THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA ELEVENTH EDITION FIRST edit on, publis bed in three volumes, 1768— 1771. SECOND , . » ten „ 1777— 1784. THIRD , , , eighteen „ 1788— 1797. FOURTH , , , twenty „ 1801 — 1810. FIFTH , i » \ twenty „ 1815— 1817. SIXTH » i twenty „ 1823 — 1824. SEVENTH , , , twenty-one „ 1830 — 1842. EIGHTH , , twenty-two „ 1853-1860. NINTH , , , twenty-five „ 1875-1889. TENTH , , ninth edition and eleven supplementary volumes, 1002 --1003, ELEVENTH , publi. shed in twenty-nine volumes, 1910 — igii. COPYRIGHT in all countries subscribing to the : Bern -Cdntfention ■'. V \ .- ... by THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS of the* " ' '< ' UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE All rights riicrvid THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA A DICTIONARY OF ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE AND GENERAL INFORMATION ELEVENTH EDITION VOLUME XXVIII VETCH to ZYMOTIC DISEASES New York Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. 342 Madison Avenue Copyright, in the United States of America, 1911, by The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company. A. F. B. A. F. B.* A. F. H. A. F. L. INITIALS USED IN VOLUME XXVIII. TO IDENTIFY INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTORS, 1 WITH THE HEADINGS OF THE ARTICLES IN THIS VOLUME SO SIGNED. A. B. Go. Alfred Bradley Gough, M.A., Ph.D. f Sometime Casberd Scholar of St John's College, Oxford. English Lector in the T Westphalia, Treaty of. University of Kiel, 1896-1905. I ■ A. C. S. Algernon" Charles Swinburne. f w .i,, ter i n |. n Sec the biographical article: Swinburne, Algernon Charles. \ weD5rer > JOnn. A. D. Mo. Anson Daniel Morse, M.A., LL.D. f Emeritus Professor of History at Amherst College, Mass. Professor at Amherst -j Whig Party. College, 1877-1908. I A. E. S. Arthur Everett Shipley, M.A., D. Sc, F.R.S. fwasp (in tart)- Master of Christ's College, Cambridge. Reader in Zoology, Cambridge University. -{ w .J- . ." ' ' . Joint-editor of the Cambridge Natural History. { Weevil (m part). Aldred Farber Barker, M.Sc. /Wool, Worsted and Woollen Professor of Textile Industries at Bradford Technical College. \ Manufactures. Archibald Frank Becke. f Captain, Royal Field Artillery. Author of Introduction to the History of Tactics, -j Waterloo Campaign I740-i9o5;&c. [ A. F. Hutchison, M.A. f w « 1IaM Sip wrm™ Sometime Rector of the High School, Stirling. \ W* 1 " 08 . »» William. Arthur Francis Leach, M.A. (" Barrister -at-law, Middle Temple. Charity Commissioner for England and Wales. J Waynflete, William; Formerly Assistant-Secretary to the Board of Education. Fellow of All Souls j William of Wykeham College, Oxford, 1874-1881. Author of English Schools at the Reformation; &c. I A. F. P. Albert Frederick Pollard, M.A., F.R.Hist.S. | Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. Professor of English History in the University Walsingham, Sir Franeis; of London. Assistant-Editor of the Dictionary of National^ Biography, 1893-1901. -j Wishart, George; ""** ' " ~ -.... Cranmer ; Henry 1 VIII. ; &c. • - - ^ Author of England under the Protector Somerset; Life of Thomas Cranmer; Henry Wolsey, Cardinal. A. M. C. Agnes Mary Clerke. f „ .. See the biographical article: Clerke, Agnes M. -^iOOiae. A. N. Alfred Newton, F.R.S. See the biographical article: Newton, Alfred. f Vulture; Wagtail; Warbler; Waxwing; Weaver-bird; Wheatear; Whitethroat; Wigeon; Woodcock; Woodpecker; Wren; Wryneck; Zosterops. A. P. C. Arthur Philemon Coleman, M.A., Ph.D., F.R.S. ( Professor of Geology in the University of Toronto. Geologist, Bureau of Mines, -j Yukon Territory. Toronto, 1 893-1910. Author of Reports of the Bureau of Mines of Ontario. y A. Sy. Arthur Symons. J" Villiers de l'lsle-Adam, Sec the biographical article: Symons, Arthur. 1 Comte de. A. S. C. Alan Summerly Cole. CB. r Formerly Assistant-Secretary, Board of Education, South Kensington. Author of J . , . , . Ornament in European Silks ; Catalogue of Tapestry, Embroidery, Lace and Egyptian 1 Weaving. Archaeology am Art. Textiles in the Victoria and Albert Museum; &c. I A. S. P.-P. Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison, M.A., LL.D., D.CL. f Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Edinburgh. Gjfford J Weber's Law; Lecturer in the University of Aberdeen, 191T. Fellow of the British Academy. | Wolff, Christian {in part). Author of Man's Place in the Cosmos; The Philosophical Radicals; &c. I A. v. 0. Aloys von OrelLi. f Formerly Professor of Law in the University of Zurich. Author of Das Staatsrecht ( Veto. der schweizerischen Eidgenossenschaft. I 1 A complete list, showing all individual contributors, appears in the final volume. VI A. W. H.* A. W. Hu. A. W. B. B. E. S. B. H.-S. C. El. c. p. A. c. F. K. c. H. Ha. c. H, T.* c. K. W. C. L. K. C. R. B, C. W. R. D. B. M. D. F. T. D. G. H. D. H. D. H. S. D. R.-M. INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES Arthur William Holland. J" . Formerly Scholar of St John's College, Oxford. Bacon Scholar of Gray's Inn, 1900. \ Widukmd; Wltan. Rev. Arthur Wollaston Hutton. ( Rector of Bow Church, Cheapside, London. Formerly Librarian of the National J uui coniQ „ r ri , n , Liberal Club. Author of Life of Cardinal Manning. Editor of Newman's Lives of the 1 Wiseman, t-aruinai. English Saints; &c. I Alexander Wood Renton, M.A., LL.B. Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of Ceylon. Editor of Encyclopaedia of the Laws of England. Benjamin Eli Smith, A.M. Editor of the Century Dictionary. Formerly Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst College, Mass., and in Psychology at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. Editor of the Century Cyclopaedia of Names; Century Atlas; &c. B. Heckstall-Smith. f Associate of the Institute of Naval Architects. Secretary of the International J Yachting. Yacht Raciag Union; Secretary of the Yacht Racing Association. Yachting] Editor of The Field. I Sir Charles Norton Edgcumbe Eliot, K.C.M.G., M.A., LL.D., D.C.L. f Vice-Chancellor of Sheffield University. Formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. H.M.'s Commissioner and Commander-in-Chief for the British East Africa J Yue-Cui. Protectorate; Agent and Consul-General at Zanzibar; Consul-General for German East Africa, 1 900- 1 904. |_ Cham,es Francis Atkinson. Formerly Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford. Captain, Fusiliers). Author of The Wilderness and Cold Harbor. Waste. Whitney, William Dwight. 1st City of London (Royal \ Wilderness: Grant's Campaign. Charles Francis Keary, MA. Trinity College, Cambridge. Author of The Vikings in Western Christendom; Norway and the Norwegians; &c. Viking. Carlton Huntley Hayes, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History in Columbia University, New York City, of the American Historical Association. Crawford Howell Toy, A.M., LL.U. See the biographical article; Toy, Crawford Howell. Charles Kingsley Webster, M.A. Fellow of -King's College, Cambridge. Whewell Scholar, 1907. Chakles Lethbridge Kingsford, M.A., F.R.Hist.Soc, F.S.A. Assistant-Secretary to the Board of Education. Author of %ife of Henry V. Editor of Chronicles of London and Stow's Survey of London. w , f Victor III. and IV. (Popes): Member J Viseont , t p amUy) _ [ Wisdom, Book of; I Wisdom literature. 1 Vienna, Congress of. Warwick, Richard Beau- champ, Earl of; Warwick, Richard Neville, Earl ol; Whittington, Richard; Worcester, John Tiptoft, Earl of; York, Richard, Duke of. Charles Raymond Beazley, M.A., D.Litt., F.R.G.S., F.R.Hist.S. Professor of Modern History in the University of Birmingham. Formerly Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and University Lecturer in the History of Geography. Lothian Prizeman, Oxford, 1889. Lowell Lecturer, Boston, 1908. Author of Henry the Navigator ; The Dawn of Modern Geography ; &c. Charles' Walker Robinson, C.B., D.C.L. ■ Major-General (retired). Assistant Military Secretary, Headquarters of the Army, 1890^-1892. Governor and Secretary, Royal Military Hospital, Chelsea, 1895- 1898. Author of Strategy of the Peninsular War; &c. David Binning Monro, M.A., Litt.D. See the biographical article: Monro, David Binning. Zemarchus. Vitoria. Donald Francis Tovey. Author of Essays in Musical Analysis: comprising The Classical Concerto, Goldberg Variations, and analyses of many other classical works. The David George Hogarth, M.A. Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and Fellow of Magdalen College. Fellow of the British Academy. Excavated at Paphos, 1888; Naucratis, 1899 and 1903; Ephesus, 1904-1905; Assiut, 1906-1907. Director, British School at Athens, 1897-1900. Director, Cretan Exploration Fund, 1899. David Hannay. Formerly British Vice-Consul at Barcelona. Author of Short History of the Royal Navy ; Life of EmUio Castelar ; Sec. Dukinfield Henry Scott, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D., F.R.S. Professor of Botany, Royal College of Science, London, 1885-1892. Formerly President of the Royal Microscopical Society and of the Linnean Society. Author of Structural Botany; Studies in Fossil Botany; &c. David Randall-Maciver, M.A., D.Sc. Curator of Egyptian Department, University of Pennsylvania. Formerly Worcester Reader in Egyptology, University of Oxford. Author of Medieval Rhodesia ; &C Wolf, Friedrich August. r Victoria, Tommasso L. da; Wagner: Biography (in part) and Critical Appreciation; Weber: Critical Appreciation. j Xanthus; 1 Zeitun. ) Villeneuve; ( Zumalacarregui. Williamson, William Crawford. J 7.i Zimbabwe. INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES vu E. Ar.* E. C* E. Cu. E. C. B. E. C. S. E. G. Ed. M. E. M. W E. 0.* E. O'N. E. Pr. E. P. W. E. R. L. E. T. F. A. C. F. C. C. F. G. M. B. F. J. H. F. Ke. Rev. Elkanah Aemitage, M.A. Trinity College, Cambridge. Professor in Yorkshire United Independent College, Bradford. Ernest Clarke, M.D., F.R.C.S. Surgeon to the Central London Ophthalmic Hospital, and Consulting Ophthalmic . Surgeon to the Miller General Hospital. Vice-President of the Ophthalmological Society. Author of Refraction of the Eye; &c. Zwtngli. Vision: &c. Errors of Refraction, Edmund Curtis, M.A. Keble College, Oxford. Lecturer on History in the University of Sheffield. Right Rev. Edward Cuthbert Butler, O.S.B., M.A., D.Litt. Abbot of Downside Abbey, Rath. Author of " The Lausiac History of Palladius ' in Cambridge Texts and Studies. Edmund Clarence Stedman. See the biographical article: Stedman, Edmund Clarence. William I. and II. of Sicily. Wadding, Luke. Whittier, John GreenleaJ. , Villanelle; Virelay; Vosmaer, Caiel; Waller, Edmund; Walloons: Literature; Watson, Thomas; Wells, Charles Jeremiah; Wennerberg, Gunnar; WiBther, Christian; I Wordsworth, Dorothy. Professor of Ancient History in the University of Berlin. Author of Geschichte des "! y^**™,*. v™' j ^ " ~ ' Die Israeliten und ihre Nachbarslamme. L AexX8S > la^egerO. Edmund Gosse, LL.D. See the biographical article: Gosse, Edmund. Eduard Meyer, Ph.D., D.Litt., LL.D Professor of Ancient History in the L AUerthums; Geschichte des alien Aegyptens Rev. Edward Mewburn Walker, M.A. Fellow, Senior Tutor and Librarian of Queen's College, Oxford. Xenophon {in part). Edmund Owen, F.R.C.S., LL.D., D.Sc. r Consulting Surgeon to St Mary's Hospital, London, and to the Children's Hospital, J Wart; Great Ormond Street, London. Chevalier of the Legion of Honour. Author of 1 Whitlow, A Manual of Anatomy for Senior Students. i Elizabeth O'Neill, M.A. (Mrs H. O. O'Neill). Formerly University Fellow and Jones Fellow of the University of Manchester. Edgar Prestage. Special Lecturer in Portuguese Literature in the University of Manchester. Com- mendador, Portuguese Order of S. Thiago. Corresponding Member of Lisbon Royal Academy of Sciences and Lisbon Geographical Society ; &c. Everett Pepperreli. Wheeler, A.M. Formerly Chairman of the Commission on International Law, American Bar Association, and other similar Commissions. Author of Daniel Webster; Modern Law of Carriers ; Wages and the Tariff. Sir Edwin Ray Lankester, K.C.B., F.R.S., D.Sc, LL.D., D.C.L. Hon. Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. President of the British Association, 1906. Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy in University College, London, 1874-1890. Linacre Professor of Comparative Anatomy at Oxford, 1891-1898. Director of the Natural History Departments of the British Museum, 1898-1907. Vice-President of the Royal Society, 1896. Romanes Lecturer at Oxford, 1905. Author of Degeneration; The Advancement of Science; The Kingdom of Man; &c. Elihu Thomson, A.M., D.Sc., Ph.D. Inventor of Electric Welding. Electrician to the Thomson-Houston and General Electric Companies. Professor of Chemistry and Mechanics, Central High School, Philadelphia, 1870—1880. President of the International Electro-technical Com- mission, 1908. Franklyn Arden Crallan. Formerly Director of Wood-carving, Gloucester County Council. Author of Gothic Woodcarving. Frederick Cornwallis Conybeare, M.A., D.Th. Fellow of the British Academy. Formerly Fellow of University College, Oxford. Editor of The Ancient Armenian Texts of Aristotle. Author of Myth, Magic and Morals; &c. Frederick George Meeson Beck, M.A. Fellow and Lecturer of Clare College, Cambridge. Francis John Haverfield, M.A., LL.D., F.S.A. Camden Professor of Ancient History in the University of Oxford. Fellow of Brase- nose College. Formerly Censor, Student, Tutor and Librarian of Christ Church. Ford's Lecturer, 1906-1907. Fellow of the British Academy. Author of Mono- graphs on Roman History, especially Roman Britain ; &c. Frank Keiper, A.M., B.L., M.E. Manager of the United States Voting Machine Company. Formerly Assistant Examiner. United States Patent Office Vicar. Vicente, Gil; Vieira, Antonio. Webster, Daniel {in part). Zoology. Welding: Electric. Wood-Carving. Vow. ■i Wessex. I Walling Street. j Voting Machines. 1 G. F. H. H 6. G. P.* 6. H. C. 6. J. J. T. G S* G w .P. INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES Lady Lugard. J . See the biographical article: Lugard, Sir F. J. D. \ »ria. Colonel Frederic Natusch Maude, C.B. f Lecturer in Military History, Manchester University- Author of War and the ■{ Wfirth. World's Policy; The Leipzig Campaign; The Jena Campaign. I r Victoria Falls; Frank R. Cana. J Victoria Nyanza (iw £ar/); Author of South Africa from the Great Trek to the Union. I Zambezi • Zululand Sir Frank Thomas Marzials, K.C.B. -f Zola fimile Formerly Accountant-General of the Army. Editor of the "Great Writers" Series. \ ' Frederick Wedmore. f whistler. See the biographical article: Wedmore, Frederick. \ Frederick William Rudler I.S 10., F.G.S J Volcano; Wolframite; Curator and Librarian of the Museum of Practical Geology, London, 1879-1902. 1 rji rnnn President of the Geologists' Association, 1887-1889. I z,ircon - Frederick York Powell, D.C.L., LL.D. [ , r .- iBii -...-„ See the biographical article: Powell, Frederick York. I vigiusson, uiiaDranur, Lord Grimthorpe. J See the biographical article: Grimthorpe, ist Baron, \ Watch {in part). Rev. George Albert Cooke, M.A., D.D. r Oriel Professor of the Interpretation of Holy Scripture in the University of Oxford, J »»-__».■_ and Fellow of Oriel College. Canon of Rochester. Hon. Canon of* St Mary's] * en0Dia - Cathedral, Edinburgh. Author of Text-Book of North Semitic Inscriptions; &c. I G. C. L. George Collins Levey, C.M.G. r Member of the Board of Advice to the Agent-General for Victoria. Formerly Editor J and Proprietor of the Melbourne Herala. Secretary, Colonial Committee of Royal j Commission to the Paris Exhibition, 1900. Secretary, Adelaide Exhibition, 1887. i Victoria (Australia): History, Secretary, Royal Commission, Hobart Exhibition, 1894-1895. Secretary to Com- missioners for Victoria at the Exhibitions in London, Paris, Vienna, Philadelphia and Melbourne. viii F. L. L. F. N. M. f\ R. C. F. T. M. F. We. F. W. R.* F. Y. P. G G A. C* G. E. Rev. George Edmundson, M.A., F.R.Hist.S. Formerly Fellow and Tutor of Brasenose College, Oxford. Ford's Lecturer, 1909. Hon. Member, Dutch Historical Society ; and Foreign Member, Netherlands Association of Literature. William II., King of the Netherlands; William III., King of the Netherlands; William the Silent; I William II., Prince of Orange. G. Ft George Fleming, C.B., LL.D., F.R.C.V.S. f Formerly Principal Veterinary Surgeon, War Office, London. Author of Animal -l Veterinary Science (in part). Plagues: their History, Nature and Prevention. I G. F. D. George Frederick Deacon, LL.D., M.Inst.M.E., F.R.M.S. (1843-1909). r Formerly Engineer-in-Chief for the Liverpool Water Supply (Vyrnwy Scheme),' and Member of the Council of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Borough and Water \ Water Supply. Engineer of Liverpool, 1871-1879. Consulting Civil Engineer, 1879-1909. Author I of addresses and papers on Engineering, &c. George Francis Robert Henderson. See the biographical article: Henderson, George Francis Robert. War. George Grenville Phillimore, M.A., B.C.L. f Wreck (in -Part) Christ Church, Oxford. Barrister-at-law, Middle Temple. "^ George Herbert Carpenter. r ... ,. . Professor of Zoology in the Royal College of Science, Dublin. Author of Insects: i was P { - ln P a ">\ their Structure and Life. [_ Weevil (in part). George Jamieson, C.M.G., M.A. f Formerly Consul-General at Shanghai, and Consul and Judge of the Supreme Court, J Yangtsze-Kiang. Shanghai. [ George James Turner. r Barrister-at-law, Lincoln's Inn. Editor of Select Pleas of the Forests for the Selden J Wapentake. Society. [ George Saintsbury, D.C.L., LL.D. f 7,'^' A } lKi de = See the biographical article: Saintsbury, George E. B. -i Villehardouin, Geoffrey de; L Villon, Francois; Voltaire. George Waiter Prothero, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D. Editor of the Quarterly Review. Honorary Fellow, formerly Fellow of King's I College, Cambridge. Fellow of the British Academy. Professor of History in the J \i/;ik««, tv v,™ n r v*,~i*nn University of Edinburgh, 1894-1899. Author of Life and Times of Simon de Mont- 1 wuuam lv -> Am & 01 *-ngiano. fort ; &c. Joint-editor of the Cambridge Modern History. I G. W. R. Major George William Redway. f nnM--.,,,.. ,. . a Author of The War of Secession, 1861-1862; Fredericksburg: a Study in War. \ wutt « In ess Km part). G. W. T. Rev. Griefithes Wheeler Thatcher, M.A., B.D. f Wahhabis; Waqidi; Warden of Camden College, Sydney, N.S.W. Formerly Tutor in Hebrew and Old \ Ya'qfibl; Yaqut; Testament History at Mansfield College, Oxford. [ Zamakhshari; Zuhair. INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES IX H. Ch. H. C. H. H De H E. R.* H F. G. H H. C. H H H. Ja w. H. J. C. H. Lb. 15. L. J. H. H. C. H. M. V. H. R. T. H. St. H Sw H. W. C. D. H. W. R.