, origin of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">keeps her independence, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">prefers the Turk to Venice, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Austria, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Raleigh</span>, Sir Walter, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rama</span>, Hungarian kingdom of, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rametta</span>, taken by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ramsbury</span>, see of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rascia</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Dioklea</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rassa</span> (Novi Bazar), capital of Dioklea, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rastadt</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ravenna</span>, residence of the Western Emperors, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of the Gothic kings, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of the exarchs, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Lombards, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its ecclesiastical position, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Venice, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost by Venice, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Red Russia</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Galicia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Regensburg</span>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_596" id="Page_596">{596}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Revel</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Rex Francorum</i>, title of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rheims</span>, position of the archbishop, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rhine</span>, the boundary of the Roman Empire, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">frontier of, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rhodes</span>, in the Homeric Catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">keeps its independence, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Vespasian, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by the knights of Saint John, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolutions of, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">knights driven out from, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rhode Island</span>, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Riazan</span>, annexed by Muscovy, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Richard I.</span>, of England, takes Cyprus, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grants it to Guy of Lusignan, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Riga</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under the Sword-brothers, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rimini</span> (Ariminum), <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Riparanensia</span>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Robert Wiscard</span>, duke of Apulia, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conquests in Epeiros, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rochester</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roesler</span>, R., on the origin of the name Magyar, <a href="#Page_433">433</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_48">note</a></i>).</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the Roumans, <a href="#Page_435">435</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_50">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roger I.</span>, count of Sicily, his conquests, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roger II.</span>, king of Sicily, his conquests, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Romagna</span> (Romania), represents the old Exarchate, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the name, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">cities in, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Piedmont, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roman</span>, name kept on in the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">continued under the Turks, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roman Empire</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Empire, Roman</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Romania</span>, geographical name of the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Latin Empire of, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Romania</span> in Italy; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Romagna</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Romano</span>, lordship of, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rome</span>, the centre of European history, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes the head of Italy, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">nature of her provinces, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her Macedonian wars and conquests, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her rivalry with Parthia, <i><a href="#Page_41">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">wars of, with Persia, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Patriarchate of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her later history, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes the Tiberine Republic, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to the Pope, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporated with France, <i><a href="#Page_253">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to the Pope, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Italy, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roskild</span>, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishopric of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rostock</span>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rottweil</span>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rouen</span>, capital of Normandy, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roum</span>, Sultan of, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roumans</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their northern settlements, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roumania</span>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">principality of, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of the Treaty of Berlin on, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roumelia</span>, Eastern, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Roussillon</span>, released from homage to France, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Aragon, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">finally annexed by France, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rovigo</span>, annexed by Venice, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rügen</span>, held by Denmark, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by Sweden, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rupertsland</span>, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Russia</span>, its origin, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations towards the Turks, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">geographical continuity of its conquests, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of the name, <a href="#Page_480">480</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_62">note</a></i>), <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical relations of, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its imperial style, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Scandinavian settlement in, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of against Chazars and Fins, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its rulers become Slavonic, <i><a href="#Page_481">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">attempts on Constantinople, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its isolation, <i><a href="#Page_482">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its first occupation of Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divided into principalities, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes tributary to the Mongols, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of the German conquest of Livland on, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revival of, <a href="#Page_499">499</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-<li class="isub1">delivered by Ivan the Great, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, <a href="#Page_505">505-507</a>, <a href="#Page_511">511-517</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521-523</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Sweden, <a href="#Page_507">507</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">wars with Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Poland, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lands recovered by, <i><a href="#Page_506">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">assumes the title of Empire, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_597" id="Page_597">{597}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes a Baltic power, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its share in the partitions of Poland, <a href="#Page_513">513-515</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">no original Polish territory gained at this time by, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">new kingdom of Poland united to, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent and character of its dominion, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its territory in America sold to the United States, <a href="#Page_523">523</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Russia</span>, Red; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Galicia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ruthenians</span>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Rutland</span>, formation of the shire, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ryswick</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Sabines</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sachsen-Lauenburg</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Lauenburg</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saguntum</span>, taken by Hannibal, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Andrews</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Asaph</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Davids</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Domingo</span>, Spanish settlements in, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French settlement in, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">distinct from Hayti, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Gallen</span>, abbey of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint John</span>, knights of, conquer Rhodes, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Malta granted to, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">driven out of Rhodes, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint John</span> of Maurienne, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Lucia</span>, kept by England, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Omer</span>, held by Spain, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Petersburg</span>, foundation of, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saint Sava</span>, duchy of; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Herzegovina</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saladin</span>, takes Jerusalem, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salamis</span>, its position in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salerno</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salisbury</span>, diocese of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salona</span>, Roman colony, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salôna</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Turks, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saluzzo</span>, disputed homage of, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ceded to Savoy, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Salzburg</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes a secular electorate, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Austria, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by Bavaria, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samaites</span>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samigola</span>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samland</span>, Danish occupation of, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samnites</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their wars with Rome, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Sulla, <i><a href="#Page_51">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samo</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samogitia</span>, purchased by the Teutonic knights, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Lithuania, <i><a href="#Page_496">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Samos</span>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by the Maona, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sancho</span> the Great, king of Navarre, extent of his dominion, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">San Marino</span>, independence of, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">San Stefano</span>, treaty of, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Santa Maura</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Leukas</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saracens</span>, their settlements in Europe, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">rise of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their conquests of Persia, Africa, and Spain, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their province in Gaul, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">greatest extent of their power, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquest of Sicily, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with the Ottoman Turks, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">end of their rule in Spain, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sarai</span>, capital of the