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The Church in the Roman Empire before 170 A.D. (London, 1893).
St. Paul the Traveller and the Roman Citizen (London, 1895).
The Cities and Bishoprics of Phrygia, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1896-7).
Was Christ born at Bethlehem? (London, 1898).

The Letters to the Seven Churches of Asia (London, 1905). Hogarth's Nearer East (Oxford, 1902) summarises our present knowledge of these lands, and for the students of ancient geography the same writer gives a valuable discussion on Ancient and Modern Roads in Eastern Asia Minor (Part v. of the third volume of the Supplementary Papers of the Royal Geographical Society, London, 1893).

A great deal of information may be found scattered through Murray's Guide Book on Asia Minor (London, 1895), and a multitude of excellent works of travel and exploration have been written on the same subject, e.g., by Humann and Puchstein, Sterrett, Radet, Lanckoronski, Conder, Newton and Wood.

Excellent histories of the Jews of this period may be found in Milman, (History of the Jews, vol. iii., 3rd edition, London, 1863), Schürer (Geschichte des Jüdischen Volkes (Leipzig, 1890), and Graetz (Geschichte der Jüden, 11 vols., Leipzig, 1866—78).

For Egypt a convenient summary will be found in volume v. of Flinders Petrie's History of Egypt, Under Roman Rule, by J. G. Milne (London, 1898). For further information the great collections of Papyri will be found useful, especially Letronne's Receueil des Inscriptions Grecques et Latines de l'Egypte (Paris, 1842-8).

The puzzling Arabian expedition of Aelius Gallus has been the subject of much discussion :

Krüger. Der Feldzug des Aelius Gallus (Wismar, 1862).

A. Sprenger. The Campaign of Aelius Gallus in Arabia (Journal of
Royal Asiatic Society, July, 1872).

Bunbury. History of Ancient Geography, chapter xx. (London,
1879).

Glaser. Geschichte and Geographie Arabiens (Berlin, 1890, chapter iii., Aelius Gallus' Feldzug nach Arabien)

Hogarth. The Penetration of Arabia (London, 1905).

The social life of the period is treated in Friedlander's classic work Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms (Leipzig 1888-9), and in Marquardt Das Privatleben der Römer (Leipzig, 1886).

The best general history of the period of recent times is Schiller (Die Geschichte der Römischen Kaiserzeit, vol. i.), and for particular points there are the Dictionaries of Antiquities (Smith, Pauly-Wissowa, Daremberg-Saglio, and Ruggiero).

INDEX.

INDEX TO MEMOIR.

A

Addison, selections from, Thomas Arnold's edition of, cxii.

African question, the, Arnold's opinion of, xxxix.

Africa, south, cix., cx., cxvi.

Aja, Frau, Goethe's mother, cxiv.

Allen, Mr. E. L. B., friend and brother-in-law of W. T. Arnold, x.,

xi.—xiv., xix., xxiv., cxxi.

Arabi Pasha, xxxiv.

Arnold, Dr., of Rugby, iv., vi., lii.

Mrs., wife of Dr. Arnold, vii., see Penrose, Mary.

Mary, daughter of Thomas Arnold, vii., viii.; see Hiley, Mrs.
Matthew, iv., xii., xxxviii., xli., lxxx.

Frances, daughter of Dr. Arnold, vi., 1., lii.

Thomas, father of W. T. Arnold, iv., xlvi.; his relations to the
Church of Rome, v., viii., xlvi.; W. T. Arnold's biographical
article on, cxiii.

Julia, mother of W. T. Arnold, iv., xlvi.

Mary A., sister of W. T. Arnold, v., xxxiii.; see also Ward, Mrs.
Humphry.

Theodore, brother of W. T. Arnold, viii.

F. S., brother of W. T. Arnold, xlv.

William Thomas, early years of, iii.—viii.; school and college,
ix.-xxx.; marriage, xxx.; in Oxford, xxxi.; in Manchester
on the staff of the Guardian, xxxii. civ.; in Ireland, xxxv.;
literary work of, xxxvii.-xli., lxxiv., lxxxvii., civ.; biblio-
graphy of his writings in the English Historical Review, xl. ;
his edition of Keats, xl.-xlii.; his work as a journalist, xl.,
lix., lx. lxxvi.; his politics, xliv., lxxvi.-lxxix.; his views on
German and French, lxxxviii.-xcvii.; letters of, xxi.—xxvi.,
lxxx.; friends of, cvi.; his love of animals, xlvii.—xlix., xcix.;
illness, ciii.-cxxii.; death of, cxxii.

Mrs., see Wale, Henrietta, cxxii.

Mr. Charles, Arnold in the house of, ix.
Arnold Essay Prize, won by W. T. Arnold, xxx.
Art Gallery, the, in Manchester, xxxiii., xlv.

Art, School of, in Manchester, xlv.

Austen, Jane, read by Arnold, cxiii.

B

Balfour, Mr., administration of, xliv.

Basques, the, Arnold's sympathy with, lxxvii.

Bodley, Mr. his studies of modern France, xcii.

Birmingham, the Arnolds at, viii.

Boers, the, lxxx., cix.

Bosanquet, Mr. Bernard, friend and tutor of W. T. Arnold, xxv.,

Bourdon, M. Emile, writing of Arnold, xcvi.

Bourgogne, M. Lucien, writing of Arnold, xcvi.

Brachet, recommended by Arnold for philology of French, lxxxviii.

Bradley, Dr., Master of University College, Oxford, xvi.

Brasenose Club, the, foundation of, xliv.

British Association, the, meeting in Manchester in 1881, xlvii.

C

xli.

Carlyle Square, Chelsea, Arnold's house in, cxii.

Casaubon, in Middlemarch, lxii.

Cavendish, Lord Frederick, funeral of, xxxv.

Lady Frederick, xxxv.

Lord Edward, xxxv.

Century, magazine, the, cxiii.

Chamberlain, Mr., W. T. Arnold's opinion of, xliv.

Chaucer, an essay written by W. T. Arnold on, xiii.

Chelsea, Arnold living in, cvi.

Cherbuliez, memoir of, by Faguet, quoted by W. T. Arnold, lxxv.

Chésières, letter from Arnold from, lxxx.; the Arnolds at, cxvii.

Clarens, visits of the Arnolds to, xliii., cxvii.

Claude, a picture of, described by W. T. Arnold, xiii.

Clough, Arthur, iv.

Colvin, Mr. Sidney, his criticism of W. T. Arnold's edition of Keats,

xli.

Corneille, read by Arnold, cxiii.

Cropper, Mr. and Mrs., son-in-law and daughter of Dr. Arnold, viii.

D

Daniel, S., his works studied by Arnold, cxiii.

Darmesteter, Arsène, his Life of Words, lxxxviii
Débats, Journal des, the, cvi., cxxiii.

Denison, Sir William, Governor of Tasmania, iv.

Devonshire, the Duke of, xxxv.—xxxvi.

Dryden, his Essay on Dramatic Poetry, edited by Arnold, cxii.

Dublin, the Catholic University of, Thomas Arnold at, v.

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