* A. I. J. C. Hugh Chisholm, M.A. Formerly Scholar of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Editor of the Ilth edition of" the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Co-editor of the ioth edition. Rev. Horace Carter Hovey, A.M., D.D. Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Geological Society of America, the National Geographic Society and the Societede Sp£!eologie. * Author of Celebrated American Caverns; Handbook of Mammoth Cave of Kentucky; &c. Victoria, Queen; Walter, John; Ward, Mrs Humphry; Wilde, Oscar; Wordsworth, William (in pari) Wyandotte Cave. nd Hippot.yte Delehaye, S.J. Bollandist. Joint Editor of the Acta Sanctorum; and the Analecla BoUandiana Herbert Edward Ryle, M.A., D.D. Dean of Westminster. Bishop of Winchester, 1903-1911. Bishop of Exeter, 1901- 1903. Formerly Hulsean Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge; and Fellow of King's College. Author of On Holy Scripture and Criticism; &c. &c. Hans Friedrich Gadow, M.A., Ph.D., F.R.S. Strickland Curator and Lecturer on Zoology in the University of Cambridge. Author of " Amphibia and Reptiles " in the Cambridge Natural History; &c. Sir Henry Hardinge Cunynghame, K.C.B., M.A. Assistant Under-Secretary, Home Office, London. Vice-President, Institute of Electrical Engineers. Author of various works on Enamelling, Electric Lighting, &c. Rev. Henry Herbert Williams, M.A. Fellow, Tutor and Lecturer in Philosophy, Hertford College, Oxford. Chaplain to the Bishop of Llandaff. Henry Jackson, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D., O.M. f Regius Professor of Greek in the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Trinity J College. Fellow of the British Academy. Author of Texts to illustrate the History of\ Greek Philosophy from Thales to Aristotle. I Henry James Chaney, I.S.O. (1842-1906). Formerly Superintendent of the Standards Department of the Board of Trade, and Secretary to the Royal Commission on Standards. Represented Great Britain at the International Conference on the Metric System, 1901. Author of Treatise on Weights and Measures. Horace Lamb, M.A., LL.D., D.Sc, F.R.S. Professor of Mathematics in the University of Manchester. Formerly Fellow Assistant Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. Member of Council of the Royal Society, 1894-1896. Royal Medallist, 1902. President of London Mathematical Society, 1902-1904. Author of Hydrodynamics ; &c. Henry Lewis Jones, M.A., M.D., F.R.C.P., M.R.C.S. Medical officer in charge of the Electrical Department and Clinical Lecturer on Medical Electricity at St Bartholomew's Hospital, London. Author of Medical Electricity ; &c. Hector Munro Ciiadwick, M.A. Fellow and Librarian of Clare College, Cambridge, and University Lecturer in Scandinavian. Author of Studies on Anglo-Saxon Institutions. Herbert Murray Vaughan, M.A., F.S.A. Keble College, Oxford. Author of The Last of the Royal Stuarts; The Medici Popes; The Last Stuart Queen. Henry Richard Tedder, F.S.A. Secretary and Librarian of the Athenaeum Club, London. Henry Sturt, M.A. Author of Idola Theatri ; The Idea of a Free Church ; Personal Idealism. Henry Sweet, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D. University Reader in Phonetics, Oxford University. Corresponding Member of the Academies of Munich, Berlin, Copenhagen and Helsingfors. Author cf A History of English Sounds since the Earliest Period ; A Primer of Phonetii s ; &c. Henry William Carless Davis, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of Balliol College, Oxford. Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, 1895-1902. Author of England under the Normans and Angevins; Charlemagne. Rev. Henry Wheeler Robinson, M.A. Professor of Church History in Rawdon College, Leeds. Senior Kennicott Scholar, Oxford, 1901. Author of " Hebrew Psychology in Relation to Pauline Anthropo- logy " in Mansfield College Essays; &c. Israel Abrahams, M.A. Reader in Talmudic and Rabbinic Literature in the University of Cambridge. Formerly President, Jewish Historical Society of England. Author of A Short History of Jewish Literature ; Jewish Life in the Middle A ges ; Judaism ; &c. Isaac Joslin Cox, Pn.D. Assistant Professorof History in the University of Cincinnati. President of the Ohio Valley Historical Association. Author of The Journeys of La Salle and his Companions; &c. -I Vincent, St; Vitus, St. Westcott, Brooke Foss. Viper. Watch {in pari). Examining 1 Will: Philosophy. Xenocrates; Xenophanes of Colophon; Zeno of Elea. Weights and Measures: Scientific and Commercial. Wave. X-Ray Treatment. Woden. Wales: Geography and Statistics and History. Wood, Anthony a. Vischer, Friedrich Theodor. Volapuk. Wace, Robert; Walter of Coventry; William I., King of England; William II., King of England; William of Malmesbury; William of Newburgh. Zechariah (in part) . Wise, Isaac Mayer; Zunz, Leopold. Wilkinson, James. J. A. H. J. Bt. J. Bu. J. E. 0. x INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES J. A. E. James Alfred Ewing, C.B., LL.D., F.R.S., M.Inst.CE. f Director of (British) Naval Education. Hon. Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. J \ir a H T am pc Professor of Mechanism and Applied Mechanics in the University of Cambridge, 1 ' 1890-1903. Author of The Strength of Materials ; &c. I J. A. F. John Ambrose Fleming, M.A., D.Sc, F.R.S. _ | Pender Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of London. Fellow of J Voltmeter' Wattmeter* University College, London. Formerly Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge, 1 whoatcfnJa'c p . H „ * and University Lecturer on Applied Mechanics. Author of Magnets and Electric "neaisione S Bridge. Currents. [ John Allen Howe. f Curator and Librarian of the Museum of Practical Geology, London. Author of 1 Wealden; Wenlock Group. The Geology of Building Stones. I James Bartlett. f Lecturer on Construction, Architecture, Sanitation, Quantities, &c, at King's J Wall-eoverinffS College, London. Member of the Society of Architects. Member of the Institute of 1 Junior Engineers. I John Burroughs. -f whitman to»i+ See the biographical article: Burroughs, John. \ waumau > wau - Julius Emtl Olson, B.L. _ f Professor of Scandinavian Languages and Literature at the University of Wisconsin. -I. Vinland. Author of Norwegian Grammar and Reader. [_ J. F.-K. James Fitzmaueice-Kellv, Litt.D., F.R.Hist.S. f Gilmour Professor of Spanish Language and Literature, Liverpool University. Vlllaniediana, Count de; Norman McColl Lecturer, Cambridge University. Fellow of the British Academy. "1 Villena, Enrique de; Member of the Royal Spanish Academy. Knight Commander of the Order of Zorrilla y Moral Jose. Alphonso XII. Author 01 A History of Spanish Literature; &c. [ ' ■ " J. P. M'L. John Fergusson M'Lennan. j Wer woIf (in pari). See the biographical article : M Lennan, John Fergusson. t J. Ga. James Gairdner, C.B LL.D. J York, House of. See the biographical article : Gairdner, James. i_ J. G. H. Joseph G. Horner, A.M.I. Mech.E. j' .. ,. , Author of Plating and Boiler Making; Practical Metal Turning; &c. \ WelOing (,»» part). J. G. M. John Gray McKendrick, M.D., LL.D., F.R.S. , F.R.S. (Edin.). f vision- Emeritus Professor of Physiology in the University of Glasgow. Professor of -j „ . ' Physiology, 1876-1906. Author of Life in Motion; Life of Helmhollz; &c. |_ V01C6. J. G. R. John George Robertson, M.A., Ph.D. f Professor of German Language and Literature, University of London. Editor of the J w . , ^ -,. . , . w ,. Modem Language Journal. Author of History of German Literature ; Schiller after | Wielana, l/nristopu. Martin. a Century; &c. I J. G. So. Sir James George Scott, K.C.I.E. [ Superintendent and Political, Officer, Southern Shan States. Author of Burma; "j Wa. The Upper Burma Gazetteer. t J. H. F. John Henry Freese MA jxenophon (in part). Formerly Fellow of St John s College, Cambridge. I J. H. M. John Henry Middleton, M.A., Litt.D., F.S.A., D.C.L. (1846-1806). f Slade Professor of Fine Art in the University of Cambridge, 1 886-1895. Director Vltrovius; of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 1 889-1 892. Art Director of the South H Wren, Sir Christopher; Kensington Museum, 1892-1896. Author of The Engraved Gems of Classical Zuccaro I.-II. Times; Illuminated Manuscripts in Classical and Medieval Times. [_ I- J. L.* Rev. John James Lias, M.A. r Chancellor of Llandaff Cathedral. Formerly Hulsean Lecturer in Divinity and Lady J w.,-.! wiliiom rA^. Margaret Preacher, University of Cambridge. Author of Miracles, Science and) wara > "Uiiam ueorge. Prayer ; &c. [ J. L. W. Jessie Laidlay Weston. f _. .. _ , . . Author of Arthurian Romances unrepresented in Malory. | WOltrarn von iJiSCnenbaen. J. Mac. James MacQueen, F.R.C.V.S. r Professor of Surgery at the Royal Veterinary College, London. Editor of Fleming's Operative Veterinary Surgery (2nd edition); Dun's Veterinary Medicines (ioth-{ Veterinary Science {in part): edition); and Neumann's Parasites and Parasitic Diseases of the Domesticated J Animals (2nd edition). t I J. Mu.* John Muir, A.M., LL.D. ' f Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. President of the Sierra Club and the American Alpine Club. Visited the Arctic regions on the United-! yosemite. States steamer " Corwin " in search of the De Long expedition. Author of The Mountains of California; Our National Parks; &c. ! J. M. G. John Miller Gray (1850-1894). t r Art Critic. Curator of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, 1884-1894. Author J Wilkie, Sir David. of David Scott, R.S.A.; Jamas and William Tassie. ]_ J. M. J. John Morris Jones, M.A. f Professor of Welsh at the University College of North Wales, Bangor. Formerly I Wales: Literature and Research Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford. Author of The Elucidarium in Welsh; 1 Language. J. M. M. John Malcolm Mitchell. r _ - Sometime Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford. Lecturer in Classics, East London -j WinckelmanH {in part). College (University of London). Joint-editor of Grote's History of Greece. |_ INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES XI J. Si. J. S. N. J. S. R. J.T.* J. T. Be. J. T. C. J. V. B. J. W. J. We. J. W. G. J. W. He. K. G. K. G. J. K. S. L. L. D.* L. F. V.-H. L. J. S. L. R. P. L. V.* -j Winckelmann (in part)- Wyttenbach, Daniel Albert. James Sime, M.A. (1843-1895). Author of A History of Germany; &c. Joseph Shield Nicholson, M.A., Sc.D. f Professor of Political Economy at Edinburgh University. Fellow of the British J Wages; Academy. Author of Principles of Political Economy; Money and Monetary 1 Wealth. Problems; &c. I James Smith Reid, M.A., LL.M., Litt.D., LL.D. Professor of Ancient History in the University of Cambridge and Fellow and Tutor J of Gonvillc and Caius College. Hon. Fellow, formerly Fellow and Lecturer, of Christ's College. Editor of Cicero's Academica; De Amicitia; &c. Rev. John Telford. [ Wesley (Family); Wesleyan Methodist Connexional Editor. Editor of the Wesleyan Methodist J \y es i e y John' Magazine and the London Quarterly Review. Author of Life of John Wesley; „. , „ .*. ,. . _, , Life of Charles Wesley; &c. I Wesleyan Methodist Church. Vladimir: Government [in part) Volga (in part); Vologda: Government (in part) Vyatka: Government (in part). Warsaw: Poland (in part); Yakutsk (in part); Yeniseisk (in part). John Thomas Bealby. Joint -author of Stanford's Europe. Formerly Editor of the Scottish Geographical Magazine. Translator of Sven Hedin's Through Asia, Central Asia and Tibet; &c. Joseph Thomas Cunningham, M.A., F.Z.S. Lecturer on Zoology at the South-Western Polytechnic, London. Formerly Fellow of University College, Oxford, and Assistant Professor of Natural History in the University of Edinburgh. Naturalist to the Marine Biological Association. James Vernon Bartlet, M.A., D.D. Professor of Church History, Mansfield College, Oxford. Author of The Apostolic Age; &c. James Williams, M.A., D.C.L., LL.D. All Souls Reader in Roman Law in the University of Oxford, and Fellow of Lincoln College. Barrister-at-Law of Lincoln's Inn. Author of Law of the Universities; &c. Julius Wellhausen, D.D. See the biographical article: Wellhausen, Julius. John Walter Gregory, D.Sc, F.R.S. Professor of Geology in the University of Glasgow. Professor of Geology and Mineralogy in the University of Melbourne, 1900-1904. Author of The Dead Heart of A ustratia ; &c. James Wycliffe Headlam, M.A. Staff Inspector of Secondary Schools under the Board of Education. Formerly Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and Professor of Greek and Ancient History at Queen's College, London. Author of Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire; &c. Karl Frif.drich Geldner, Ph.D. Professor of Sanskrit and Comparative Philology in the University of Marburg. Author of Vedische Studien; &c. • KiNfiSLF.v Garland Jayne. Sometime Scholar of Wadham College, Oxford. Author of Vasco da Gama and his Successors. Kathleen Schlesinger. Editor of The Portfolio of Musical Archaeology. Author of The Instruments of the Orchestra. Count Lutzow, Litt.D., D.Ph., F.R.C..S. f Chamberlain of H.M. the Emperor of Austria, King of Bohemia. Hon. Member of the Royal Society of Literature. Member of the Bohemian Academy, &c. Author \ Zizka, John. of Bohemia: a Historical Sketch; The Historians of Bohemia (Ilchester Lecture, Oxford, 1904) ; The Life and Times of John Hus ; &c- • Louis Duchesne. See the biographical article: Duchesne, Louis M. O. Leveson Francis Vernon-Harcourt, M.A., M.Inst. C.E. (1839-1907). Professor of Civil Engineering at University College, London, 1882^1905. Author of Rivers and Canals ; Harbours and Docks; Civil Engineering as applied in Con- struction ; &c. Whitebait. Vinet, Alexandre R, Warranty; Water Rights; Will (Law); Women (Early Law); Writ. Zechariah (in part). Victoria: Geology; Western Australia: Geology. Windthorst, Ludwig. Zend-Avesta; Zoroaster. Matthew Arnold Prizeman, 1903. j Xavier, Francisco de. Vielle; Viol; Virginal; Wind Instruments; Xylophone. { Victor I.-II. (Popes). Weir. Leonard James Spencer, M.A. Assistant in the Department of Mineralogy, British Museum. Formerly Scholar of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, and Harkness Scholar. Editor of the Minera- logical Magazine. Lewis Richard Farnf.ll, M.A., Litt.D. f Fellow and Senior Tutor of Exeter College, Oxford. University Lecturer in Classical J 7 P1IS Archaeology; and Wilde Lecturer in Comparative Religion. Author of Cults of) ' Greek States ; Evolution of Religion. I Luioi Villari. Italian Foreign Office (Emigration Department). Formerly Newspaper Corre- spondent in the East of Europe. Italian Vice-Consul in New Orleans, 1906 ; Phila- delphia, 1907 ; and Boston, 1907-1910. Author of Italian Life in Town and Country ; &c. r Vivianite; Wad; I Wavellite; Willemite; J Witherite; Wollastonite; I Zeolites; Zoisite. Victor Emmanuel II. L. W. M. A. B M. Be. M. Br. M C. LNITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES M. Ca. M. H. S. N. W. T. P. A. K. P. C. M. P. Gi. P. G. H. P. G. K. P. S. P Vi. R. A. W. R. C. D. R. G. R. G. M. R. He. R. J. M. Zionism. Lccien Wolf. | Vice-President, formerly President, of the Jewish Historical Society of England. *i Joint-editor of the Bibliotheca Anglo-judaica. I Lady Broome (Mary Anne Broome). Author of Station- Life in New Zealand; Stories About; Colonial Memories; &c. Malcolm Bell. Author of Pewter Plate; Sir E. Burne-Jones: a Record and Review. Margaret Bryant. Rt. Rev. Makdell Creighton, D.C.L., LL.D. Sec the biographical article: Creighton, Mandell. Moritz Cantor, Ph.D. J Honorary Professor of Mathematics in the University of Heidelberg. Ilofrat of "1 Vieta, Francois. the German Empire. Author of Vorlesungen uber die Geschichte der Mathematik ; &c. t Marion II. Spielmann, F.S.A. Formerly Editor of the Magazine of A rt. Member of Fine Art Committee of Inter- national Exhibitions of Brussels, Paris, Buenos Aires, Rome, and the PVanco-British Exhibition, London. Author of History of "Punch" ; British Portrait Painting to the opening of the igth Century; Works of G. ¥. Walls, R.A.; British Sculpture and Sculptors of To-Day ; Henriette Ronner ; &c. i Western Australia: History. \ Watts, George Frederick. I Virgil: The. Virgil Legend. \ Waldenses. Wauters, Emile; Wood-engraving {in pari). Northcote Wiiitridge Thomas, M.A. _ I Government Anthropologist to Southern Nigeria. Corresponding Member of the j Societe o" Anthropologic de Paris. Author of Thought Transference; Kinship and Marriage in Australia; &c. Prince Teter Alexeivitch Kkopotkin. See the biographical article: Kropotkin, Prince P. A. Peter Chalmers Mitchell, M.A., D.Sc, LL.D., F.Z.S., F.R.S. Secretary of the Zoological Society of London. University Demonstrator in Com- parative Anatomy and Assistant to Linacre Professor at Oxford, 1888-1891. Author of Outlines of Biology ; &c. Peter Giles, M.A. , LL.D., Litt.D. f w - Fellow and Classical Lecturer of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and University J A. Reader in Comparative Philology. Formerly Secretary of the Cambridge Philo- 1 Y. logical Society. Author of Manual of Comparative Philology. 1 2 Week; Werwolf (in part) ; Witchcraft. Vladimir: Government (in part) ; Volga (in part) ; Vologda: Government (in part) ; Vyatka: Government (in part); Warsaw: Poland (in part) ; Yakutsk (in part); Yeniseisk (in part). I Zoological Gardens; 1 Zoological Nomenclature. Philip Gilbert Hamerton. Sec the biographical article: Hamerton, Philip Gilbert. Wood-engraving (in part). L Paul George Konodv. Art Critic of The Observer and The Daily Mail. Formerly Editor of The Artist. J Watteau, Antoine. Author of The Art of Walter Crane; Velasquez, Life and Work; ike. \_ Philip Schidrowhv, Ph.D., F.C.S. r Member of the Council, Institute of Brewing; Member of the Committee of the J Whisky; Society of Chemical Industry. Author of numerous articles on the Chemistry and | Wine. Technology of Brewing, Distilling; &c. [ Paul Vinogradoff, D.C.L.. LL.D. See the biographical article: Vinogradoff, Paul. Colonel Robert Alexander Wahab, C.B., C.M.G., CLE. Formerly H.M. Commissioner, Aden Boundary Delimitation. Served with Tirah Expeditionary Force, 1897-1898, and on the Anglo-Russian Boundary Commission, Pamirs, 1895. Romesh Chitnder Dutt, CLE. (1848 -1 000). Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature; Member of the Royal Asiatic. Society. Barrister-at-Law, Middle Temple. Formerly Revenue Minister of Baroda State, and Prime Minister of Baroda State. Author of Economic History of India in the V-ictorian Age, 1837-1900; &c. Richard Gafnett, LL.D. See the biographical article: ' Village Communities; . VHIenage. Yemen. Vidyasagar, Iswar Chandra. Garrett, Richard. Wakefield, Edward Gibbon. Reginald Godfrey Marsden. Barrister-at-Law, Inner Temple. Sir Reginald Hennell, D.S.O., C.V.O. Colonel in the Indian Army (retired). Lieutenant of the King's Body-Guard of the I Yeomen of the Guard. Served in the Abyssinian Expedition, 1867-68: Afghan J W.ar, 1879-80; Burmah Campaign, 1886-87. Author of History of the Yeomen of \ the Guard, 14S5- 1904; &c. J Wreck {in part). Yeomen of the Guard. Ronald John McNeill, M.A. Christ Church, Oxford. Barrister-at-Law, Lincoln's Inn. St James's Gazette (London). Formerly Editor of the-] Wentworth {Family). INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES xm R. K. D. R. L.