Mongols, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sardica</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Sofia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sardinia</span>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its early inhabitants, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_53">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">occupied by Pisa, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Aragon, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Savoy, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sathas</span>, M., referred to, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Savona</span>, march of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Savoy</span>, House of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">position and growth of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-<li class="isub1">originally Burgundian, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to Geneva, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexes Nizza, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its claims on Saluzzo, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Bernese conquests from, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Italian and French influence on, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its decline, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its later history, <a href="#Page_288">288-289</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French annexations from, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">French occupation of, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Italian advance of, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Sicily and Sardinia, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_598" id="Page_598">{598}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">boundaries of, after the fall of Buonaparte, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by France, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saxon Mark</span>, the, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saxons</span>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlement in Britain, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Saxony</span>, conquered by Charles the Great, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">duchy of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">use of the name, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">break-up of the duchy, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">new duchy and electorate of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">circle of, <i><a href="#Page_209">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dismemberment of, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scanderbeg</span>, revolt of Albania under, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scandinavia</span>, ecclesiastical provinces of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its momentary union with Britain, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Spain, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Eastern and Western aspects of, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its barbarian neighbours, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdoms of, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its influence on the Baltic, compared with that of Germany, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scania</span>, originally Danish, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its momentary transfer to Sweden, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Hanseatic occupation of, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Schaffhausen</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Schlesien</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Silesia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sclavinia</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Danish conquest of, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scotland</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dioceses of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its greatness due to its English element, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">historical position of, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">analogy of Switzerland to, <i><a href="#Page_549">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">settlements of the Northmen in, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acknowledges the English supremacy, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">different tenures of the dominions of its kings, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grant of Lothian and Cumberland to, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its shifting relations towards England, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with England, <i><a href="#Page_552">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scots</span>, their settlement in Britain, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their union with the Picts, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scutari</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Skodra</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Scythia</span>, Roman province of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sebasteia</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sebastopol</span>, answers to old Cherson, <a href="#Page_516">516</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_73">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sebenico</span>, under Venice, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Seleukeia</span>, independence of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to the Empire by Trajan, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Seleukids</span>, extent and decline of their kingdom, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Selim I.</span>, Sultan, his conquests in Syria and Egypt, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Seljuk</span> Turks, their invasions, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">driven back by the Komnênoi, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">weakened by the Mongols, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Selsey</span>, see of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Selymbria</span>, won back to the Empire, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Semigallia</span>, <span class="smcap">Semigola</span>, part of the duchy of Curland, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of the Sword-brothers in, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Semitic</span> nations in Europe, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sena Gallica</span> (Sinigallia), Roman colony, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sens</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divided, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Septimania</span> (Gothia), <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by the Franks, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">march of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Servia</span>, Slavonic character of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Simeon, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations to the Empire, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolts from the Empire, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Manuel, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of the house of Nemanja, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its possessions on the Hadriatic, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loses Bosnia, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of under Stephen Dushan, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419-420</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">break up of the Empire, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">later kingdom of, <i><a href="#Page_426">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests and deliverances of, <i><a href="#Page_426">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">revolts and deliverance of, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">enlarged by the Berlin Treaty, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Servians</span>, never wholly enslaved, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fourfold separation of the nation, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Severia</span>, conquered by Lithuania, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Severin</span>, Banat of, attacked by Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Seven Weeks’ War</span>, the, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Seville</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Castile, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_599" id="Page_599">{599}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sforza</span>, House of, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sherborne</span>, see of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Shetland</span>, Scandinavian colony, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">pledged to Scotland, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Shires</span>, mentioned in Domesday, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">two classes of, <i><a href="#Page_555">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Shirwan</span>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Siberia</span>, khanat of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian conquest of, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sicily</span>, early inhabitants of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Phœnician colonies in, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the first Roman province, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">state of under Rome, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by George Maniakês, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman kingdom of, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393-395</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquests from the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">never a fief of the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Charles of Anjou, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its revolt, <i><a href="#Page_397">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Aragon, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with Savoy, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with Austria, <i><a href="#Page_251">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">with Naples, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_540">540</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its practical effacement, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with the Crusading states, <i><a href="#Page_398">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Venice, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sicilies, The Two</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">union of with Aragon, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the Spanish monarchy, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_540">540</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divided, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">reunited, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Italy, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Siculi</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Szeklers</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sidon</span>, Phœnician colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Siebenbürgen</span>, origin of the name, <a href="#Page_435">435</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_49">note</a></i>); <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Transsilvania</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Siena</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commonwealth of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Florence, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sikanians</span>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sikels</span>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sikyôn</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">a Dorian city, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Silesia</span>, its early relations to Poland, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">passes under Bohemian supremacy, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to the Bohemian kingdom, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes a dominion of the House of Austria, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">the greater part conquered by Prussia, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Polish territory added to, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Silvas</span>, conquered by Portugal, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Simeon</span>, Tzar of Bulgaria, his conquests, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sind</span>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sinôpê</span>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sirmium</span>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sitten</span>, see of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Skipetars</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Albanians</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Skodra</span> (Scutari), kingdom of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Servian, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominion of the Balsa at, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">sold to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Mahomet the Conqueror, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Skopia</span>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slaves</span>, their settlement and migrations, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with those of the Teutons, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their two main divisions, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">parted asunder by the Magyars, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements within the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">in Greece and Macedonia, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">remain on Taÿgetos, <i><a href="#Page_375">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">their relations to the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">general history of the Northern Slaves, <a href="#Page_472">472-485</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slavia</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slavinia</span>, name of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slavonia</span>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slavonic Gulf</span>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sleswick</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations with Denmark, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Christian I., <a href="#Page_491">491</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of the Peace of Roskild on, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">guaranteed to Denmark, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">wars in, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">transferred to Prussia, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Slovaks</span>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Smolensk</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Lithuania, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its shiftings between Russia and Poland, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Smyrna</span>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquired by Genoa, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sobrarbe</span>, formation of the kingdom, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Aragon, <a href="#Page_531">531</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Social War</span>, the, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sofia</span> (Sardica), taken by the Bulgarians, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Turks, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_600" id="Page_600">{600}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Solothurn</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sorabi</span>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spain</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_3">3</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_1">note</a></i>).