02557nam 2200445 n 450 99639425190331620200824120810.0(CKB)3810000000009815(EEBO)2248541326(UnM)99833644e(UnM)99833644(EXLCZ)99381000000000981519960202d1682 uy |engurbn#|||a|bb|The history of the present state of the Ottoman Empire[electronic resource] Containing the maxims of the Turkish polity, the most material points of the Mahometan religion, their sects and heresies, their convents and religious votaries. Their military discipline, with an exact computation of their forces both by sea and land. Illustrated with divers pieces of sculpture representing the variety of habits amongst the Turks. In three books. By Paul Ricaut Esq; late secretary to his Excellency the Earl of Winchelsea, embassador extraordinary for His Majesty Charles II. &c. to Sultan Mahomet Han the Fourth, emperor of the Turks) now consul of Smyrna, and fellow of the Royal SocietyThe sixth edition corrected.London Printed by T.N. for John Starkey at the Mitre within Temple-Bar1682[16], 406, [6] p., [12] leaves of plates ill. (metalcuts)With an additional title page, engraved.Includes table of contents for each book at end of text.Text and register are continuous despite pagination.With caption title for each book: "The maxims of the Turkish polity,"; "Of the Turkish religion."; and "The third book, wherein is treated of the Turkish militia."; register is continuous.Imperfect: engraved title page cropped at foot affecting text; quire A lacks leaf A8.Reproduction of the original in the British Library.eebo-0116TurkeyHistoryMehmed IV, 1623-1640Early works to 1800TurkeyPolitics and governmentEarly works to 1800TurkeySocial conditionsEarly works to 1800TurkeyReligious life and customsEarly works to 1800TurkeyMilitiaEarly works to 1800Rycaut PaulSir,1628-1700.667748Hove Frederick Hendrick van1628?-1698,Cu-RivESCu-RivESWaOLNBOOK996394251903316The history of the present state of the Ottoman Empire2308153UNISA04480nam 2200577 450 991081001870332120170822124336.01-58367-523-X(CKB)3710000000382645(EBL)1998856(SSID)ssj0001494275(PQKBManifestationID)11807458(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001494275(PQKBWorkID)11535834(PQKB)10236948(MiAaPQ)EBC1998856(EXLCZ)99371000000038264520150409h20052005 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrKarl Marx's Theory of RevolutionVolume 5War & revolution /Hal Draper & E. HaberkernNew York :Monthly Review Press ;Alameda, California :Center for Social History,[2005]©20051 online resource (286 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-58367-138-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; TABLE OF CONTENTS; INTRODUCTION.; The "Revolution" of August 14, 1914; Lenin, Potresov and Kautsky; Three Epochs; "No Other Question Could Have Been Posed"; Two Barking Dogs; What Engels Did and Didn't Say; CHAPTER 1. WAR AND THE DEMOCRACY IN 1848; War and Revolution 1793-1848; The Main Enemy; A Nation That Oppresses Others Cannot Itself Be Free; War With Russia; "Sea-Girt Schleswig-Holstein"; Hungarians and Poles; The Old Poland and the New; Revolutionary Cattle Dealers; The Workers Have No Country; CHAPTER 2. "NON-HISTORIC" PEOPLES; Twenty VendéesHegel on "Residual Fragments of Peoples"The "Non-Historic" Czechs; "Counterrevolutionary Peoples"; Bakunin's 'Völkisch' Nationalism; Democratic Pan-Slavism; CHAPTER 3. THE SIXTH POWER; Marx's "Russophobia"; First Impressions; The Revolutionary Side; The Peace Party in England; The Russian Menace; Two Ex-Revolutionaries; The "Sixth Power"; CHAPTER 4: PULLING THE PLUG; The Demagogy of "National Revolution"; Po and Rhine; Lassalle's Appeasement Policy; Germany's Unification in "A Prussian Barracks"; Bismarck's Coup; "The Prussian Military Question and the German Workers' Party"Engels on Universal ConscriptionA Bourgeois Bluff; The "Workers' Party" and Universal Suffrage; "Bourgeois Freedoms"; Engels as "Military Expert" in 1866; CHAPTER 5. "THE DESPOTS OF ALL COUNTRIES ARE OUR ENEMIES"; The 1870 Split in the German Social Democracy; Marx and Engels' 'Defensism'; Marx's 'Pro-Prussianism'; The "Neutrality Spirit'; The Trouble With Wilhelm Liebknecht; Engels' Attack on Liebknecht; Marx's Reply to Engels; The Letter to the Brunswick Committee; What Changed at Sedan; Postscript; "How to Fight the Prussians"; Treason; CHAPTER 6. BURYING THE 'TSARIST MENACE'The Danger of WarThe Tsarist Threat; Engels' 1891 "Prowar" Aberration; The Tsar Learns to Sing the Marseillaise; The Dispute With Bebel; The French Reaction; A New Stage of Capitalism?; Internment; CHAPTER 7. BURNING DOWN THE EMPEROR'S PALACE; Can Europe Disarm?; "... and the German Army Is Ours"; The Fight Over The Class Struggles in France; SPECIAL NOTE A: ROSDOLSKY VS. ROSDOLSKY; Marx and Engels on 1846; Two Diversions; The Neue Rheinische Zeitung and the Jews; Rosdolsky: 1929 and 1948; SPECIAL NOTE B. "CONSTITUTIONAL" OR "REVOLUTIONARY" WAR?; Lincoln and SlaveryThe Abolitionists in ChargeMarx on the Secession Crisis; Lincoln's Fear of Revolution; Marx as commentator on the American Civil War; Why?; SPECIAL NOTE C:THE LINCOLN MYTH; SPECIAL NOTE D: ENGELS' "LAST TESTAMENT" A TRAGI-COMEDY IN FIVE ACTS; Enter Wilhelm Liebknecht Stage Right-Stumbling; Enter Bernstein-Twirling a Long Black Mustache; D. Riazonov Discovers Engels' Original Draft; The Communists vs. the Socialist Labor Party-Comic Relief; LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS; BIBLIOGRAPHY; NOTES; INDEX; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; J; K; L; M; N; P; R; S; T; U; V; W; Z . Revolutions and socialismRevolutionsWarRevolutions and socialism.Revolutions.War.Draper Hal232768Haberkern E(Ernest),MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910810018703321Karl Marx's Theory of Revolution3953144UNINA