* R. L. P. Sir Robert Kennaway Douglas. Formerly Professor of Chinese, Kind's College, London. Keeper of Oriental Printed Books and MSS. at the British Museum, 1892-1907. Member of the Chinese Consular Service, 1858-1865. Author of The Language and Literature of China; Europe and the Far East; &c. Richard Lydexker, F.R.S., F.G.S., F.Z.S. Member of the Staff of the Geological Survey of India, 1874-1882. Catalogue of Fossil Mammals, Reptiles and Birds in the British Museum ; of all Lands; The Game Animals of Africa; &c. Author of The Deer Wade, Sir Thomas F. Viscaoha; Vole; Walrus (in part) ; Water-Deer; Weasel; Whale (in part); Whale-fishery; Wolf (in pari)', Wombat; Zebra (in part); Zoological Distribution. Reginald Lane Poole, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D. Keeper of the Archives of the University of Oxford and Fellow of Magdalen College. I Fellow of the British Academy. Editor of the English Historical Review. Author -\ Wycliffe (in part). of Wyclijfe and movements for Reform ; &c. R. Mu.* Rev. Robert Munro, B.D., F.S.A. (Scot.) Barclay Manse, Old Kilpatrick, N. B. R. N. B. Robert Nisbet Bain (d. 1909). Assistant Librarian, British Museum, 1883-1909. Author of Scandinavia: the Political History of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, 1513-1900; Tlie First Romanovs, 1613-1725 ; Slavonic Europe : the Political History of Poland and Russia from 146Q to I7g6 ; &c. R. P. S. R. PriENE Spiers, F.S.A., F.R.I.B.A. Formerly Master of the Architectural School, Royal Academy, London. Past President of the Architectural Association. Associate and Fellow of King's College, * London. Corresponding Member of the Institute of France. Editor of Fergusson's History of Architecture. Author of Architecture: East and West; &c. J Vitrified Forts. Vladimir, St; Voluinsky, Artemy Petrovich; Vorontsov (Family); Vorosmarty, Mihaly; Wallqvist, Olaf; Wesselenyi, Baron; Wielopolski, Aleksander; Witowt; Wladislaus I.-IV. of Poland. Zamoyski, Jan; Zolkiewski, Stanislaus; Zrinyi, Count (1 508-1 566); . Zrinyi, Count (1620-1664). Villa; Window. Robert Seymour Conway, M.A., D.Lttt. f Professor of Latin and Indo-European Philology in the University of Manchester. J v i sp ; Formerly Professor of Lathi 1 in University College, Cardiff ; and Fellow of Gonville | R. S. C. and Caius College, Cambridge. Author of The Italic Dialects. R. W. F. H. Robert William Frederick Harrison. Barristcr-al-Law, Inner Temple. Assistant Secretary of the Royal Society, London. S. A. C. Stanley Arthur Coos. Lecturer in Hebrew and Syriac, and formerly Fellow, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. Editor for the Palestine Exploration Fund. Author of Glossary of Aramaic Inscriptions; The Laws of Moses and the Code of Hammurabi; Critical Notes on Old Testament History; Religion of Ancient Palestine; &c. S. N. Simon Newcomb, D.Sc, LL.D. See the biographical article : Newcomb, Simon. S. P. Stephen Paget, F.R.C.S. Surgeon to the Throat and Ear Department, Middlesex Hospital. Hon. Secretary, Research Defence Society. Author of Memoirs and Letters of Sir James Paget ; &c. T. As. Thomas Ashby, M.A., D.Lttt. Director of the British School of Archaeology at Rome. Formerly Scholar of Christ Church, Oxford. Craven Fellow, 1897. Conington Prizeman, 1906. Member of the Imperial German Archaeological Institute. Author of The Classical Topography of the Roman Campagna. T. A. A. Thomas Andrew Archer, M.A. Author of The Crusade of Richard I. ; &c. T. A. C. Timothy Augustine Coghlan, I.S.O. Agent-General for New South Wales. Government Statistician, New South Wales, 1886-1905. Honorary Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society. Author of Wealth and Progress of New South Wales ; Statistical Account of A ustralia and New Zealand ; Sec. T. Ba. Sir Thomas Barclay. Member of the Institute of International Law. Officer of the Legion of Honour. Author of Problems of International Practice and Diplomacy; &c. M.P. for Black- burn, 1910. T. H. B. Thomas Hudson Beare, M.Inst.C.E., M.Inst.M.E. Regius Professor of Engineering in the University of Edinburgh. Author of papers in the Transactions of the Societies of Civil and Mechanical Engineers, 1894-1902. / Violin. Zebulun; Zedekiah; Zephaniah. Zodiacal Light Vivisection. Vetulonium; Vicenza; Viterbo; Volci; Volsinii; Volterra; • Volturno. Vincent of Beauvais. Victoria: Geography and Statistics; Western Australia: Geography and Statistics. War: Laws of; Waters, Territorial. Water Motors. XIV r. r. g. T. W.-D. T. W. F. U. B. W. Ay. W. A. B. C. W. A. J. F. W. A. P. W. B.* W. C. U. W. E. G. W. F. C. W. Hy. W. H. F. W. I. G. W. M. W. MacD.* INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES w. M F. P w. M R. w. 0. S. w. P. C. w P. J. Terrot Reaveley Glovek, M.A. Fellow and Classical Lecturer at St John's College, Cambridge. Professor of Latin, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada, 1896-1901. Author of Studies in Virgil; &c. Walter Theodore Watts-Dunton. See the biographical article: Watts-Dunton, Walter Theodore. Virgil (in part). Wyoherley, William. Author of Mechanics of S Y arn * Thomas William Fox. Professor of Textiles in the University of Manchester. Weaving. Count Ugo Balzani, Litt.D. Member of the Realc Accademia dei Lincei. Sometime President of the Reale Societa Romana di Storia Patria. Corresponding Member of the British Academy ; Author of The Popes and the Hohenstaufen ; &c. Wilfrid Airy, M.Inst. C.E. Sometime Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge. Technical Adviser to the Standards Department of the Board of Trade. Author of Levelling and Geodesy ; &c. Rev. William Augustus Beevoort Coolidge, M.A., F.R.G.S., Ph.D. Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. Professor of English History, St David's College, Lampeter, 1880-1881. Author of Guide du Ilaut Dauphini; The Range of the Todi; Guide to Grindelwald ; Guide to Switzerland; The Alps in Nature and in History; &c. Editor of the Alpine Journal, 1880-1881; &c. Walter Armitage Justice Ford. Sometime Scholar of King's College, Cambridge. Teacher of Singing at the Royal College of Music, London. Walter Alison Phillips, M.A. Formerly Exhibitioner of Morton College and Senior Scholar of St John's College, Oxford. Author of Modern Europe; &c. William Burton, M.A., F.C.S. Chairman of the Joint Committee of Pottery Manufacturers of Great Britain. Author of English Stoneware and Earthenware ; &c. William Cawthorne Unwin, F.R.S., LL.D., M.Inst.C.E., M.Inst.M.E. Emeritus Professor, Central Technical College, City and Guilds of London Institute. Author of Wrought Iron Bridges and Roofs ; Treatise on Hydraulics ; &c. Sir William Edmund Garstin, G.C.M.G. British Government Director, Suez Canal Co. Formerly Inspector-General of Irrigation, Egypt. Adviser to the Ministry of Public Works in Egypt, 1904-1908. William Feilden Craies, M.A. Barrister-at-Law, Inner Temple. Lecturer on Criminal Law, King's College, London. Editor of Archbold's Criminal Pleading (23rd edition). William Henry. Founder and Chief Secretary of the Royal Life Saving Society. Associate of the J Order of St John of Jerusalem. Joint Author of Swimming (Badminton Library) ; &c. Sir William Henry Flower, F.R.S. See the biographical article: Flower, Sir W. H. Villani, Giovanni. Weighing Machines. Vevey; Vienne: Town; Vorarlberg; Walensee; Winkelried, Arnold von; Winterthur; Zug: Canton; Zug: Town; Zug, Lake of; Zurich: Canton; Zurich: Town; Zurich, Lake ot. Wolf, Hugo. Walther von der Vogelweide; Wycliffe (in part). Wedgwood, Josiah. Windmill. Victoria Nyanza (in part). Wager; Warrant; Witness. Water Polo. Walrus (in part); Whale (in part) ; Wolf (in part) ; Zebra (in part). William Lawson Grant, M.A. f Professor of Colonial History, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada. Formerly J ^|yii sfln gjj, Daniel. Beit Lecturer on Colonial History, -Oxford University. Editor of Acts of the Privy j * Council (Canadian Series). I William Minto, M.A. See the biographical article : MlNTO, WILLIAM. William MacDonald, LL.D., Ph.D. Professor of American History in Brown University, Frovidence, R.I. Formerly Professor of History and Political Science, Bowdoin. Member of the American" Historical Association, &c. Author of History and Government of Maine; &c Editor of Select Charters and other documents illustrative of American History. i Wordsworth, William (in parti. Washington, George. William Matthew Flinders Fetrie, F.R.S., D.C.L., Litt.D. See the biographical article : Petrie, W. M. Flinders. William Michael Rossetti. See the biographical article: Rossetti, Dante Gabriel. William Oscar Scroggs, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History and Economics at Louisiana State University Formerly Goodwin and Austin Fellow, Harvard University. William Prtdeaux Courtney. See the biographical article: Courtney, L. H, Baron. J* Weights and Measures: \ Ancient Historical. J Vivarini; \ Zurbaran, Francisco. J Walker, William. J Walpole, Horatio; \ Wilkes, John.- William Price James. Barrister-at-Law, Inner Temple. Romantic Professions; &c. High Bailiff, Cardiff County Court. Author of \ Watson, William (poet). INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES XV W. P. R. W. Ri. W. S. R. W. T. Ca. W. Wr. W. W. F.' W. W. R.* W. Y. S. Hon. William 1'ember Reeves. Director of the London School of Economics. Agent-General and High Com- missioner for New Zealand, 1896-1909. Minister of kducatiou, Labour and Justice, -I Vogel Sir JllliUS New Zealand, 1891-1896. Author of 'The Long White Cloud: a History of Nevj ' Zealand; &c. t William Ridgeway, M.A., D.Sc, Litt.D. f Disney Professor of Archaeology, and Brereton Reader in Classics, in the University of Cambridge. Fellow of Gonville and Caius College. Fellow of the British | Villanova. Academy. President of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1908. Author of The Early Age of Greece; &c. ^~ William Smyth Rockstro. f Wagner: Biography (in part); Author of A Great History of Music from the Infancy of the Greek Drama to the Present '\ Weber Period; &c. L William Thomas Calman, D.Sc., F.Z.S. f Water-flea; Assistant in charge of Crustacea, Natural History Museum, South Kensington, ~i Wood-louse Author of " Crustacea," in a Treatise on Zoology, edited by Sir E. Kay Lankestcr. I Williston Walker, Ph.D., D.D. Professor of Church History, Yale University. Author of History of the Congrega- tional Churches in the United States; The Reformation; John Calvin; &c. William Warde Fowler, M.A. Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford Winthrop, John (1588-1649). Sub-rector, 1881-1904. Gifford Lecturer, J Vulcan. Edinburgh University, 1908. Author of The City-State of the Greeks and Romans; "■ ~ are remarkable for originality and good sense. In Great Britain animal medicine was perhaps in a more advanced condition than in Germany, if we accept the evidence of the Ancient Laws and Institutes of Wales (London, 1841); yet it was largely made up of the grossest super- stitions. 1 Among the Celts the healer of horse diseases and the shoer were held in high esteem, as among the more civilized nations of Europe, and the court farrier enjoyed special privileges. 2 The earliest known works in English appeared anonymously towards the commencement of the 16th century, viz. Vropertees and Medcynesjor a Horse and Mascal of Oxen, Horses, Skeepes, Hogges, Dogges. The word " mascal " shows that the latter work was in its origin Italian. There is no doubt that in the 15th century the increasing taste for horses and horsemanship brought Italian riding- masters and farriers into England; and it is recorded that Henry VIII. brought over two of these men who had been trained by Grisone in the famous Neapolitan school. The knowledge so intro- duced became popularized, and assumed a concrete form in Blunde- ville's Foure Chiefest Offices belonging to Horsemanship (1566), which contains many references to horse diseases, and, though mainly a compilation, is yet enriched with original observations. In the 1 See Leechdoms. Wortcunning and Starcraf I of Early England (3 vols. 8vo, London, 1864). * See Fleming, Horse-shoes and Horse-Shoeing (London, 1869). 15th century the anatomy of the domesticated animals, formerly almost entirely neglected, began to receive attention. A work on comparative anatomy by Volcher Koyter was issued at Nuremberg in 1573; about the same time a writer in Germany named Copho or Cophon published a book on the anatomy of the pig, in which were many original remarks on the lymphatic vessels; and Jehan Hervard in France produced in 1504 his rather incomplete Hippo- Osteologie. But by far the most notable work, and one which main- tained its popularity for a century and a half, was that of Cano Ruini, a senator of Bologna, published in 1598 in that city, and entitled Dell' Anatomia e delV Infirmity del Cavallo, e suoi Remedii. Passing through many editions, and translated into French and German, this book was for the most part original, and a remarkable one for the time in which it was composed, the anatomical portion being especially praiseworthy. English books of the 17th century exhibit a strong tendency towards the improvement of veterinary medicine and surgery, especially as regards the horse. This is even more notable in the writings of the 18th century, among which may be particularized Gibson's Farrier's New Guide (1719), Method of Dieting Horses (1721) and (best of all) his New Treatise on the Diseases of Horses, besides Braken's, Burdon's, Bridge's and Bartlet's treatises. Veterinary anatomy was greatly advanced by the Anatomy of an Horse (1683) of Snape, farrier to Charles II., illustrated with copperplates, and by the still more complete and original work of Stubbs, the Anatomy of the Horse (1766), which decidedly marked a new era in this line of study. Of foreign works it may suffice to mention that of Solleysel, Veritable parfait mareschal (1664), which passed through many editions, was translated into several languages, and was borrowed from for more than a century by different writers. Sir VV. Hope's Compleat Horseman (1696) is a translation from Solleysel by a pupil. Modern Schools and Colleges. — The most important era in the history of modern veterinary science commenced with the institution of veterinary schools. France was the first to take the p rance great'initiative step in this direction. Buff on hadrecom- an aCon- mended the formation of veterinary schools, but his tlnentul recommendations were not attended to. Claude Bourgelat ^ ur0 pe t (17 12-1799), an advocate at Lyons and a talented hippolo- [ gist, through his influence with Bertin, prime minister under Louis XV., was the first to induce the government to establish a veterinary school and school of equitation at Lyons, in 1761. This school he himself directed for only a few years, during which the great benefits that had resulted from it justified an extension of its teaching to other parts of France. Bourgelat; therefore, founded (1766) at Alfort, near Paris, a second veterinary school, which soon became, and has remained to this day, one of the finest and most advanced veterinary schools in the world. At Lyons he was replaced by the Abbe Rozier, a learned agriculturist, who was killed at the siege of Lyons after a very successful period of school management, during which he had added largely to agricultural and physical knowledge by the publication of his Journal de Physique and Cours d' Agriculture. Twenty years later the Alfort school added to its teaching staff several distinguished professors whose names still adorn the annals of science, such as Dauberton, who taught rural economy ; Vic d'Azyr, who lectured on comparative anatomy ; Fourcroy, who undertook instruction in chemistry; and_ Gilbert, one of its most brilliant pupils, who had veterinary medicine and surgerv for his department. The last-named was also a distinguished agriculturist and published many important treatises on agricultural as well as veterinary subjects. The position he had acquired, added to his profound and varied knowledge, made him most useful to France during the period of the Revolution. It is chiefly to him that it is indebted for the celebrated Rambouillet flock of Merino sheep, for the conservation of the Tuilcries and Versailles parks, and for the creation of the fine experimental agricultural estab- lishment organized in the ancient domain of Sceaux. The Alfort school speedily became the nursery of veterinary science, and the source whence all similar institutions obtained their first teachers and their guidance. A third government school was founded in 1825 at Toulouse; and these three schools have produced thousands of thoroughly educated veterinary surgeons and many professors of high scientific repute, among whom may be named Bouley, Chauveau, Colin, Joussaint, St Cyr, Goubaux, Arloing, Galtier, Nocard, Trasbot, Neumann, Cadiot and Lcclainche. The opening of the Alfort school was followed by the establishment of national schools in Italy (Turin, 1769), Denmark (Copenhagen, 1773), Austria (Vienna, 1775), Saxony (Dresden, 1776), Prussia (Hanover, 1778; Berlin, 1790)" Bavaria (Munich, 1790), Hungary (Budapest, 1787) and Spain (Madrid, 1793); and soon government veterinary schools were founded in nearly every European country, except Great Britain and Greece, mostly on a munificent scale. Probably all, but especially those of France and Germany, were established as much with a view to training veterinary surgeons for the army as for the requirements of civil life. In 1907 France possessed three national veterinary schools, Germany had six, Russia four (Kharkov, Dorpat, Kazan and Warsaw), Italy six, Spain five, Austria-Hungary three (Vienna, Budapest and Lemberg), Switzerland two (Zurich and Bern), Sweden two (Skara and Stockholm), Denmark, Holland, Belgium and Portugal one each. In 1849 o- government veterinary VETERINARY SCIENCE school was established at Constantinople, and in 1861 the govern- ment of Rumania founded a school at Bucharest. The veterinary schools of Berlin, Hanover and Vienna have been raised to the position of universities. In 1790 St Bel (whose real name was Vial, St Bel being a village near Lyons, where was his paternal estate), after studying at the Lyons school and teaching both at Alfort and Lyons, came ATJ ed to England and published proposals for founding a school *^ ' in which to instruct pupils