</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical character, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">non-Aryan people in, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Celtic settlements in, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Greek and Phœnician settlements in, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its connexion with Gaul, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">first Roman province in, <i><a href="#Page_55">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">final conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_55">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">settlements of Suevi and Vandals in, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">West-Gothic kingdom in, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">southern part won back to the Empire, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">reconquered by West-Goths, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">separated from the Eastern Caliphate, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquests of Charles the Great in, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">foundation of its kingdoms, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_549">549</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its ecclesiastical divisions, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geographical relations with France, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its quasi-imperial character, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Scandinavia, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>, <a href="#Page_525">525</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">with South-eastern Europe, <a href="#Page_525">525</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">nation of, grew out of the war with the Mussulmans, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">king of, use of the title, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">African Mussulmans in, <a href="#Page_530">530</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">end of their rule in, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">divides the Indies with Portugal, <a href="#Page_542">542</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of under Charles V., <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquests in Africa, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its insular possessions, <i><a href="#Page_543">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">revolutions of its colonies, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its possessions in the West Indies, <i><a href="#Page_544">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spalato</span>, its origin, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Venice, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spanish March</span>, the, conquered by Charles the Great, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">remains part of Karolingia, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of, <i><a href="#Page_155">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spanish Monarchy</span>, the greatest extent of, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">partition of, <i><a href="#Page_539">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sparta</span>, her supremacy, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Achaian league, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Speyer</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes Bavarian, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spizza</span>, originally Servian, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Austria, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Spoleto</span>, Lombard duchy of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stalbova</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stati degli Presidi</span>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Steiermark</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Styria</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stephen Dushan</span>, extent of the Servian Empire under, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stephen Tvartko</span>, king of Bosnia, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stephen Urosh</span>, his conquest of Thessaly and title, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stettin</span>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stormarn</span>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Strabo</span>, his description of Hellas, <a href="#Page_18">18</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_2">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Stralsund</span>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Strassburg</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">seized by Lewis XIV., <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Strathclyde</span>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acknowledges the English supremacy, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">granted to Scotland, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Strigonium</span> (Gran), ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Strymôn</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Styria</span> (Steiermark), duchy of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sudereys</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Hebrides</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Suevi</span>, their settlements, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Suleiman</span>, the Lawgiver, his conquests, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his African overlordship, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sumatra</span>, Dutch settlement in, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Surat</span>, French factory at, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Susdal</span>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sussex</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sutherland</span>, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sutorina</span>, Ottoman frontier extends to, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Svealand</span>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sviatopluk</span>, founds the Great Moravian kingdom, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sviatoslaf</span>, overruns Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Asiatic conquests, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Swabia</span>, circle of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical towns in, <i><a href="#Page_216">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sweden</span>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its position in the Baltic, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relation to the Empire, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquest of Curland, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Finland, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined with Norway and Denmark, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_601" id="Page_601">{601}</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">separated, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth of, compared with Russia, <a href="#Page_507">507</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of under Gustavus Adolphus, <i><a href="#Page_507">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">wars of with Russia and Poland, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of against Denmark and Norway, <i><a href="#Page_508">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its German territories, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">greatest extent of, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>, <a href="#Page_510">510</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its settlements in America, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its decline, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its later wars with Russia, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">losses of, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Norway, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Swiss League</span>, beginning and growth of, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268-274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Swithiod</span>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Switzerland</span>, represents the Burgundian kingdom, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">German origin of the Confederation, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">popular errors about, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">eight ancient cantons of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of on the Austrian power, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of its Italian dominions, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">thirteen cantons of, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its allied and subject lands, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent and position of the League, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Savoyard conquests, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its relations with France, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">abolition of the federal system in, <i><a href="#Page_344">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">restored by the Act of Mediation, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Buonaparte’s treatment of, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">nineteen cantons of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">present confederation of twenty-two cantons, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sword-Brothers</span>, their connexion with the Empire, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">established in Livland, <i><a href="#Page_495">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of their dominion, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to the Teutonic Order, <i><a href="#Page_496">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">separated from them, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fall of the Order, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Sybaris</span>, Greek colony, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Syracuse</span>, Greek colony, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquest of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered and loss by the Eastern Empire, <i><a href="#Page_370">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">by the Normans, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Syria</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman province of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saracen conquest of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">partially restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Selim I., <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Szeklers</span>, settle in Transsilvania, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Tangier</span>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>, <a href="#Page_558">558</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tannenberg</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Taormina</span> (Tauromenion), taken by the Saracens, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tarantaise</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tarentum</span>, (Taras), early greatness of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Normans, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tarifa</span>, taken by Castile, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tarragona</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to Barcelona, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tarsos</span>, restored to the Empire, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tartars</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Mongols</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tasmania</span>, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tauros, Mount</span>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tauromenion</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Taormina</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Taÿgetos</span>, Slave settlement on, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tchernigof</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">lost and recovered by Poland, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Temeswar</span>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tenda</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tênos</span>, held by Venice, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Terbounia</span> (Trebinje), <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Terra Firma</span>, compared with