in veterinary medicine and surgery. The Agricultural Society of Odiham, which had been meditating sending two young men to the Alfort school, elected him an honorary member, and delegated a committee to consult with him respecting his scheme. Some time afterwards this committee detached themselves from the Odiham Society and formed an institution styled the Veterinary College of London, of which St Bel was appointed professor. The school w r as to be commenced and maintained by private subscription. In March 1792 arrange- ments were made for building temporary stabling for fifty horses and a forge for shoeing at St Pancras. The college made rapid progress in public estimation, notwithstanding considerable pecuniary embarrassments. As soon as the building was ready for the recep- tion of animal patients, pupils began to be enrolled ; and among the earliest were some who afterwards gained celebrity as veterinarians, as Bloxam t Blaine, R. Lawrence, Field and Bracy Clark. On the death of St Bel in August 1793 there appears to have been some difficulty in procuring a suitable successor; but at length, on the recommendation of John Hunter and Cline, two medical men were appointed, Coleman and Moorcroft, the latter then practising as a veterinary surgeon in London. The first taught anatomy and physiology, and Moorcroft, after visiting the French schools, directed the practical portion of the teaching. Unfortunately, neither of these teachers had much experience among animals, nor were they well acquainted with their diseases; but Coleman (1765-1839) had as a student, in conjunction with a fellow- student (afterwards Sir Astley Cooper), performed many experiments on animals under the direction of CJine. Moorcroft, who remained only a short time at the college, afterwards went to India, and during a journey in 1S19 was murdered in Tibet. Coleman, by his scientific researches and energetic management, in a few years raised the college to a high standard of usefulness; under his care the progress of the veterinary art was such as to qualify its practitioners to hold commissions in the army ; and he himself was appointed veterinary surgeon- general to the British cavalry. In 1831 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society. Owing to the lack of funds, the teaching at the college must have been very meagre, and had it not been for the liberality of several medical men in throwing open the doors of their theatres to its pupils for instruction without fee or reward, their professional knowledge would have been sadly deficient. The board of examiners was for many years chiefly composed of eminent members of the medical profession. Coleman died in 1839, and with him disappeared much of the interest the medical profession of London took in the progress of veterinary medicine. Vet the Royal Veterinary College (first styled " Royal " during the presidentship of the duke of Rent) continued to do good work in a purely veterinary direction, and received such public financial support that it was soon able to dispense with the small annual grant given to it by the government. In the early years of the institution the horse was the only animal to which much attention was given. But at the instigation of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, which gave £200 per annum for the purpose, an addi- tional professor was appointed to investigate andteach the treatment of the diseases of cattle, sheep and other animals; outbreaks of disease among these were also to be inquired into by the_ officers of the college. This help to the institution was withdrawn in 1875, but renewed and augmented in 1886. For fifteen years the Royal Agricultural Society annually voted a sum of £500 towards the expenses of the department of comparative pathology, but in 1902 this grant was reduced to £200. As the result of representations made to the senate of the uni- versity of London by the governors of the Royal Veterinary College, the university in 1906 instituted a degree in veterinary science (B.Sa). The possession of this degree does not of itself entitle the hclder to practise as a veterinary surgeon, but it washoped that an increasing number of students would, while studying for the diploma of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, also adoptthe curriculum which is necessary to qualify for the university examina- tions and obtain the degree of bachelor of science. To provide equipment for the higher studies required for the university degree, the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries in 1906 made a grant to the college of £800 per annum. At this school post-graduate instruc- tion isgivenon the principles of bacteriological research, vaccination and protective inoculation, the preparation of toxins and vaccines and the bacteriology of the specific diseases of animals. The London Veterinary School has been the parent of other schools in Great Britain, one of which, the first in Scotland, was founded by Professor Dick, a student under Coleman,_ and a man of great per- severance and ability. Beginning at Edinburgh in 1819-20 with only one student, in three years he gained the patronage of the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, which placed a small gum of money at the disposal of a committee appointed by itself to take charge of a department of veterinary surgery it had formed. This patronage, and very much in the way of material assistance and encouragement, were continued to the time of Dick's death in 1866. During the long period in which he presided over the school considerable progress was made in diffusing a sound knowledge of veterinary medicine in Scotland and beyond it For many years his examining board, whijh gave certificates of proficiency under the auspices of the Highland and Agricultural Society, waa composed of the most distinguished medical men in Scotland, such as Goodsii; Syme, Lizars, Ballingall, Simpson and Knox. By his will Dick vested the college in the lord provost and town council of Edinburgh as trustees, and left a large portion of the fortune he had made to maintain it for the purposes for which it was founded. In 1859 another veterinary school w r as established in Edinburgh by John Gamgee, and the Veterinary College, Glasgow, was founded in 1863 by James McCalL Gamgee's school was discontinued m 1865; and William Williams established in 1873 the "New Veterinary College," Edinburgh. This school was transferred in 1904 to the university, Liverpool. In 1900 a veterinary school was founded in Dublin. In 1844 the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (to be carefully distinguished from the Royal Veterinary College) obtained its charter of incorporation. The functions of this body were until 1881 limited almost entirely to examining students taught in the veterinary schools, and bestowing diplomas of membership on those who successfully passed the examinations conducted by the boards which sat in London and Edinburgh. Soon after the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons obtained its charter of incorporation, a difference arose between the college and Dick, which resulted in the latter seceding altogether from the union that had been established, and forming an independent examining board, the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland granting certificates of proficiency to those students w r ho were deemed competent. This schism operated very injuriously on the progress of veterinary education and on professional advancement, as the competition engendered was of a rather deteriorating nature. After the death of Dick in 1866, the dualism in veterinary licensing was suppressed and the Highland Society ceased to grant certificates. Now there is only one portal of entry into the profession, and the veterinary students of England, Ireland and Scotland must satisfy the examiners appointed by the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons before they can practise their profession. Before beginning their professional studies students of veterinary medicine must pass an examination in general education equivalent in every respect to that required of students of human medicine. The minimum length of the professional training is four years of three terms each, and during that course four searching examinations must be passed before the student obtains his diploma or licence to Kractise as a veterinary surgeon. The subjects taught in the schools ave been increased in numbers conformably with the requirements of ever extending science, and the teaching is more thorough and practical. During the four years' curriculum, besides the pre- liminary technical training essential to every scientist, the student must study the anatomy and physiology of the domesticated animals, the pathology and bacteriology of the diseases to which these animals are exposed, medicine, surgery, hygiene, dietetics and meat inspec- tion, and learn to know the results of disease as seen post mortem or in the slaughter-house. In 1881 an act of parliament was obtained protecting the title of the graduates of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons and conferring other advantages, not the least of which is the power granted to the college to remove the names of unworthy members from its register. In some respects the Veterinary Surgeons Act is superior to the Medical Act, while it places the profession on the same level as other learned bodies, and prevents the public being misled hy empirics and imposters. In 1876 the college instituted a higher degree than membership — that of fellow (F.R.C.V.S.), which can only be obtained after the graduate has been five years in practice, and by furnishing a thesis and passing a severe written and oral examination en pathology and bacteriology, hygiene and-sanitary science, and veterinary medicine and surgery. Only fellows can be elected members of. the examining boards for the membership and fellowship diplomas. The graduates of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons registered from its foundation in 1844 until 1907 numbered about 6000. In the British army a veterinary service was first instituted at the beginning of the 19th century, when veterinary surgeons with the relative rank of lieutenant were appointed to regiments of cavalry, the royal artillery and the royal wagon train. After the Crimean War, and consequent on the abolition of the East India Company (which then possessed its own veterinary service), the number of veterinary surgeons employed was increased, and in 1878 they were constituted a " department, " with distinctive uniform, instead of being regimental officers as was previously the case. At the same time they were all brought on to a general roster for foreign service, so that every one in turn has to serve abroad. In 1903 the officers of the department were given substantive rank, and in 1904 were constituted a " corps, " with a small number of non-commissioned officers and men under their command and specially trained by them. In 1907 the Army Veterinary Corps consisted of 167 officers, and 220, VETERINARY SCIENCE United States. non-commissioned officers and men. The men are stationed at the veterinary hospitals, Woolwich depot, Aldershot, Bulford and the Curragh, but when trained arc available for duty under veterinary officers at any station, and a proportion of them are employed at the various hospitals in South Africa. Owing to their liability to service abroad in rotation, it follows that every officer spends a considerable portion of his service in India, Burma, Egypt or South Africa. Each tour abroad is five years, and the average length of service abroad is about one-half the total. This offers a wide and varied field for the professional activities of the corps, but naturally entails a corresponding strain on the individuals. Commissions us lieutenants are obtained by examination, the candidates having previously qualified as members of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons. Promotion to captain and major is granted at five and fifteen years' service respectively, and subsequently, by selection, to lieutenant-colonel and colonel, as vacancies occur. The director- general has the honorary rank of major-general. The Indian civil veterinary department was at first recruited from the A. V. Corps, but candidates who qualified as members of . ., the R.C.V.S. were subsequently granted direct appoint- ments by the India Office, by selection. The service is paid and pensioned on the lines of the other Indian civil services, and offers an excellent professional career to those whose constitu- tion permits them to live in the tropics. The work comprises the investigation of disease in animals and the management of studs and farms, in addition to the clinical practice which falls to the share of all veterinary surgeons. In India there are schools for the training of natives as veterinary surgeons in Bombay, Lahore, Ajmere and Bengal. The courses extend aver two and three years, and the instruction is very thorough. The professors are officers of the Indian civil veterinary depart- ment, and graduates are given subordinate appointments in that service, or find ready employment in the native cavalry or in civil life. In the United States of America, veterinary science made very slow progress until 1884, when the Bureau of Animal Industry was established in connexion with the Department of Agriculture at Washington. The immediate cause of the formation of the bureau was the urgent need by the Federal government of official information concerning the nature and prevalence of animal diseases, and of the means required to control and eradicate them, and also the necessity of having an executive agency to carry out the measures necessary to stop the spread of disease and to prevent the Importation of contagion into the country, as well as to conduct investigations through which further knowledge might be obtained. In 1907 the bureau consisted of ten divisions, employing the services of 815 veterinary surgeons. It deals with the investigation, control and eradication of contagious diseases of animals, the inspection and quarantine of live stock, horse-breeding, experiments in feeding, diseases of poultry and the inspection of meat and dairy produce. It makes original investiga- tions as to the nature, cause and prevention of communicable diseases of live stock, and takes measures for their repression, frequently in conjunction with state and territorial authorities. It prepares tuberculin and mallein, and supplies these substances free of charge to public health officers, conducts experiments with immunizing agents, and prepares vaccines, sera and antitoxins for the protection of animals against disease. It prepares and publishes reports of scientific investigations and treatises on various subjects relating to live stock. The diseases which claim most attention are Texas fever, sheep scab, cattle mange, venereal disease of horses, tuberculosis of cattle and pigs, hog cholera, glanders, anthrax, black-quarter, and parasitic diseases of cattle, sheep and horses. The effect of the work of the bureau on the health and value of farm animals and their products is well known, and the people of the United States now realize the immense importance of veterinary science. Veterinary schools were established in New York City in 1846, Boston in 1848, Chicago in 1883, and subsequently in Kansas City and elsewhere, but these, like those of Great Britain, were private institutions. The American Veterinary College, N.Y., founded in 1875, is connected with New York University, and the N.Y. State Veterinary College forms a department of Cornell University at Ithaca. Other veterinary schools attached to state universities or agricultural colleges are those in Philadelphia, Pa.-; Columbus, Ohio; Ames, Iowa; Pullman, Washington; Auburn, Alabama; Manhattan, Kansas; and Fort Collins, Colorado. Other veterinary colleges are in San Francisco; Washington, D.C. (two) ; Grand Rapids, Michigan; St Joseph, Missouri; and Cincinnati, Ohio. In Canada a veterinary schocl was founded at Toronto in 1862, and four years later another school was established at Montreal. _ . For some years the Montreal school formed a department *"* of McGill University, but in 1902 the veterinary branch was discontinued. Veterinary instruction in French is given by the faculty of comparative medicine at Laval University. _ The Canadian Department of Agriculture possesses a fully equipped veterinary sanitary service employing about 400 qualified veterinary surgeons as inspectors of live stock, meat and dairy produce. A'ew Zealand, South Africa. In the Australian commonwealth there is only one veterinary school, which was established in Melbourne, Victoria, in 1888. The Public Health Departments of New South Wales, „ Western Australia, Tasmania and the other states employ A " str *'ta' qualified veterinary surgeons as inspectors of live stock, cowsheds, meat and dairy produce. There is no veterinary school in New Zealand, but the Depart- ment of Agriculture has arranged to establish one at Wellington in connexion with the investigation laboratory and farm of the division of veterinary science at Waflaceville. The government employs about forty qualified veterinarians as inspectors of live stock, abattoirs, meat-works and dairies. In Egypt a veterinary school with French teachers was founded in 1830 at Abu-Zabel, near Cairo, by Clot-Bey, a doctor of medicine. This school was discontinued in 1842, The Public Health Etrvot Department in 1901 established at Cairo a new veterinary ^syP • school for the instruction of natives. Ten qualified veterinary surgeons are employed in the sanitary service. Each of the colonics Natal, Cape Colony, Transvaal, Orange River Colony, Swaziland, Bechuanaland and Rhodesia has a veterinary sanitary police service engaged in dealing with the contagious diseases of animals. Laboratories for the investigation of disease and the preparation of antitoxins and protective sera have been established at Grahamstown, Pretoria and Pictermaritzburg. Characteristics of Veterinary Medicine. Veterinary medicine has been far less exposed to the vagaries of theoretical doctrines and systems than human medicine. The explanation may perhaps be that the successful practice of this branch of medicine more clearly than in any other depends upon the careful observation of facts and the rational deductions to be made therefrom. No special doctrines seem, in later times at least, to have been adopted, and the dominating sentiment in regard to disease and its treatment has been a medical eclecticism, based on practical experience and anatomico- pathological investigation, rarely indeed on philosophical 01 abstract theories. In this way veterinary science has become pre-eminently a