ἤπειρος, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_3">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Teutonic Knights</span>, their connexion with the Western Empire, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of their rule, <i><a href="#Page_495">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of their dominion, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joined to the Sword-brothers, <i><a href="#Page_496">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">separated from them, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their losses, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their cessions to Poland, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their vassalage to Poland, <i><a href="#Page_497">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">secularization of their dominion, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Teutons</span>, their settlements, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their wars with Rome, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">confederacies among, <i><a href="#Page_84">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thasos</span>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thebes</span>, head of the Boiôtian League, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed by Alexander, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Theodore Laskaris</span>, founds the Empire of Nikaia, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Theodoric</span>, King of the East Goths, his reign in Italy, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thermê</span>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Thessalonikê</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thesprotians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">invade Thessaly, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_602" id="Page_602">{602}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thessalonikê</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its effects on the Latin Empire, <i><a href="#Page_384">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent under Boniface, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Michael of Epeiros, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <i><a href="#Page_385">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">separated from Epeiros, <i><a href="#Page_385">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporated with the Empire of Nikaia, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">sold to Venice, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by the Turks, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thessaly</span>, Thesprotian invasion of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">subservient to Macedonia, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the kingdom of Thessalonikê, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to Servia by Stephen Urosh, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Turkish conquest of, <i><a href="#Page_420">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thionville</span>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thirty Years’ War</span>, the, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thopia</span>, House of, Albanian kings in Epeiros, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thorn</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Prussia, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thrace</span>, Greek colonies in, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its geography, <i><a href="#Page_33">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Rome, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">diocese of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thracians</span>, in the Homeric catalogue, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thrakêsion</span>, theme of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thurgau</span>, won from Austria by the Confederates, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Thuringians</span>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Franks, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tiberine Republic</span>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tigranes</span>, king of Armenia, subdued by the Romans, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Timour</span>, overthrows Bajazet, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tingitana</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tirnovo</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tobago</span>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tocco</span>, House of, effects of their rule in Western Greece, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Toledo</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Alfonso VI., <a href="#Page_532">532</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tortona</span>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tortosa</span>, Aragonese conquest of, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Toul</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Toulouse</span>, Roman colony, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">capital of the West Gothic kingdom, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">county of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Touraine</span>, united to Anjou, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Philip Augustus, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Τοῠρκοι</span>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_48">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tournay</span>, becomes French, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tours</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishopric of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trajan</span>, Emperor, his conquests, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">forms the province of Dacia, <i><a href="#Page_99">ib.</a></i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Transpadane Republic</span>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Transsilvania</span>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Magyars, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Teutonic colonies in, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tributary to the Turk, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">incorporated with Hungary, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Transvaal</span>, annexation of, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Traü</span>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trebinje</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Terbounia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trebizond</span> (Trapezous), city of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Empire of, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acknowledges the Eastern Emperor, <i><a href="#Page_422">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by the Turks, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trent</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishopric of, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">fluctuates between Germany and Italy, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">within the Austrian circle, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Bavaria, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Triaditza</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Sofia</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trier</span>, taken by the Franks, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">chancellorship of Gaul held by its archbishops, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trieste</span>, commends itself to Austria, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trinidad</span>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tripolis</span> (Asia), county of, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tripolis</span> (Africa), conquered by Suleiman, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trojans</span>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trondhjem</span> (Nidaros), ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Trondhjemlän</span>, ceded to Sweden, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Norway, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Troyes</span>, treaty of, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tuam</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tunis</span>, conquests and losses of by the Turk, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Charles V., <a href="#Page_447">447</a>, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Turanian</span> nations in Europe, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Turks</span>, Magyars so called, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_48">note</a></i>).</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <span class="smcap">Ottomans</span> and <span class="smcap">Seljuks</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tuscany</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commonwealths of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">grand duchy of, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">exchanged for Lorraine, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Piedmont, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tver</span>, annexed by Muscovy, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tyre</span>, Phœnician colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tyrol</span>, within the circle of Austria, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken by Bavaria, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Austria, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_603" id="Page_603">{603}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tzar</span>, origin of the title, <a href="#Page_512">512</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_70">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tzernagora</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Montenegro</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tzernojevich</span>, dynasty of, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Tzetinje</span>, foundation of, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Ukraine Cossacks</span>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Ulster</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">United Provinces</span>, the, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recognition of their independence, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">colonies of, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">United States</span> of America, the greatest colony of England, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">formation of, <a href="#Page_560">560-562</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acknowledgement of their independence, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their extension to the West, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their lack of a name, <i><a href="#Page_563">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">cessions to by Spain, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Upsala</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Urbino</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by the Popes, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Uri</span>, obtains the Val Levantina, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Utica</span>, Phœnician colony, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Utrecht</span>, its bishops, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">peace of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Val Levantina</span>, won by Uri, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valence</span>, annexed to the Dauphiny, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valencia</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Aragon, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valenciennes</span>, annexed by France, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valentia</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valladolid</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valois</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">added to France, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Valtellina</span>, won by Graubünden, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to the French kingdom of Italy, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to the kingdom of Lombardy and Venice, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vandals</span>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their settlements in Spain and in Africa, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">end of their kingdom, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Varna</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Varus</span>, defeated by Arminius, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vasco de Gama</span>, discovers Cape of Good Hope, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vasto</span>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vaud</span>, conquered from Savoy, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">freed, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Veii</span>, conquered by Rome, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Venaissin</span>, annexed to France, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Veneti</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Venetia</span>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman conquests of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">province of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Venice</span>, her origin, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">patriarchal see of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her greatness, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">relations to the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Genoa and Sicily, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her first conquests in Dalmatia and Croatia, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her share in the Latin conquest of Constantinople, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with Sicily, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of the fourth Crusade on, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">inherits the position of the Eastern Empire, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her dominion primarily Hadriatic, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her possession of Crete, Cyprus, and Thessalonikê, <i><a href="#Page_405">ib.</a></i></li>