science of observation. At times indeed it has to some extent been influenced by the doctrines which have controlled the practice of human medicine — such as those of Broussais, Hahnemann, Brown, Rasori, Rademacher and others — yet this has not been for long: experience of them when tested upon dumb unimaginative animals soon exposed their fallacies and compelled their discontinuance. Of more moment than the cure of disease is its prevention, and this is now considered the most important object in con- nexion with veterinary science. More especially is this the case with those contagious disorders that depend for their existence and extension upon the presence of an infecting agent, and whose ravages for so many centuries are written largely in the history of civilization. Every advance made in human medicine affects the progress of veterinary science, and the invaluable investigations of Davaine, Pasteur, Chauveau, Lister and Koch have created as great a revolution in veterinary prac- tice as in the medicine of man. In " preventive medicine " the benefits derived from the application of the germ theory are new realized to be immense; and the sanitary police measures based on this knowledge, if carried rigorously into operation, must eventually lead to the extinction of animal plagues. Bacteriology has thrown much light on the nature, diagnosis and cure of disease both in man and animals, and it has developed the beneficent practice of aseptic and antiseptic surgery, enabling the practitioner to prevent exhausting suppuration and wound infection with its attendant septic fever, to ensure the rapid healing of wounds, and to undertake the more serious operations with greater confidence of a success- ful result. The medicine of the lower animals differs from that of man in no particular so much, perhaps, as in the application it makes of utilitarian principles. The life of man is sacred; but in the case of animals, when there are doubts as to complete restora- tion to health or usefulness, pecuniary considerations gener- ally decide against the adoption of remedial measures. This feature in the medicine of domesticated animals brings very prominently before us the value of the old adage that " pre- vention is better than cure." In Great Britain the value of VETERINARY SCIENCE veterinary pathology in the relations it bears to human medicine, to the public health and wealth, as well as to agriculture, has not been sufficiently appreciated; and in consequence but little allowance has been made for the difficulties with which the practitioner of animal medicine has to contend. The rare instances in which animals can be seen by the veterinary surgeon in the earliest stages of disease, and when this would prove most amenable to medical treatment; delay, generally due to the inability of those who have the care of animals to perceive these early stages; the fact that animals cannot, except in a negative manner, tell their woes, describe their sensations or indicate what and where they suffer; the absence of those comforts and conveniences of the sick-room which cannot be called in to ameliorate their condition; the violence or stupor, as well as the attitude and structural peculiarities of the sick creatures, which only too frequently render favourable positions for recovery impossible; the slender means generally afforded for carrying out recommendations, together with the oftentimes intractable nature of their diseases; and the utilitarian in- fluences alluded to above — all these considerations, in the great majority of instances, militate against the adoption of curative treatment, or at least greatly increase its difficulties. But notwithstanding these difficulties, veterinary science has made greater strides since 1877 than at any previous period in its history. Every branch of veterinary knowledge has shared in this advance, but in none has the progress been so marked as in the domain of pathology, led by Nocard in France, Schiitz and Kitt in Germany, Bang in Denmark, and McFadyean in England. Bacteriological research has discovered new dis- eases, has revolutionized the views formerly held regarding many others, and has pointed the way to new methods of prevention and cure. Tuberculosis, anthrax, black- quarter, glanders, strangles and tetanus furnish ready examples of the progress of knowledge concerning the nature and causation of disease. These diseases, formerly attributed to the most varied causes — including climatic changes, dietetic errors, peculiar condition of the tissues, heredity, exposure, close breeding, overcrowding and even spontaneous origin — have been proved beyond the possibility of doubt to be due to infection by specific bacteria or germs. In the United Kingdom veterinary science has gained distinc- tion by the eradication of contagious animal diseases. For many years prior to 1865, when a government veterinary department was formed, destructive plagues of animals had prevailed almost continuously in the British islands, and scarcely any attempt had been made to check or extirpate them. Two exotic bovine diseases alone (contagious pleuro -pneumonia or lung plague and foot-and-mouth disease) are estimated to have caused the death, during the first thirty years of their prevalence in the United Kingdom, of 5,549,780 cattle, roughly valued at £83,616,854; while the invasion of cattle plague (rinderpest) in 1865-66 was calculated to have caused a money loss of from £5,000,000 to £8,000,000. The depredations made in South Africa and Australia by the lung plague alone are quite appalling; and in India the loss brought about by contagious diseases among animals has been stated at not less than £6,000,000 annually. The damage done by tuberculosis — a contagious disease of cattle, transmissible to other animals and tq man by means of the milk and flesh of diseased beasts — cannot be even guessed at; but it must be enormous considering how widely this malady is diffused. But that terrible pest of all ages, cattle plague, has been promptly suppressed in England with comparatively trifling loss. Foot-and-mouth disease, which frequently proved a heavy infliction to agriculture, has been completely extirpated. Rabies may now be included, with rinderpest, lung plague and sheep-pox, in the category of extinct diseases; and new measures have been adopted for the suppression of glanders and swine fever. To combat such diseases as depend for their continuance on germs derived from the soil or herbage, which cannot be directly controlled by veterinary sanitary measures, recourse has been had to pro- tective inoculation with attenuated virus or antitoxic sera. The Board of Agriculture and Fisheries has an efficient staff, of trained veterinary inspectors, who devote their whole time to the work in connexion with the scheduled diseases of animals, and are frequently employed to inquire into other diseases of an apparently contagious nature, where the circumstances are of general importance to agriculturists. Veterinary science can offer much assistance in the study and prevention of the diseases to which mankind are liable. Some grave maladies of the human species are certainly derived from animals, and others may yet be added to the list. In the training of the physician great benefit would be derived from the study of disease in animals — a fact which has been strangely overlooked in England, as those can testify who understand how closely the health of man may depend upon the health of the creatures he has domesticated and derives subsistence from, and how much more advantageously morbid processes can be studied in animals than in our own species. Although as yet few chairs of comparative pathology have been established in British universities, on the European continent such chairs are now looked upon as almost indis- pensable to every university. Bourgelat, towards the middle of the 1 8th century, in speaking of the veterinary schools he had been instrumental in forming, urged that " leurs portes soient sans cesse ouvertes a ceux qui, charges par l'etat de la conservation des hommes, auront acquis par le nom qu'ils se seront fait le droit d'interroger la nature, chercher de& analogies, et verifier des idees dont la conformation ne peut etre qu'utile a l'espece humaine." And the benefits to be mutually derived from this association of the two branches of medicine inspired Vicq d'Azyr to elaborate his Nouveau plan de la constitution de la mtdecine en France, which he presented in the National Assembly in 1790. , His fundamental idea was to make veterinary teaching a preliminary {le premier degrg) and, as it were, the principle of instruction in human medicine. His proposal went so far as to insist upon a veterinary school being annexed to every medical college established in France. This idea was reproduced in the Rapport sur Vinstruction publique which Talleyrand read before the National Assembly in 1790. In this project veterinary teaching was to form part of the National Institution at Paris. The idea was to initiate students of medicine into a knowledge of diseases by observing those of animals. The suffering animal always appears exactly as it is and feels, without the intervention of mind obscuring the symptomatology, the symptoms being really and truly the rigorous expression of its diseased condition. From this point of view, the dumb animal, when it is ill, offers the same diffi- culties in diagnosis as does the ailing infant or the comatose adult. Of the other objects of veterinary science there is only one to which allusion need here be made: that is the perfectioning of the domestic animals in everything that is likely to make them more valuable to man. This is in an especial manner the province of this science, the knowledge of the anatomy, physiology and other matters connected with these animals by its students being essential for such improvement. Diseases of Domestic Animals. Considerations of space forbid a complete or detailed descrip- tion of all the diseases, medical and surgical, to which the domesticated animals are liable. Separate articles are devoted to the principal plagues, or murrains, which affect animals — Rinderpest, Foot -and- Mouth Disease, Pleuro- Pneumonia, Anthrax, &c. Reference will be made here only to the more important other disorders of animals which are of a communic- able nature. Diseases of the Horse. Every horseman should know something of the injuries, lame- nesses and diseases to which the horse is liable. Unfortunately not very much can be done in this direction by book instruction; indeed, there is generally too much doctoring and too little nursing of sick animals. Even in slight and favourable cases of illness recovery is often retarded by too zealous and injudicious medication ; the object to be always kept in view in the treatment of animal patients is to place them in those conditions which allow nature to VETERINARY SCIENCE operate most freely in restoring health. This can best be rendered in the form of nursing, which sick animals greatly appreciate. How- ever indifferent a horse may be to caressing or kind atten- Nurslag. t ; on during health, when ill he certainly appreciates both, and when in pain will often apparently endeavour to attract notice and seek relief from those with whom he is familiar. Fresh air and cleanliness, quiet and comfort, should always be secured, if passible. The stable or loose-box should be warm, without being close, and free from draughts. If the weather is cold, and especially if the horse is suffering from inflammation of the air-passages, it may be necessary to keep up the temperature by artificial means ; but great care should be taken that this does not render the air too dry to breathe. The surface of the body can be kept warm by rugs, and the legs by woollen bandages. Yet a sick horse is easily fatigued and annoyed by toe much clothing, and therefore it is better to resort to artificial heating of the stable than to overload the body or impede movement by heavy wrappings. If blankets are used, it is well to place a cotton or linen sheet under them, should the horse have an irritable skin. For bedding, long straw should be employed as little as possible, since it hampers movement. Clean old litter, sawdust or peat-moss litter is the best. If the hoofs are strong, and the horse likely to be confined for some w r ecks, it affords relief to take off Lhe shoes. Tying up should he avoided, if possible, unless it is urgently required, the horse being allowed to move about or lie down as he may prefer. When a sick horse has lost his appetite, he should be tempted to eat by offering him such food as will be enticing to him. It should be given frequently and in small quantities, but should not Food for k c | urcec [ on him; food will often be taken if offered from * sfc * the hand, when it will not be eaten out of the manger. horse. Whether the animal be fed from a bucket or from a manger, any food that is left should be thrown away, and the receptacle well cleaned out after each meal. As a rule, during sickness a horse requires laxative food, in order to allay fever or inflammatory symptoms, while supporting the strength. The following list comprises the usual laxative foods employed: green grass, green wheat, oats and barley, lucerne, carrots, parsnips, gruel, bran mash, linseed and bran mash, boiled barley, linseed tea, hay tea and linseed oil. Green grass, lucerne, and similar articles of food if cut when in a wet state, should be dried before being given. Boiled grain should be cooked with very little water, so that it may be floury and comparatively dry when ready; a little salt should be mixed with it. One gallon of good gruel may be made with a pound of meal and cold water, which should be stirred till it boils, and afterwards permitted to simmer over a gentle fire till the fluid is quite thick. To make a bran mash, scald a stable bucket, throw out the water, put in 3 lb of bran and I oz. of salt, add i\ pints of boiling water, stir up well, cover over and allow the mash to stand for fifteen or twenty minutes until it is well cooked. For a bran and Unseed mash, boil slowly for two or three hours 1 lb of linseed, so as to have about a couple of quarts of thick fluid, to which 2 lb of bran' and I oz. of salt may be added. The whole should be stirred up, covered over and allowed to steam as before described. The thicker the mash the more readily will the horse eat it. I.inseed tea is made by boiling I lb of lin- seed in a couple of gallons of water until the grains are quite soft. It may be economically made by using less water to cook the linseed, and afterwards making up the quantity of water to about a gallon and a half. Hay tea may be prepared by filling a bucket, after scalding it, with good sweet hay, pouring in as much boiling water as the bucket will hold, covering it over, and allowing it to stand until cold, when the fluid may be strained off and given to the horse. This forms a refreshing drink. Linseed oil, in quantities of from 1 oz. to 6 oz. daily, may be mixed with the food; it keeps the bowels in a lax condition, has a good effect on the skin and air- passages, and is useful as an article of diet. When debility has to be combated, as in low fever or other weakening diseases, strengthen- ing and other easily digested food must be administered, though some of the foods already mentioned, such as boiled grain, answer this purpose to a certain extent. Milk, eggs, bread and biscuits, malt, corn, Sec, are often prescribed with this object. Milk may be given skimmed or unskimmed; a little sugar may be mixed with it; and one or two gallons may be given daily, according to circum- stances. One or two eggs may be given beaten up with a little sugar and mixed with milk, three or four times a day, or more frequently; or they may be boiled hard and powdered, and mixed in the milk. A quart of stout, ale or porter may be given two or three times a day, or a half to one bottle of port wine daily. Scalded oats, with a little salt added, are very useful when convalescence is nearly completed. As a rule, a sick horse should have as much water as he likes to drink, though it may be necessary in certain cases to restrict the quantity, and to have the chill taken off; but it should never be warmer than 75 to 8o°. As little grooming as possible should be allowed when a horse is very weak; it should be limited to sponging the mouth, nostrils, eyes and forehead with clean water, to which a little eucalyptus or sanitas may be added. Rub the legs and ears with the hand, take off the clothing, and shake or change it once a day, and if agreeable rub over the body with a soft cloth. Exercise is of course not required during sickness or injury, and the period at which it is allowed will depend upon circumstances. Care must be taken that it is not ordered too early, or carried too far at first. Much care is required in administering medicines in the form of ball or bolus; and practice, as well as courage and tact, is needed in order to give it without danger to the administrator or the animal. The ball should be held between the fingers ^ d ™ /s " of the right hand, the tips of the first and_ fourth being "[JJ brought together below the second and third, which are me ae ' placed on the upper side of the ball; the right hand is thus made as small as possible, so as to admit of ready insertion into the mouth. The left hand grasps the horse's tongue, gently pulls it out and places it on that part of the right side of the lower jaw which is bare of teeth. With the right hand the ball is placed at the root of the tongue. The moment the right hand is withdrawn, the tongue should be released. This causes the ball to be carried still farther back. The operator then closes the mouth and. watches the left side of the neck, to note the passage of the ball down the gullet. Many horses keep a ball in the mouth a considerable time before they will allow it to go down. A mouthful of water or a handful of food will generally make them swallow it readily. It is most essential to have the ball moderately soft ; nothing can be more dangerous than a hard one. To administer a drink or drench requires as much care as giving a ball, in order to avoid choking the horse, though it is unattended with risk to the administrator. An ordinary glass or stone bottle may be used, providing there are no sharp points around the mouth ; but cither the usual drenching- horn or a tin vessel with a narrow mouth or spout is safer. It is necessary to raise the horse's head, so that the nose may be a little higher than the horizontal line. The drink must be given by a person standing on the right side (the attendant being in front or on the left side of the horse), the cheek being pulled out a little, to form a sack or funnel, into which the medicine is poured, a little at a time, allowing an interval now and again for the horse to swallow. If any of the fluid gets into the windpipe (which it is liable to do if the head is held too high), it will cause coughing, whereupon the head should be instantly lowered. Neither the tongue nor the nostrils should be interfered with. Powders may be given in a little mash or gruel, well stirred up, or in the drinking water. If a wide surface is to be fomented (as the chest, abdomen or loins), a blanket or other large woollen cloth should be dipped in water as hot as the hand can comfortably bear it, moderately wrung out and applied to the part, the heat and moisture being retained by covering it with a waterproof sheet or dry rug. When it has lost some of its heat, it should be removed, dipped in warm water and again applied. In cases of acute inflammation, it may be necessary to have the water a little hotter; and, to avoid the inconvenience of removing the blanket, or the danger of chill when it is removed, it may be secured round the body by skewers or twine, the hot water being poured on the outside of the top part of the blanket by any convenient vessel. To foment the feet, they should be placed in a bucket or tub (the latter with the bottom resting wholly on the ground) containing warm water; a quantity of moss litter put in the tub or bucket prevents splashing and retains the heat longer. Poultices are used for allaying pain, softening horn or other tissues, and, when antiseptic, cleansing and promoting healthy action in wounds. To be beneficial they should be large and always kept moist. For applying poultices to the feet, ^o""*^ 8 * a piece of sacking, or better a poultice-boot, supplied by saddlers, may be used with advantage. Poultices are usually made with bran, though this has the disadvantage of drying quickly, to prevent which it. may be mixed with linseed meal or a little linseed oil. Antiseptic poultices containing lysol, izal, carbolic acid or creolin, are very useful in the early treatment of foul and punctured wounds. A charcoal poultice is sometimes employed when there is an offensive smell to be got rid of. It is made by mixing linseed meal with boiling water and stirring until a soft mass is produced; with this some wood charcoal in powder is mixed, and when ready to be applied some more charcoal is sprinkled on the surface. It may be noted that, in lieu of these materials for poultices, spongiopiline can be usefully employed. A piece ol sufficient size is steeped in hot water, applied to the part, covered with oiled silk or water- proof sheeting, and secured by tapes. Even an ordinary sponge, steeped in hot water and covered with waterproof material, makes a good poulticing medium; it is well adapted for the throat, the space between the branches of the lower jaw, as well as for the lower joints of the Umbs. Enemata or clysters are given in fevers, constipation, colic, &c, to empty the posterior part of the bowels. They can be administered by a large syringe capable of containing a quart or more of water, with a nozzle about 12 in. long, or by a large Enemata funnel with a long nozzle at aright angle. Water, soap and water, or oil may be employed. To administer an enema, clysters. one of the horse's fore feet should be held up, while the operator introduces the nozzle, smeared with oil or lard, very gently and steadily into the rectum, then injects the water. The quantity injected will depend on the nature of the malady and the size of the horse; from 2 or 3 quarts to several gallons may be used. 8 VETERINARY SCIENCE The epizootic diseases affecting the horse are not numerous, and may generally be considered as sp'ecific and infectious or contagious in their nature, circumstances of a favourable kind leading Epizootic and con- tagious to their extension by propagation of the agent upon which their existence depends. This agent, in most of the diseases ma ' a dies, has been proved to be a micro-organism, and there can be little doubt that it is so for all of them. Glanders (q.v.), or equinia, one of the most serious maladies of the horse, ass and mule, prevails in nearly every part of the world. Glanders- ^ * s a contagious, inoculable disease, caused by the bacillus farcv ' wwittei, and specially affects the lungs, respiratory mucous membrane and the lymphatic system. The virulent agent of glanders appears to establish itself most easily among horses kept in foul, crowded, badly ventilated stables, or among such as are over-worked, barliy fed or debilitated. Glanders, however, is always due to contagion, and in natural infection it may be contracted by inhalation of the bacilli, by ingestion of the virus with food or water, or by inoculation of a wound of the skin or a mucous membrane. Carnivorous animals — lions, tigers, dogs and cats — have become infected through eating the flesh of glandered horses; and men attending diseased horses are liable to be infected, especially if they have sores on the exposed parts of their bodies. Though in man infection through wounds is the readiest way of receiving the disease, the bacillus may also obtain access through the digestive organs, the lungs and mucous membranes of the eyes, nose and lips. In descriptions of the equine disease sometimes a distinction is made between glanders with nasal ulcers and other symptoms of respiratory disease, and glanders of the skin, or farcy, but there is no essential difference between them. Glanders and farcy are due to the same causal organism, and both may be acute or chronic. Acute glanders is always rapidly fatal, and chronic glanders may become acute or it may terminate by apparent recovery. The symptoms of acute glanders are initial fever with its accom- paniments, thirst, loss of appetite, hurried pulse and respiration, emaciation, languor and disinclination to move. Sometimes the legs or joints are swollen and the horse is stiff; but the characteristic symptoms are a greyish -yellow viscid discharge from one or both nostrils, a peculiar enlarged and nodulated condition of one or both submaxillary lymphatic glands, which though they may be painful very rarely suppurate, and on the nasal membrane small yellow pimples or pustules, running into deep, ragged-edged ulcers, and sometimes on the septum large patches of deep ulceration. The discharge from the nose adheres to the nostrils and upper lip, and the infiltrated nasal lining, impeding breathing, causes snuffling and frequent snorting. The lymphatic vessels of the face are often involved and appear as painful subcutaneous " cords " passing across the cheek. These vessels sometimes present nodules which break and discharge a glutinous pus. As the disease progresses, the ulcers on the nose increase in number, enlarge or become con- fluent, extend in depth and sometimes completely perforate the septum. The nasal discharge, now more abundant and tenacious, is streaked with blood and offensive, the respiration is noisy or roaring, and there may be coughing with bleeding from the nose. Painful oedematous swellings appear on the muzzle, throat, between the fore legs, at the flank or on the limbs, and ; ' farcy buds " may form on some of the swollen parts. Symptoms of congestion of the lungs, or pneumonia and pleurisy, with extreme prostration, diarrhoea and gasping respiration, precede death, which is due to asphyxia or to exhaustion. Chronic or latent glanders generally presents few definite symptoms. The suspected animal may have a discharge from the nose, or an enlarged submaxillary gland, or both, and small unbroken nodules may exist on the septum, but usually there is no visible ulceration of the nasal membrane. In some horses suspicion of glanders may be excited by lameness and sudden swelling of a joint, by profuse staling, sluggishness, loss of condition and general unthriftiness, or by refusal of food, rise of temperature, swollen fetlocks, with dry hacking cough, nasal catarrh and other symptoms of a common cold. With rest in the stable the horse improves, but a one-sided nasal discharge continues, the submaxillary gland enlarges, and, after an interval, ulcers appear in the nose or " farcy buds " form on a swollen leg. In occult glanders the horse may appear to be in good health and be able to perform ordinary work. In these cases the existence of glanders can only be discovered by resorting to inoculation or the mallein test. In cutaneous glanders, or farcy, symptoms occur on the skin of a limb, usually a hind one, or on the body, where the lymphatics become inflamed and ulcerated. The limb is much swollen, and the animal moves with pain and difficulty. The lymphatic vessels appear as prominent lines or "cords, " hard and painful on manipula- tion, and along their course arise nodular swellings — the so-called "farcy buds. " These small ahscesses break and discharge a yellow, glutinous, blood-stained pus, leaving sores which heal very slowly. There is a rise of temperature with other symptoms of constitutional disturbance. Medical treatment of glanders or farcy should not be attempted. The disease is dealt with under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) ;\cts. Horses which present suspicious symptoms, or those which have been in contact, or have stood in the same stable with glandered horses, should be isolated and tested with mallein. Animals which are found affected should immediately be destroyed, and their harness, clothing and the utensils employed with them thoroughly cleansed, while the stalls, horse-boxes and places which the horses have frequented should be disinfected. Forage left by glandered horses should be burned or fed to cattle. Mallein, which is almost indispensable in the diagnosis of latent glanders, was discovered in 1888 by Helman, a Russian military veterinary surgeon, and the first complete demonstration of its diagnostic value was given in 1891 by Kalning, also of Russia. Mallein, prepared for the diagnosis of glanders in animals, is the sterilized and filtered liquid-culture of glanders bacilli. It there- fore does not contain even dead bacilli, but it has in solution certain substances which are added to the liquid by the bacilli during their growth (McFadyean). Employed under proper precautions and subcutaneously injected in a glandered horse, mallein causes a marked rise of temperature and an extensive painful swelling at the seat of injection. Epizootic lymphangitis is a contagious eruptive disease of the horse caused by the cryptococcus farciminosus, and characterized by nodular swellings and suppuration of the superficial „ . ,. lymphatics. Infection can be transmitted by mediate lymohan- or immediate contagion. The eruption usually appears ^// on the limbs, but it may occur on the body or on the head and neck. The symptoms closely resemble those of cutaneous glanders or farcy, from which this disease may readily be distin- guished by microscopic examination of the pus discharged from the sores, or by testing the horse with mallein. Glanders and epizootic lymphangitis may coexist in the same animal. It is a scheduled disease, and treatment should not be attempted. Strangles is a specific contagious eruptive fever peculiar to horses, and is more especially incidental to young animals. It is particu- larly characterized by the formation of abscesses in the strangles lymphatic glands, chiefly those between the branches of * the lower jaw (submaxillary). Various causes have been ascribed for its production, such as change of young horses from field to stable, from grass to dry feeding, from idleness to hard work, irritation of teething, and change of locality and climate. But the sole cause is infection by the strangles streptococcus. Languor and feverishness, diminution of appetite, cough, redness of the nasal membrane, with discharge from the eyes and nose, and thirst are among the earliest symptoms. Then there is difficulty in swallowing, coincident with the development of swelling between the branches of the lower jaw, which often causes the water in drinking to be returned through the nose and the masticated food to be dropped from the mouth. The swelling is hot and tender, diffused, and uni- formly rounded and smooth; at first it is hard, with soft, doughy margins; but later it becomes soft in the centre, where an abscess is forming, and soon "points " and hursts, giving exit to a quantity of pus. Relief is now experienced by the animal ; the symptoms subside, and recovery takes place. In some cases the swelling is so great or occurs so close to the larynx that the breathing is interfered with, and even rendered so difficult that suffocation is threatened. In other cases the disease assumes an irregular form, and the swelling, instead of softening in the centre, remains hard for an indefinite time, or it may subside and abscesses form in various parts of the body, sometimes in vital organs, as the brain, lungs, liver, kidneys, &c, or in the bronchial or mesenteric glands, where they generally produce serious consequences. Not unf requently a pustular eruption accompanies the other symptoms. The malady may terminate in ten days or be protracted for months, sometimes terminating fatally from complications, even when the animal is well nursed and kept in a healthy stable. Good nursing is the chief part of the treatment. The strength should be maintained by soft nutritious food, and the body kept warm and comfortable; the stable or loose-box must have plenty of fresh air and be kept clean. The swelling may be fomented with warm water or poulticed. The poultice may be a little bag con- taining bran and. linseed meal mixed with hot water and applied warm to the tumefaction, being retained there by a square piece of calico, with holes for the ears and eyes, tied down the middle of the face and behind the ears. If the breathing is disturbed and noisy, the animal may be made to inhale steam from hot water in a hucket or from bran mash. If the breathing becomes very difficult, the windpifx, must be opened and a tube inserted. Instead of the swelling being poulticed, a little blistering ointment is sometimes rubbed over it, which hastens pointing of the abscess. When the abscess points, it may be lanced, though sometimes it is better to allow it to break spontaneously. It is important to distinguish strangles from glanders, and the distinction can, with certainty, be ascertained by resorting to the mallein test for glanders, or by microscopical examination of the pus from the strangles abscess. Under influenza several diseases are sometimes included, and in different invasions it may (and doubtless does) assume vary- ing forms. It is a specific fever of a low or asthenic j a ff aenzat type, associated with inflammation of the mucous mem- brane lining the air-passages, and also sometimes with that of VETERINARY SCIENCE other organs. At various times it has prevailed extensively over different parts of the world, more especially during the 18th and 19th centuries. Perhaps one of the most widespread outbreaks recorded was that of 1872, on the American continent. It usually radiates from the district in which it first appears. The symptoms have been enumerated as follows: sudden attack, marked by ex- treme debility and stupor, with increased body -tempera litre, quick weak pulse, rigors and cold extremities. The head is pendent, the eyelids swollen and half closed, eyes lustreless, and tears often flowing down the face. There is great disinclination to move ; the body sways on the animal attempting to walk; and the limb-joints crack.- The appetite is lost and the mouth is hot and dry; the bowels are constipated and the urine scanty and high-coloured; there is nearly always a deep, painful and harassing cough; on auscultation of the chest, crepitation or harsh blowing sounds arc audible; and the membrane lining the eyelids and nose assumes either a bright pink colour or a dull leaden hue. A white, yellowish or greenish-coloured discharge flows from the nostrils. In a few days the fever and other symptoms subside, and convalescence rapidly sets in. In unfavourable cases the fever increases, as well as the prostration, the breathing becomes laboured, the cough more painful and deep, and auscultation and percussion indicate that the lungs are seriously involved, with perhaps the pleura or the heart. Glots sometimes form in the latter organ, and quickly bring about a fatal termination. When the lungs do not suffer, the bowels may, and with this complication there are, in addition to the stupor and torpor, tension and tenderness of the abdominal walls when pressed upon, manifestations of colic, great thirst, a coated tongue, yellow- ness of the membranes of nose and eyes, high-coloured urine, con- stipation, and dry faeces covered with mucus. Sometimes rheu- matic swelling and tenderness takes place in the muscles and joints of the limbs, which may persist for a long time, often shifting from leg to leg, and in\-o!ving the sheaths of tendons. At other times acute inflammation of the eyes supervenes, or even paralysis. In this disease good nursing is the chief factor in the treatment. Comfortable, clean and airy stables or loose-boxes should be pro- vided, and the warmth of the body and limbs maintained. Cold and damp, foul air and uncleanliness, are as inimical to health and as antagonistic to recovery as in the case of mankind. In influenza it has been generally found that the less medicine the sick animal receives the more likely it is to recover. Nevertheless, it may be necessary to adopt such medical measures as the following. For constipation administer enemata of warm water or give a dose of linseed oil or salines. For fever give quinine or mild febrifuge diuretics (as liquor'of acetate of ammonia or spirit of nitrous ether), and, if there is cough or nervous excitement, anodynes (such as extract of belladonna). When the fever subsides and the prostration is great, it may be necessary to give stimulants (carbonate of ammonia, nitrous ether, aromatic ammonia) and tonics, both vege- table (gentian, quassia, calumba) and mineral (iron, copper, arsenic). Some veterinary surgeons administer large and frequent doses of quinine from the onset of the disease, and, it is asserted, with excellent effect. If the abdominal organs are chiefly involved, demulcents may supplement the above (linseed boiled to a jelly, to which salt may be added, is the most convenient and best), and drugs to allay pain (as opium and chloral hydrate). Olive oil is a safe laxative in such cases. When nervous symptoms are mani- fested, it may be necessary to apply wet cloths and vinegar to the head and neck; even blisters to the neck have been recommended. Bromide of potassium has been beneficially employed. To combat inflammation of the throat, chest or abdomen, counter-irritants may be resorted to, such as mustard, soap liniment or the ordinary white liniment