-<li class="isub1">her Greek and Albanian possessions, <a href="#Page_408">408-410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">loses and recovers Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">acquires Skodra, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her losses, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">her Italian dominions, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">losses of by the treaty of Bologna, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquest and loss of the Peloponnêsos, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to Austria, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">part of the French kingdom of Italy, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Austria, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">momentary republic of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united to Italy, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Verden</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held and lost by Sweden, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Verdun</span>, division of, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishopric of annexed by France, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vermandois</span>, annexed to France, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Verona</span>, fluctuates between Germany and Italy, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">history of, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">subject to Venice, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">to Austria, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Italy, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vespasian</span>, his annexations, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Viatka</span>, commonwealth of, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed by Muscovy, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Victoria</span> (Australia), <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vienna</span>, Congress of, <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">battle of, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_604" id="Page_604">{604}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vienne</span>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Viennois</span>, Dauphiny of, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vindelicia</span>, conquest of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Visconti</span>, House of, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vlachia</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Wallachia and Roumania</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vlachia, Great</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Thessaly</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vlachs</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Roumans</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vladimir</span>, first Christian prince of Russia, takes Cherson, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vladimir</span>, on the Kiasma, supremacy of, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vladimir</span> (Lodomeria) annexed by Lewis the Great, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">under Austria, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Volhynia</span>, conquered by Lithuania, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">recovered by Russia, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Volscians</span>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">their wars with Rome, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Vratislaf</span>, king of Bohemia, <a href="#Page_492">492</a> (<i><a href="#Footnote_65">note</a></i>).</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Wagri</span>, <span class="smcap">Wagria</span>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Waldemar</span>, king of Denmark, conquests and losses, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wales, North</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wales</span>, Harold’s conquests from, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquest of, <a href="#Page_554">554</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">full incorporation of, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wales</span>, principality of, <a href="#Page_554">554</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wallachia</span>, formation of, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">shiftings of, <a href="#Page_438">438-440</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its union with Moldavia, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wallis</span>, League of, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its conquests from Savoy, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">united with France, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes a Swiss Canton, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘<span class="smcap">Wandering of the Nations</span>,’ <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Warsaw</span>, duchy of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Weleti</span>, <span class="smcap">Weletabi</span>, <span class="smcap">Wiltsi</span>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wells</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Welsh</span>, use of the name, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wessex</span>, kingdom of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its growth and supremacy, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Westfalia</span>, duchy of and circle, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">kingdom of, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Westfalia</span>, Peace of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">West Indies</span>, French colonies in, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">British possessions in, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Westmoreland</span>, formation of the shire, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Widdin</span>, twice annexed by Hungary, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">William</span> the Conqueror, his continental conquests, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">England united by, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">William</span> of Hauteville, founds the county of Apulia, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">William</span> the Good, king of Sicily, his Epeirot conquests, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Winchester</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Wismar</span>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Witold</span>, of Lithuania, his conquests, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Worcester</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Worms</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">annexed to France, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">restored to Germany, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Württemberg</span>, county of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">electorate and kingdom of, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its extent, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Würzburg</span>, bishopric of, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">its Bishops Dukes of East Francia, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Grand Duchy of, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">York</span>, archbishopric of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="smcap">Zabljak</span>, ancient capital of Montenegro, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zaccaria</span>, princes of, hold Chios, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zachloumia</span>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zagrab</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Agram</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zähringen</span>, dukes of, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zakynthos</span> (Zante), conquered by William the Good, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held in fief by Margarito, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">commended to Venice, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">tributary to the Sultan, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zalacca</span>, battle of, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zante</span>; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Zakynthos</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zara</span> (Jadera), Roman colony, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">held by Venice, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Peace of, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zaragoza</span>, ecclesiastical province of, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">conquered by Aragon, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zealand</span>, province of, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zealand</span>, Danish island, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zeno</span>, reunion of the Empire under, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zeugmin</span>, recovered by Manuel Komnênos, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zips</span>, pledged to Poland, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zug</span>, joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zürich</span>, minster of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins the Confederates, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zutphen</span>, county of, annexed to Burgundy, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="smcap">Zuyder-Zee</span>, inroads of, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>Spottiswoode &amp; Co., Printers, New-street Square, London.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-<p class="ph3"><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</a></p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> In modern use we speak of <i>Spain</i> as only one part, though much the
-larger part, of the peninsula, and of <i>Portugal</i> as another part. But
-this simply comes from the accident that, for some centuries past, all
-the other Spanish kingdoms have been joined under one government, while
-Portugal has remained separate. In speaking of any time till near the
-end of the fifteenth century of our æra, the word <i>Spain</i> must always
-be used in the geographical sense, as the name of the whole peninsula.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> See the first chapter of his eighth book (vol. ii. p. 139 of
-the Tauchnitz edition). He makes four peninsulas within peninsulas,
-beginning from the south with Peloponnêsos, and he enlarges on the
-general character of the country as made up of gulfs and promontories.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Ἤπειρος is simply the mainland, and came only gradually to mean a
-particular country. We may compare the use of ‘terra firma’ in South
-America. In the catalogue (<i>Iliad</i>, ii. 620-635), after the island
-subjects of Odysseus have been reckoned up, we read: οἵ τ᾽ Ἤπειρον
-ἔχον, ἠδ᾽ ἀντιπέραι᾽ ἐνέμοντο. This must mean the land afterwards
-called Akarnania. It was remarked at a later time that the Akarnanians
-were the only people of Greece who did not appear in the catalogue.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> We shall come as we go on to two uses of the name in which Italy,
-oddly enough, meant only the northern part of the land commonly so
-called. But in both these cases the name had a purely political and
-technical meaning, and it never came into common use in this sense.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Some may think that the Cisalpine Gauls ought to be excepted, as
-the common Roman story represents them as having crossed the Alps from
-Transalpine Gaul at a time which almost comes within the range of
-contemporary history. But this is a point about which there is no real
-certainty; and it seems quite as likely that the Gaulish settlements on
-the Italian side of the Alps were as old as those on the other side.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> In a more minute study of the history it will be found that Latin
-Africa held out against the Saracens very much longer than Syria
-and Egypt. But for our purpose the two may be classed together in
-opposition to those lands in Europe and Asia which always remained
-Roman or Greek.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> The geographical extent of the Frankish dominion before and after
-the conquest of Charles is most fully marked by Einhard, Vita Karoli,
-c. 15.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> While I was revising this chapter, I became acquainted with C. J.
-Jireček’s <i>Geschichte der Bulgaren</i> (Prag, 1876), the third chapter
-of which is devoted to an examination of the early settlements of
-the Slaves in the Eastern peninsula. He makes it probable that they
-were there earlier than is generally thought. They seem, exactly
-like the Teutons, to have first entered the Empire as captives and
-colonists, a process which may have begun as early as the second and
-third centuries. He shows also that the march of Theodoric into Italy
-had the effect of laying a large region open to their settlements.
-But he leaves my general propositions untouched. It is not till the
-sixth century that those Slavonic movements began which are of real
-importance to historical geography.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> The best account of the various names by which the East-Frankish
-kings and their people are described is given by Waitz, <i>Deutsche
-Verfassungsgeschichte</i>, v. 121 et seqq.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> So Wippo (2) describes the gathering of the men of the kingdom:
-‘Cis et circa Rhenum castra locabant. Qui dum Galliam a Germanis
-dividat, ex parte <i>Germaniæ</i> Saxones cum sibi adjacentibus Sclavis,
-Franci orientales, Norici, Alamanni, convenere. De <i>Gallia</i> vero Franci
-qui super Rhenum habitant, Ribuarii, Liutharingi, coadunati sunt.’ The
-two sets of Franks are again distinguished from the Latin or French
-‘Franci.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> See special treatise on the Themes in the third volume of the Bonn
-edition. The Treatise which follows, ‘de Administrando Imperio,’ is
-also full of geographical matter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Unless we except the small part of Flanders held by the
-Confederation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> On the marks, see Waitz, <i>Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichten</i>, vii.