composed of oil of turpentine, solution of ammonia and olive oil. The food should be soft mashes and gruel of oatmeal, with carrots and green food, and small and frequent quantities of scalded oats in addition when convalescence has been established. Dourine, maladie du coit, or covering disease of horses, is a contagious malady caused by the Trypanosoma equiperdum, and characterized by specific lesions of the male and female Dour- genital organs, the lymphatic and central nervous sys- ae ' _° r terns. It occurs in Arabia and continental Europe, and ^disease ^as recent 'y been carried from France to the United States of America (Montana, Nebraska, the Dakotas, Iowa and Illinois) and to Canada. In some of its features it resembles human syphilis, and it is propagated in the same manner. From one to ten days after coitus, or in the stallion not unfrequently after some weeks, there is irritation, swelling and a livid redness of the external organs of generation (in stallions the penis may shrink), followed by unhealthy ulcers, which appear in successive crops, often at considerable intervals. In mares these are near the clitoris, which is frequently erected, and the animals rub and switch the tail about, betraying uneasiness. In horses the eruption is_ on the penis and sheath. In the milder forms there is little constitutional disturbance, and the patients may recover in a period varying from two weeks to two months. In the severe forms the local swell- ing increases by intermittent steps. In the mare the vulva is the seat of a deep violet congestion and extensive ulceration; pustules appear on the perinaeum, tail and between the thighs; the lips of the vulva are parted, exposing the irregular, nodular, puckered, ulcerated and laraaceous-looking mucous membrane. If the mare happen to be pregnant, abortion occurs. In all cases emaciation sets in; lameness of one or more limbs occurs; great debility is manifested, and this runs on to paralysis, when death ensues after a miserable existence of from four or five months to two years. In horses swelling of the sheath may be the only symptom for a long time, even for a year. Then there may follow dark patches of extravasated blood on or swellings of the penis; the testicles may become tumefied; a dropsical engorgement extends forward beneath the abdomen and chest; the lymphatic glands in different parts of the body may be enlarged; pustules and ulcers appear on the skin; there is a discharge from the eyes and nose; emacia- tion becomes extreme; a weak and vacillating movement of the posterior limbs gradually increases, as in the mare, to paralysis ; and after from three months to three years death puts an end to loathsomeness and great suffering. This malady appears to be spread only by the act of coition. The indications for its suppres- sion and extinction are therefore obvious. They are (1) to prevent diseased animals coming into actual contact, especially per coitum, with healthy ones; (2) to destroy the infected; and (3) as an addi- tional precautionary measure, to thoroughly cleanse and disinfect the stables, clothing, utensils and implements used for the sick horse. Various medicines have been tried in the treatment of slowly developing cases of dourine, and the most successful remedy is atoxyb— a prepaiation of arsenic. Horse-pox, which is somewhat rare, is almost, if not quite, identical with cow-pox, being undistinguishable when inoculated on men and cattle. It most frequently attacks the limbs, though it may appear on the face and other parts of the body. rae " There is usually slight fever; then swelling, heat and J>ox " tenderness are manifest in the part which is to be the seat of erup- tion, usually the heels; firm nodules form, increasing to one-third or one-half an inch in diameter; the hair becomes erect; and the skin, if light-coloured, changes to an intense red. On the ninth to the twelfth day a limpid fluid oozes from the surface and mats the hairs together in yellowish scabs ; when one of these is removed, there is seen a red, raw depression, whereon the scab was fixed. In three or four days the crusts fall off, and the sores heal spontaneously. No medical treatment is needed, cleanliness being requisite to prevent the pocks becoming sloughs. If the inflammation runs high, a weak solution of carbolic acid may be employed. • Diseases of Cattle. The diseases of the bovine species are not so numerous as those of the horse, and the more acute contagious maladies are dealt with under Rinderpest and other articles already mentioned. Tuberculosis is a most formidable and widespread disease of cattle, and it is assuming greater proportions every year, in con- sequence of the absence of legislative measures for its Taber* suppression. It is a specific disease, contracted through cutosis cohabitation, and caused by the Bacillus tuberculosis, dis- covered by Koch in 1882. Infection takes place by inhalation of the bacilli or their spores, derived from the dried expectorate or other discharges of tuberculous animals; by ingestion of the bacilli carried in food, milk or water, or by inoculation of a wound of the skin or of a mucous or serous membrane. Occasionally the disease is transmitted by an infected female to the foetus in utero. Its infective properties and communicability to other species render it a serious danger to mankind through the con- sumption of the milk or flesh of tuberculous cows. The organs chiefly involved are the lymphatic glands, lungs, liver, intestine and the serous membranes — the characteristic tubercles or " grapes " varying in size from a millet seed to immense masses weighing several pounds. The large diffused nodular growths are found principally in the chest and abdomen attached to the membranes lining these cavities. The symptoms somewhat resemble those of contagious pleuro- pneumonia (q-v.) in its chronic form, though tubercles, sometimes 111 large numbers, are often found after death in the bodies of cattle which exhibited no sign of illness during life and which when killed were in excellent condition. When the lungs are extensively involved there are signs of constitutional disturbance, irregular appetite, fever, difficult breathing, dry cough, diarrhoea, wasting and debility, with enlarged throat glands, and, in milch cows, variation in the quantity of milk. Auscultation of the chest dis- covers dullness or absence of respiratory sounds over the affected parts of the lungs. If the animal is not killed it becomes more and more emaciated from anaemia, respiratory; difficulty, defective nutrition and profuse diarrhoea. Tuberculosis of the mammary glands usually begins as a slowly developing, painless, nodular induration of one quarter of the udder. The milk at first may be normal in quantity and quality, but later it becomes thin or watery and assumes a blue tint. Cattle with tubercular lesions unaltered by retrogressive changes may appear to be in an ordinary state of health, and in such animals the existence of _ the disease can only be discovered by resorting to the tuberculin test. Tuber- culin, as prepared for the purpose of diagnosis, is a sterilized culture of tubercle bacilli, and when employed with proper precautions it causes a marked rise of temperature in affected cattle, but in IO VETERINARY SCIENCE no n -tuberculous animals it has no appreciable action. Medical treatment is of little if any avail. Preventive measures are of the utmost importance. Animals proved free of tuberculous taint should alone be bred from, and those found diseased should be at once completely segregated or slaughtered. Before being used as food the flesh should be well cooked, and the milk from tuber- culous cows should be boiled or heated to a temperature of 155° F. Black-quarter, or black-leg, is a specific, inoculabte disease which occurs in young stock from a few months to two years old, in Black- various parts of the country, and generally in low-lying Quarter damp situations. It was classed with anthrax until 1879. when its nature was investigated by Arloing, Cor- nevua and Thomas, who termed it symptomatic anthrax {Charbon symptomatique) — a misleading name for a disease which is perfectly distinct from anthrax. This disease is caused by the Bacillus Chauvaei, and natural infection takes place through small wounds of the legs and feet or other parts. At first it is a local disease affecting usually a hind quarter, though sometimes the character- istic swelling forms on the shoulder, neck, breast, loins or flank. The chief symptoms are sudden loss of appetite, accelerated pulse and respiration, high temperature, debility, lameness or stiffness, followed by the formation of a small, painful swelling which rapidly increases in extent, becomes emphysematous, and in the centre cold and painless. Incision of the tumour gives escape to a red, frothy, sour-smelling fluid. This disease runs its course very rapidly and nearly always terminates fatally, even when medical treatment is promptly applied. Infection can be prevented by- resorting to protective inoculation by one of the methods intro- duced by Arloing, Kitt and others. The natural virus-muscle from the lesion, dried, reduced to powder and attenuated by heat at a high temperature, and a pure culture of the causal organism, are employed as vaccines. The vaccine is introduced subcutane- ously at the tip of the tail or behind the shoulder. Immunity lasts for about twelve months. Abortion, or the expulsion of the foetus before viability, is a contagious disease in cows. In a herd a case of abortion or pre- Abortloa mature birth from accident or injury sometimes occurs, but when a number of pregnant females abort the cause is due to specific infection of the womb. The microbe of abortion inducescatarrhofthe uterus and the discharge contains the infective agent. The virus may be transmitted by the bull, by litter, attendants, utensils, or anything which has been contaminated by the discharge from an infected cow. Whenever abortion occurs in a shed the cow should be at once isolated from the others, if they are pregnant, and cleansing and disinfection immediately resorted to, or preferably the pregnant cows should be quickly removed out of the shed and every care should be taken to keep them away from the affected cow and its discharges; the litter and the aborted foetus being burned or otherwise completely destroyed, and the cowshed thoroughly disinfected with quicklime. To prevent further infection, the hinder parts of the in-calf cows should be washed and disinfected from time to time. , Contagious mammitis is a common disease in milch cows. It has been investigated by Nocard and Mollereau, and proved Con- to ^ e caused by a streptococcus which is transmitted taeious froro one cow to another by the hands of the milkers. mammitis. The microbe gains access to the quarter by the teat and induces catarrhal inflammation of the milk ducts and sinuses, with induration of the gland tissue. This disease develops slowly, and except in cases complicated by suppuration, there is little or no constitutional disturbance, though sometimes the affected cows lose condition. The milk at first preserves its normal appear- ance, but is less in quantity; it curdles quickly, is acid, and when mixed with good milk produces clotting; then it becomes thin and watery, and finally viscous, yellowish and foetid. At the base of the teat of the affected quarter induration begins and gradually extends upwards, and if not checked the disease passes From one quarter to another until the whole udder is attacked. Prevention can be secured by washing and disinfecting the udder and teats and the milkers' hands before and after milking. Diseased cows should be isolated, their milk destroyed or boiled and fed to pigs, and after each milking the teats should be injected with a warm solution of boracic acid or sodium fluoride. Infected cowsheds should be thoroughly cleansed and disinfected. Parturient paralysis, or mammary toxaemia, also known as milk fever, though neither a febrile nor a contagious malady, was until quite recently a very fatal affection of dairy cows. It is caused by a nerve poison which is formed in the udder soon after parturition; and, according to Schmidt, the toxin enters the circulation and affects especially, the central nervous system and the muscles, and in a less degree all the organs of the body. This disease usually attacks good milking cows within a few days of an easy labour and seldom before the third or fourth parturition. In twenty-four to forty-eight hours after calving the cow becomes excited and restless, strikes at the abdomen with the hind feet, whisks the tail, lows, grinds the teeth, staggers, falls, makes ineffectual attempts to rise, and eventually lies comatose, stretched on her side with the head extended or inclined towards the shoulder. The eyes are dull, injected and insensitive ; general Milk lever. sensation, voluntary motion and the power of swallowing are lost. Secretion of milk fails, digestion is suspended, fermentation of the contents of the paunch sets in, with tympany, constipation and retention of urine. The pulse becomes feeble or imperceptible. Respiration is slow, sometimes stertorous or groaning, and the temperature is low or subnormal. If not treated the animal dies in two or three days from prolonged coma or heart failure; The curative treatment of this disease continued very unsatis- factory until 1897, when Schmidt, a veterinarian of Kolding, Denmark, introduced the method of injecting the teats with a solution of potassium iodide in conjunction with insufflation of atmospheric air. The immediate results of this line of treatment were astonishing. Rapid recovery became the rule, and in most cases the comatose condition disappeared in less than six hours, and the average mortality (40 to 60%) was reduced to 6%. Afterwards chinosol and other antiseptics were substituted for the potassium salt, and later pure oxygen or atmospheric air alone was injected into the udder, with the result of increasing the recoveries to 99 %. Cowpox is a contagious disease of much less frequent occurrence now than formerly, probably owing to improved hygienic manage- ment. In many localities the disease appears in all cowpox. heifers which have recently calved on certain farms. There is usually a slight premonitory fever, which i3 generally overlooked; this is succeeded by some diminution in the quantity of the milk, with some increased coagulability, and by the appear-, ance of the eruption or " pox " on the udder and teats. In well- observed cases the udder is hot and tender on manipulation for a day or two previous to the development of small pale-red nodules about the size of peas; these increase in dimensions to from three- fourths to one inch in diameter by the eighth or tenth day, when their contents have become fluid and they present a depressed centre. This fluid, at first clear and limpid, becomes yellowish white as it changes to pus, and soon dries up, leaving a hard, button- shaped black crust, which gradually becomes detached. On the teats, owing to the handling of the milker or to the cow lying on, the hard ground or on straw, the vesicles are early ruptured and sores are formed, which often prove troublesome and may cause inflammation of the udder. Actinomycosis, though affecting man, horses, pigs and other creatures, is far more common in the bovine species. _ The fungus {Actinomyces) may be found in characteristic nodules in various parts of the body, but it usually invades the bones mycos'ts of the jaws, upper and lower, or the soft parts in the ' neighbourhood of .these; as the tongue, cheeks, face, throat and glands in its vicinity. About the head the disease appears to com* mence with slight sores on the gums or mucous membrane of the mouth or with ulcers alongside decaying teeth, and these extend slowly into the tissues* If the jaw is affected; a. large rounded tumour grows from it, the dense outer bone becoming absorbed before the increasing soft growth within. Soon the whole becomes ulcerated and purulent discharges take place, in which are found the minute, hard, yellow granules which contain the fungus. When the tongue is affected, it becomes enlarged and rigid; hence the designation of " wooden tongue " given to it by the Germans. In the course of time the surface of the organ becomes ulcerated, and yellowish masses or nodules may be seen on the surface. Sometimes the entire face is involved, the lips and nostrils becoming swollen, hard and immovable, often rendering respiration difficult. Around the throat there are rounded dense swellings, implicating the glands. When the disease is well-defined and of. slight extent, the parts involved may be removed by the knife, wholly or partially. If the latter only, then the remaining affected tissues should be dressed with tincture of iodine or iodized carbolic acid. Chromic acid has also been found useful. A course of potassium iodide internally is sometimes curative and always beneficial. Diseases of Sheep. The contagious diseases of the sheep (other than those of foot- and-mouth disease, anthrax, rinderpest, black-quarter) are com- paratively few. The formidable disorder of sheep-pox is confined chiefly to the con- tinent of Europe. It is extremely contagious and fatal, and in these and some other characteristics resembles human smallpox. : . From three to twelve days after being exposed to infec- Mp " tinn the sheep appears dull and listless, and eats little, if ^** anything; the temperature rises; there are frequent tremblings; tears flow from the eyes; and there is a nasal discharge. Red patches appear inside the limbs and under the abdomen ; and on them, as well as on other parts where the skin is thin, dark red spots show themselves, which soon become papules, with a deep hard base. These are generally conical, and the apex quickly becomes white from the formation of pus. This eruption is char- acteristic and unmistakable ; and the vesicles or pustules may remain isolated (discrete pox) or coalesce into large patches (con- fluent pox). The latter form of the disease is serious. In bad cases the eruption may develop on the eyes and in the respiratory and digestive passages. The course of the disease lasts about three weeks or a month, and the eruption passes through the same VETERINARY SCIENCE ii Swine fever. stages as that of cowpox. The mortality may extend from w% in mild outbreaks to 90 or 95 % in very virulent ones. Diseased animals should be sheltered, and fed on nourishing food, especially gruels of oatmeal flour or linseed; acidulated water may be allowed. If there is sloughing of the skin or extensive sores, oxide of zinc ointment should be applied. But treatment should not be adopted unless there is general infection over a wide extent of country. All diseased animals should be destroyed, as