-62, et seq.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> No influence was more powerful for this end than the <i>Zollverein</i>
-or customs union, which gradually united most of the German states
-for certain purposes. But as it did not affect the boundaries or the
-governments of sovereign states, it hardly concerns geography. Neither
-do the strivings after more perfect union in 1848 and the following
-years.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Compare the mention of Rudolf in the letter of Cnut, on his Roman
-Pilgrimage, in Florence of Worcester, 1031. He is there ‘Rodulphus rex,
-qui maxime ipsarum clausurarum dominatur.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> That Aosta was strictly Burgundian appears from the ‘Divisio
-Imperii, 806’ (Pertz, Leges, i. 141), where Italy is granted whole
-to Pippin, Burgundy is divided between Charles and Lewis; but it is
-provided that both Charles and Lewis shall have success to Italy,
-‘Karolus per vallem Augustanam quæ ad regnum ejus pertinet.’ The
-Divisio Imperii of 839 is still plainer (Pertz, Leges, i. 373,
-Scriptores, i. 434). There the one share takes in ‘Regnum Italiæ
-partemque Burgundiæ, id est, vallem Augustanam,’ and certain other
-districts. So Einhard (Vita Karoli, 15) excludes Aosta from Italy.
-‘Italia tota, quæ ab Augusta Prætoria usque in Calabriam inferiorem, in
-qua Græcorum et Beneventanorum constat esse confinia, porrigitur.’ As
-Calabria was not part of Italy in this sense, so neither was Aosta.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> See Waitz, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte, iv. 73.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Namely in the Illyrian Provinces and in the Ionian Islands. See
-above, <a href="#Page_322">p. 322</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_139">p. 139</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_135">p. 135</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_292">p. 292</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_264">p. 264</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_284">pp. 284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Unless we except the momentary existence of the first Septinsular
-Republic, to be spoken of below.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> The longer form Λογγιβαρδία clave to this theme, while the Greeks
-learned to apply the contracted form Λαμπαρδοί to the Lombards of
-Northern Italy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> A temporary Bulgarian occupation seems clear from Einhard, Annals,
-827, 828. But on the supposed existence of a Bulgarian duchy in the
-present Hungary see Roesler, <i>Romänische Studien</i>, 201.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> It must be remembered that δεσπότης was and is a common Byzantine
-title, with no worse meaning than <i>dominus</i> or any of the words which
-translate it.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> On this very singular, but very obscure, little state see our
-own Benedict (ii. 199) and Roger of Howden (iii. 161, 269), and
-the Ghibeline Annals of Placentia, Pertz, xix. 468. See also Hopf,
-<i>Geschichte Griechenlands</i>, vi. 161.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_379">p. 379</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> It is well to see this familiar title in Greek. The Duke (δοὺξ
-Βενετίας) was δεσποτικῷ ἀξιώματι τιμηθεὶς, ἔχειν τε ἐξ ὅλου πρὸς τὸ
-ὅλον ὃ τὸ τῶν Φράγκων ἐκτήσατο γένος τὸ τέταρτον καὶ τοῦ τετάρτου τὸ
-ἥμισυ. George Akropolitês, 15. ed. Bonn.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> If this is what is really meant by <i>Laza</i> or <i>Lacta</i> in the Act of
-Partition. Muratori, xii. 357.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> See the Venetian Chronicle in Pertz, viii. 29, 32. After the
-Venetian conquest the Duke’s name is placed after that of the Emperor
-in religious ceremonies. But we see how slight was the real hold of
-the Empire on these distant dependencies, when we find that, on the
-submission of Croatia and Dalmatia to Basil the Macedonian, the tribute
-of the cities was assigned to the Croatian prince.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> <i>Negroponte</i>—a wild corruption of <i>Euripos</i>—is strictly the
-name of one of the Latin baronies in Euboia, and has been carelessly
-transferred to the whole island, as Crete used often to be called
-<i>Candia</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_34" id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Ἄσπρη θάλασσα, as distinguished from the Euxine, the μαύρη θάλασσα.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_35" id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Fallmerayer gives the name a Slavonic origin; Hopf and Hertzberg
-make Μωραία a transposition of Ῥὡμαία. Neither derivation is
-satisfactory; but either is better than the mulberry-leaf.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_36" id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> <i>Grand Sire</i>, <i>Megaskyr</i>, = μέγας κύριος. See Nikêphoros Grêgoras,
-vii. 5, vol. i. p. 239.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_37" id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_388">p. 388</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_38" id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_283">p. 283</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_39" id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> See below, <a href="#Page_425">p. 425</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_40" id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> See <a href="#Page_141">p. 141</a>. It was Thessaly, less <i>Neopatra</i> attached to Athens,
-<i>Pteleon</i> held by Venice, <i>Zeitouni</i> by the Empire.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_41" id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> ‘Basilissa Romæorum’ = Ῥωμαίων βασίλισσα. ‘Rom<i>æ</i>i’ is not
-uncommonly used for the Ῥωμαῐωι of the East, as distinguished from the
-‘Rom<i>an</i>orum Imperator’ of the West.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_42" id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_377">p. 377</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_43" id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_420">p. 420</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_44" id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> He claimed (see Jireček, <i>Geschichte der Bulgaren</i>, p. 351)
-to rule over the Greek, the Albanian, and the Servian lands, from
-Hadrianople to Durazzo.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_45" id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> The history of George Akropolitês gives a narrative of these wars
-which is worth studying, if only for its close bearing on the most
-recent events.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_46" id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_157">p. 157</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_47" id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_158">p. 158</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_48" id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> On the origin of the name, see Roesler, <i>Romänische Studien</i>, 159,
-218, 260. There is something strange in Constantine calling the Finnish
-Magyars Τοῠρκοι, in opposition to the really Turkish Patzinaks. His
-Τουρκία and Φραγγία are of course Hungary and Germany. De Adm. Imp. 13,
-40. pp. 81, 173. ed. Bonn.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_49" id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Also called <i>Siebenbürgen</i>, a corruption of the name of the
-fortress of <i>Cibin</i>, which has many spellings.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_50" id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> I must have given far more faith to it than I do now when I
-wrote <a href="#Page_71">p. 71</a>. Roesler’s book, <i>Romänische Studien</i>, has since put the
-whole matter in a clear light; nor can I think that his arguments are
-at all set aside by the answer of Jung, <i>Römer und Romanen in den
-Donauländern</i>. Innsbruck, 1877.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_51" id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_160">pp. 160-162</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_52" id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_163">p. 163</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_53" id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> A common name for these closely allied nations is sometimes
-needed. <i>Lettic</i> is the most convenient; <i>Lett</i>, with the adjective
-<i>Lettish</i>, is the special name of one of the obscurer members of the
-family.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_54" id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_130">p. 130</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_55" id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> See Einhard, Annals A. 815, where we read, ‘trans Ægidoram
-fluvium in terram Nordmannorum ... perveniunt.’ So Vita Karoli 12:
-‘Dani ac Sueones quos Nortmannos vocamus,’ and 14, ‘Nortmanni qui Dani
-vocantur.’ But Adam of Bremen (ii. 3) speaks of ‘mare novissimum, quod
-Nortmannos a Danis dirimit.’ But the name includes the Swedes: as in i.
-63 he says, ‘Sueones et Gothi, vel, si ita melius dicuntur, Nortmanni,’
-and i. 16, ‘Dani et ceteri qui trans Daniam sunt populi <i>ab historicis
-Francorum</i> omnes Nordmanni vocantur.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_56" id="Footnote_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_131">p. 131</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_57" id="Footnote_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> See Adam of Bremen, iv. 16.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_58" id="Footnote_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> The origin of Samo and the chief seat of his dominion, whether
-Bohemia or Carinthia, is discussed by Professor Fasching of Marburg
-(Austria) in the <i>Zweiter Jahresbericht der kk. Staats-Oberrealschule
-in Marburg</i>, 1872.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_59" id="Footnote_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> See Schafarik, <i>Slawische Alterthümer</i>, ii. 503.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_60" id="Footnote_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_198">p. 198</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_61" id="Footnote_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> The Poles claim Boleslaf the First as the first king. But Lambert
-(1067), who strongly insists on the tributary condition of Poland,
-makes Boleslaf the Second the first king. The royal dignity was
-certainly forfeited after his death.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_62" id="Footnote_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> There can be no doubt that the Russian name strictly belongs to
-the Scandinavian rulers, and not to the Slavonic people. See Schafarik,
-i. 65; Historical Essays, iii. 386. The case is parallel to that of the
-Bulgarians and the Franks, save that the name <i>Rus</i> is said to be, not
-a Scandinavian name, but a name applied to the Swedes by the Fins.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_63" id="Footnote_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> See above pp. <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_64" id="Footnote_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> This document, granted at Metz in 1214, will be found in
-Bréholles’ <i>Historia Diplomatica Friderici Secundi</i>, i. 347. It reads
-like a complete surrender of all Imperial rights in both the German
-and the Slavonic conquests of Waldemar. It may be that it seems to
-have that meaning only because the retreating of Terminus was deemed
-inconceivable.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_65" id="Footnote_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Vratislaf, who reigned from 1061 to 1092, is called the first king
-of Bohemia, but his royal dignity was only personal. The succession of
-kings begins only with Ottocar the First, who reigned from 1197 to 1230.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_66" id="Footnote_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_437">p. 437</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_67" id="Footnote_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_448">p. 448</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_68" id="Footnote_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Conquered by Sweden 1643, restored to Denmark 1645. Ceded to
-Sweden 1658, but recovered the same year.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_69" id="Footnote_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_467">p. 467</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_70" id="Footnote_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> There is no doubt that the title of <i>Czar</i>, or rather <i>Tzar</i>,
-borne by the Russian princes, as by those of Servia and Bulgaria in
-earlier times, is simply a contraction of <i>Cæsar</i>. In the Treaty of
-Carlowitz Peter the Great appears as Tzar of endless countries, but he
-is not called <i>Imperator</i>, though the Sultan is.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_71" id="Footnote_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_212">p. 212</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_72" id="Footnote_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> See above, pp. <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_73" id="Footnote_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> It is however to be regretted that, in bringing back the old names
-into these regions, they have been so often applied to wrong places.
-Thus the new <i>Sebastopol</i> answers to the old <i>Cherson</i>, while the new
-<i>Cherson</i> is elsewhere. The new <i>Odessa</i> has nothing to do with the old
-<i>Odêssos</i>, and so in other cases.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_74" id="Footnote_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_208">p. 208</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_75" id="Footnote_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_228">p. 228</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_76" id="Footnote_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> See also <a href="#Page_222">p. 222</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_77" id="Footnote_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_449">p. 449</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_78" id="Footnote_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_441">p. 441</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_79" id="Footnote_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_154">p. 154</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_80" id="Footnote_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_155">p. 155</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_81" id="Footnote_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_4">p. 4</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_82" id="Footnote_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_154">p. 154</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_83" id="Footnote_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_335">p. 335</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_84" id="Footnote_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_343">p. 343</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_85" id="Footnote_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Conquered by England 1708. Ceded 1713. Recovered 1756. Ceded to
-England 1763. Recovered 1782. Conquered by England 1798. Recovered 1802.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_86" id="Footnote_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_447">p. 447</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_87" id="Footnote_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> See Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 564.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_88" id="Footnote_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> See above, <a href="#Page_98">p. 98</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_89" id="Footnote_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> The Tudor kings were doubtless of British descent; but they did
-not reign by virtue of that descent, and they did not come in till ages
-after the English kingdom was completely formed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_90" id="Footnote_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> See Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 580.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_91" id="Footnote_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> It should be remembered that the principality became the appanage
-of the eldest son only by accident. The first English prince,
-afterwards Edward the Second, was not his father’s eldest son at the
-time of his creation. The title moreover is newly created each time.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_92" id="Footnote_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> See Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 48; and Macmillan’s Magazine,
-April, 1880.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_93" id="Footnote_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> The Latin <i>colonia</i> certainly does not imply independence; but,
-the word <i>colony</i>, in our use of it, rather answers to the Greek
-ἀποικία which does.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_94" id="Footnote_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> It may be well to give the dates in order:—</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Plymouth</td><td align="left">1620</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Massachusetts</td><td align="left">1628</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New Hampshire</td><td align="left">1629</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Connecticut</td><td align="left">1635</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Newhaven</td><td align="left">1638</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Providence</td><td align="left">1644</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rhode Island</td><td align="left">1634</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Maine</td><td align="left">1638</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New Hampshire annexed by Massachusetts</td><td align="left">1641</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rhode Island and Providence united</td><td align="left">1644</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Connecticut and Newhaven united</td><td align="left">1664</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New Hampshire separated from Massachusetts</td><td align="left">1671</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Maine purchased by Massachusetts</td><td align="left">1677</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Plymouth and Massachusetts united</td><td align="left">1691</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /><div>
-
-<p>[Transcriber’s note: The following changes have been made to this text:</p>
-
-<ul class="non_index"><li>Page ix: ‘Kyrêne’ to ‘Kyrênê’—‘Crete, Cyprus, Kyrênê’.</li>
-
-<li>Page xxviii: ‘Brobant’ to ‘Brabant’—‘Brabant; Hainault’.</li>
-
-<li>Page xlii: ‘Lauenberg’ to ‘Lauenburg’—‘Saxony; Lauenburg;’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 31: ‘Peloponnêsian’ to ‘Peloponnesian’—‘Peloponnesian cities’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 94, sidenote: ‘B.C. 476-493’ to ‘A.D. 476-493’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 114, sidenote: ‘South-eastern’ to ‘South-western’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 208, sidenote: ‘121.’ to ‘1212.’—‘1180-1212.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 217: ‘Görtz’ to ‘Görz’—‘borderlands of <i>Görz</i>’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 240, sidenote: ‘Palaiologioi’ to ‘Palaiologoi’—‘Palaiologoi at Montferrat, 1306.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 320: ‘at’ to ‘as’—‘as it stood.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 352: ‘Napoleone’ to ‘Napoleon’—‘Napoleon Buonaparte was born’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 354: ‘theatened’ to ‘threatened’—‘seriously threatened’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 368: ‘setttlement’ to ‘settlement’—‘conquest and settlement’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 372: ‘begining’ to ‘beginning’—‘beginning of the eleventh’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 373: missing word ‘time’ added—‘to time enforced.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 379: ‘posssession’ to ‘possession’—‘Imperial possession’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 389: ‘Nikomédeia’ to ‘Nikomêdeia’—‘<i>Nikaia</i>, <i>Nikomêdeia</i>’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 396, sidenote: ‘Epirot’ to ‘Epeirot’—‘Epeirot conquests of William’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 407: ‘Kommênos’ to ‘Komnênos’—‘Under Manuel Komnênos’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 418, sidenote: ‘1343.’ to ‘1383.’—‘1348-1383.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 428: ‘Balza’ to ‘Balsa’—‘the house of Balsa’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 432, sidenote: ‘84’ to ‘884’—‘884-894.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 493: ‘burggraves’ to ‘burgraves’—‘burgraves of Nürnberg.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 512: ‘Ăbo’ to ‘Åbo’—‘Peace of Åbo’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 539, sidenote: ‘possesions’ to ‘possessions’—‘outlying possessions’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 550: ‘Northhumberland’ to ‘Northumberland’—‘part of Northumberland’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 561, sidenote: ‘1346’ to ‘1646’—’Maryland. 1646.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 564, sidenote: ‘Dependen’ to ‘Dependent’—‘Dependent confederacy.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 580: ‘ecclesiastial’ to ‘ecclesiastical’—‘Embrun, ecclesiastical province’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 583: ‘Geatas’ to ‘Geátas’—‘Gauts, Geátas’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 586: ‘Jagerndorf’ to ‘Jägerndorf’—‘Jägerndorf, principality of’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 587: ‘Kamenietz’ to ‘Kamienetz’—‘Kamienetz, ceded by Poland’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 587: ‘Korônê’ to ‘Kôrônê’—‘Kôrônê; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Coron</span>.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 587: ‘Koloneia’ to ‘Kolôneia’—‘Kolôneia, theme of’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 589: ‘Luzelburg’ to ‘Lüzelburg’—‘Luxemburg (Lüzelburg)’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 590: ‘Monbeliard’ to ‘Montbeliard’—‘Montbeliard, county of’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 592: ‘Komnenos’ to ‘Komnênos’—‘Alexios Komnênos, 381.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 594: ‘Phokaia’ to ‘Phôkaia’—‘Phôkaia, held by’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 594: ‘Julii’ to ‘Julia’—‘Pietas Julia; <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Pola</span>.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 595: ‘remain’ to ‘remains’—‘long remains heathen’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 595: ‘Bradenburg’ to ‘Brandenburg’—‘united with Brandenburg’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 599: ‘Maniakes’ to ‘Maniakês’—‘recovered by George Maniakês’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 599: ‘Sinopê’ to ‘Sinôpê’—‘Sinôpê, 39’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 600: ‘Soluthurn’ to ‘Solothurn’—‘Solothurn, joins the Confederates’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 600: ‘610’ to ‘10’—‘its geographical character, 10’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 600: ‘Califate’ to ‘Caliphate’—‘Eastern Caliphate, 113.’</li>
-
-<li>Page 600: ‘Presidenti’ to ‘Presidi’—‘Stati degli Presidi’.</li>
-
-<li>Page 603: ‘Tzernoievich’ to ‘Tzernojevich’—‘Tzernojevich, dynasty of’.]</li></ul>
-</div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
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