well as those which have been in contact with them, and thorough disin- fection resorted to. Foot-rot is a disease of the claws of sheep. It occurs most frequently in badly drained, low-lying, marshy land, and is caused by the Bacillus necrophorus. Infection appears to be Poot-roU transmitted by cohabitation, litter, manure and in- fected pastures. The disease begins at the sole or between the claws and gradually extends, causing changes in the bones and tendons, with suppuration, degeneration of horn and sloughing. The symptoms are lameness, foot or feet hot, tender and swollen at the coronet; the horn soft and rotten. Affected sheep when feeding may rest on the knees, or, if fore and hind feet are involved, they lie down. consJ"antly. The claws must be cleansed, loose and underrun horn removed, abscesses opened, and the foot thor- oughly disinfected and protected from, further infection by an appropriate bandage. Some cases require daily dressing, and all affected feet should receive frequent attention. When large numbers of sheep are attacked they should be slowly driven through a foot-bath containing an antiseptic solution. Pastures on which foot-rot has been contracted should be avoided, the feet examined every month or oftener, and where necessary pared and dressed with pine tar. Diseases of the Pig. The pig may become affected with anthrax, foot-and-mouth disease and tuberculosis, and it also has its own particular variola. But the contagious diseases which cause enormous destruction of pigs are swine fever and swine erysipelas in Great Britain, hog cholera and swine plague in the United States, and swine erysipelas and swine plague in France, Germany and other countries of the European continent. Swine fever is an exceedingly infectious disease, caused by a bacillus, and associated with ulceration of the intestine, enlarge- ment of the lymphatic glands, and limited disease of other organs. It is spread with great facility by mediate as well as immediate contagion ; the virus can be carried by apparently healthy pigs from an infected piggery, by litter, manure, food, attendants, dogs, cats, vermin, crates, troughs or anything which has been soiled by the discharges from a diseased pig. It is generally very rapid in its course, death ensuing in a very few days, and when the animal survives, recovery is pro- tracted. After exposure to infection the animal^ exhibits signs of illness by dullness, weakness, shiverings, burying itself in the litter, disinclination to move, staggering gait, great thirst, hot dry snout, loss of appetite, and increased pulse, respiration and temperature (105 F.). Red and violet patches appearon the skin; there is a hacking cough; nausea is followed by vomiting ; diarrhoea ensues; the hind legs become paralysed; stupor sets in, and the animal perishes. Treatment should not be attempted. Notification of the existence of swine fever is compulsory, and outbreaks are dealt with by the Board of Agricultnre and Fisheries. To suppress the disease kill all affected pigs and those which have been in contact with them; burn or deeply bury the carcasses and litter, and cover with quicklime. Disinfect everything that may have been contaminated with the virus. Diseases of the Dog. The contagious diseases of the dog are likewise very few, but the one which attracts most attention is common and generally serious. This is what is popularly known as distemper. It is peculiar to the canine species, for there is no evidence temper. t ^ at j t can ^ >e convC y ec i to other animals, though the different families of Carnivora appear each to be liable to a similar disease. Distemper is a specific fever which most frequently attacks young dogs, its effects being primarily developed in the respiratory passages, though the brain, spinal chord and abdominal organs may subsequently be involved. Highly bred and pet dog^s suffer more severely than the commoner and hardier kinds. It is a most infectious disease, and there is much evidence to prove that it owes its existence and prevalence solely to its virulence. One attack confers immunity from another. The symptoms are rigors, sneezing, dullness, loss of appetite, desire for warmth, and increased temperature, respiration and pulse. The eyes are red, and the nose, at first dry and harsh, becomes smeared with the discharge which soons begins to flow from the nostrils. _ Suppuration also begins at the eyes; vision is more or less impaired by the mucus and pus, and often the cornea becomes ulcerated, and even per- forated. There is a cough, which in some cases is so violent as to induce vomiting. Deliihty rapidly ensues, and emaciation is soon apparent; diarrhoea in the majority of cases sets in;the body emits an unpleasant odour; ulceration of the mouth is noticed; the nostrils become obstructed by the discharge from them; con- vulsions generally come on; signs of brottchitis, pneumonia, jaundice or other complications manifest themselves; and in some instances there is a pustular or vesicular eruption on the skin. In fatal cases the animal dies in a state of marasmus. Many which recover are affected with chorea for a long time afterwards. Here, again, good nursing is all-important. Comfort and cleanliness, with plenty of fresh air, must be ensured. Debility being the most serious feature of the disease, the strength should be maintained or restored until the fever has run its course. Light broth, beef tea, or bread and milk, or these alternately, may be allowed as diet. Preparations of quinine, given from the commencement of the attack in a little wine, such as sherry, have proved very bene- ficial. Often a mild laxative is required. Complications should be treated as they arise. The disease being extremely infectious, pre- cautions should be adopted with regard to other dogs. Protective vaccines and antidistemper sera have been introduced by Lignieres, Copeman, Phisalix and others, but their action is uncertain. The formidable affliction known as hydrophobia (q.v.) or rabies is treated of under that name. Principal Parasites of Domestic A nimals. Perhaps the commonest worm infesting the horse is Ascaris equorum, or common lumbricoid. The males are from 6 to 8 in. long; females 7 to 17 in. They are found in almost i n torse. every part of the intestine. When present in considerable numbers they produce slight intermittent colicky pains, an unthrifty condition of the skin, with staring coat. Although the horse feeds well, it does not improve in condition, but is " tucked up J ' and anaemic. Among the principal remedies is a mixture of tartar emetic, turpentine and linseed oil. Santonin, ferrous sulphate, common salt and arsenic are also employed. Sclerostomum equinum or palisade worm is a moderate-sized nematode, having a straight body with a somewhat globular head — males | to i\ in., females 1 in. to 2 in. long. This worm is found in the intestines, especially the double colon and caecum. The embryos are developed in the eggs after their expulsion from the host, and are lodged in moist mud, where, according to Cobbold, they change their first skin in about three weeks, after which they probably enter the body of an intermediate bearer, whence they are conveyed in food or water to the digestive canal of the horse, the ultimate host. They then penetrate the mucous membrane and enter the blood vessels, where they are sexually differentiated and give rise to aneurism. After a time they resume their wanderings and reach the large intestine, where they form small submucous cysts and rapidly acquire sexual maturity.- They are most dangerous when migrating from one organ to another. They are found in the anterior mesenteric artery, but they alsoj produce aneurism of the coeliac axis and other abdominal blood vessels, including the aorta. These parasitic aneurisms are a frequent cause of fatal colic in young horses. Sclerostomum tetracanthum, or four-spined sclerostome, is about the same size as the palisade worm, and like it is found in the colon, caecum and small intestine. It finds its way to the bowel in water or green fodder swallowed by the horse. It is a true blood-sucker, and its development is very similar to that of the S. equinum, except that it directly encysts itself in the mucous membrane and does not enter the blood vessels. The symptoms of its presence are emacia- tion, colicky pains, harsh unthrifty coat, flabby muscles, flatu- lence, foetid diarrhoea, anaemia, great weakness and, sometimes, haemorrhagic enteritis. Treatment of equine sclerostomiasis fre- quently fails, as the remedies cannot reach the encysted parasites. As vermicides, thymol, areca, ferrous sulphate, tartar emetic, arsenic, sodium chloride, oil of turpentine, lysol, creolin and carbolic acid have been found useful. Oxyurts curvula, or pin worm, is a common parasite of the large intestine. The anterior part of the body is curved and the tail sharply pointed. The male is seldom seen. The female measures I to I^ in. in length. It is found in the caecum, colon and rectum, and it causes pruritus of the anus, from which it may be found pro- jecting. This parasite is best treated by means of a cathartic, followed by a course of mineral tonics, and repeated rectal injections of sodium chloride solution, infusion of quassia or diluted creolin. The cestodes or taeniae of the horse are insignificant in size and they produce no special symptoms. Three species — Anoplocephala perfohata (26-28 mm. long), A. plicata (r^-Scm.) and A. tnamtllana (1-3 cm.) — have been described. The first is found in the small intestine and caecum, rarely in the colon ; the second occurs in the small intestine and stomach; the third in the small intestine. Generally a horse may be proved to be infested with tape-worm by finding some of the ripe segments or proglottides in the faeces. The best remedy is male fern extract with turpentine and linseed oil. , Gastrophilus equi, or the common bot-fly, is classed with the parasites on account of its larval form living as a parasite. The bot-fly deposits its eggs on the fore-arm, knee and shank of the horse at pasture. In twenty-four hours the ova are hatched and the embryo, crawling on the skin, causes itching, which induces the horse to nibble or lick the part, and in this way the embryo is carried by the tongue to the mouth and swallowed. In the stomach the embryo attaches itself to the mucous membrane, moults three times, in- creases in size and changes from a blood-red to a yellowish-brown 12 VETERINARY SCIENCE colour. The bot remains in the stomach till the following spring, when it detaches itself, passes into the food and is discharged with the faeces. When very numerous, bots may cause symptoms of indigestion, though frequently their presence in the stomach is not indicated by any sign of ill-health. They are difficult to dislodge or kill. Green food, iodine, naphthalin, hydrochloric acid and vegetable bitters have been recommended ; but the most effective remedy is a dose of carbon bisulphide given in a gelatin capsule, repeated in twelve hours, and followed twelve hours later by an aloetic ball. Of the parasites which infest cattle and sheep mention will only be made of Distomum hepaticum, or common fluke, which causes liver-rot or distomiasis, a very fatal disease of lambs and rf h ^eep under two years old. It occurs most frequently anas eep* a f ter a we ^ season on low-lying, marshy or undrainedland,- but it may be carried to other pastures by sheep which have been driven through a fluke-infested country. and sheep allowed to graze along ditches by the roadside may contract the parasite. For a full description of its anatomy and development see Trematodes. Preventive treatment comprises the destruction of flukes and snails; avoidance of low-lying, wet pastures draining infested land, and top-dressing with salt, gas-lime, lime water or soot; supplying sheep with pure drinking water; placing rock-salt in the fields, and providing extra food and a tonic lick consisting of salt, aniseed, ferrous sulphate, linseed and peas-meal. Husk, hoose or verminous bronchitis of calves is caused by Strongylus micrurus, or pointed-tailed strongyle, a thread-worm i to 3 in. long, and S. piilmonaris, a similar but smaller nematode; and the corresponding disease of sheep is due to S. filaria and S. rufescens. The male S. filaria is I to 2 in., and the female 2 to 4 in. long^. They are white in colour and of the thickness of ordinary sewing cotton. The 5". rufescens is thinner and shorter than S. filaria and its colour is brownish red. The development of these strongyles is not accurately known. When expelled and deposited in water or moist earth, the embryos may live for many months. Iloose occurs in spring and continues until autumn, when it may be most severe. In sheep the symptoms are coughing, at first strong, with long intervals, then weak and frequent, leaving the sheep distressed and wheezing; discharge from the nose, salivation, occasional retching with expulsion of parasites in frothy mucus, advancing emaciation, anaemia and weakness. In calves the symptoms are similar but less acute. Various methods of cure have been tried. Remedies given by the mouth are seldom satisfactory. Good results have Followed fumigations with chlorine, burning sulphur, tar, &c, and intra-tracheal injections of chloroform, iodine and ether, oil of turpentine, carbolic acid, and opium tincture, or chloroform, ether, creosote and olive oil. The system should be supported with as much good nourishing food as possible. The principal parasites which infest the alimentary canal of cattle or sheep arc strongyles and taeniae. The strongyles of the fourth stomach are S. contortus, or twisted wire-worm (male 10 to 20 mm., female 20 to 30 mm. long), S. convoluhis (female ro to 13 mm.), S. ceroicornis (female 10 to 12 mm.), S. gracilis (female 3 to 4 mm.), and an unnamed species (female 9 mm. long) discovered by McFadyean in 1896. In the contents of the stomach the contortus may easily be recognized, but the other parasites, owing to their small size or situation in the mucous membrane, may be overlooked in an ordinary post-mortem examination. The contortus, which is best known, may serve as the type. It lives on the blood which it abstracts from the mucous membrane, and, according to the state of reoletion, its body may be red or white. The ova of this worm are discharged m the faeces and spread over the pastures by infected sheep. The ova hatch in a few days, and, according to Ransom, within a fortnight embryos one-thirtieth of an inch long may be found encased in a chUinoid investment, which protects them from the effects of excessive cold, heat or moisture. When the ground is damp and the temperature not too low, the embryos creep up the leaves of grasses and other plants, but when the temperature is below 40 F. they are inactive (Ransom). Sheep feeding on infected pasture gather the young worms and convey them to the fourth stomach, where they attain maturity in two or three weeks. In wet weather the embryos may be washed into ponds and ditches, and cattle and sheep may swallow them when drinking. Strongyles cause loss of appetite, irritation and inflam- mation of the stomach and bowel, diarrhoea, anaemia, progressive emaciation, and, if not destroyed or expelled, a lingering death from exhaustion, The success or failure of medicinal treatment depends on the degree of infestation. A change of pasture is always de- sirable, and as remedies a few doses of oil of turpentine in linseed oil, or a solution of'lysol or cyllin, and a powder consisting of arsenic, ferrous sulphate, areca, nux vomica and common salt may be tried. The ox may be the bearer of three and the sheep of twelve species of taeniae, and of these the commonest is Moniezia {taenia} expanse, which is more frequently found in sheep than in cattle. It is the longest tapeworm, being from 6 to 30 ft. in sheep and from 40 to 100 ft. in cattle. Its maximum breadth is f- in.; it is found in the small intestine, and sometimes in sufficient numbers in lambs to obstruct the bowel. Infested animals are constantly spreading the ripe segments over the pastures, from which the ova or embryos are gathered by sheep. The symptoms are inappetence, dry harsh wool, weakness, anaemia arid diarrhoea with segments of the worms in the faeces. Various drugs have been prescribed for the expulsion of tapeworms, but the most useful are male fern extract, turpentine, kamala, kousso, aloes and linseed oil. Very young animals should be supported by dry nourishing food and tonics, including salt and ferrous sulphate. The principal round-worms of the intestine of ruminants are Ascaris vitulorum, or calf ascarid, Strongylus filicollis, S. venlricosus, Sderoslomum hyposiomum, Anckylostomum cernuum and Tricho- cephalus affinis, or common whip-worm, which sometimes causes severe symptoms in sheep. For a full account of the development of Cysticercus bovis, or beef measle, the larval form of Taenia saginala of the human subject, see Tapeworms. Another bladder-worm, found in the peritoneum of sheep and cattle, is Cysticercus tenui- collis, or slender-necked hydatid, the larval form of Taenia marginata of the dog. It seldom produces serious lesions. An important hydatid of ruminants in Coenurus cerebralis, which produces in sheep, cattle, goats and deer gid or sturdy, a peculiar affection of the central nervous system characterized by congestion, compression of the brain, vertigo, inco-ordination, and other symptohis of cerebro- spinal paralysis. This bladder-worm is the cystic form of Taenia coenurus of the dog. It is found in the cranial cavity, resting on the brain, within its substance or at its base, and sometimes in the spinal canal. The symptoms vary with the position and number of the vesicles. In an ordinary case the animal feeds intermittently or not at all, appears unaccountably nervous or very dull, more or less blind and deaf, with glazed eye, dilated pupil, the head twisted or inclined always to one side — that occupied by the cyst — and when moving the sheep constantly tends to turn in the same direction. When the vesicle is deep-seated or within the cerebral lobe, the sheep carries the head low, brings the feet together and turns round and round like a dog preparing to lie down. W r hen the developing cyst exerts pressure at the base of the cerebellum, the sheep re- peatedly falls and Tolls o\ r er. In other cases the chief symptoms may be frequent falling, always on the same side, high trotting action with varying length of step, advancing by rearing and leaping, complete motor paralysis, and in spinal cases posterior paralysis with dragging of the hind limbs. Medicinal treatment is of no avail, but in some cases the hydatid can be removed by trephining the skull. Gid may be prevented by attending to the treatment of dogs infested with the tapeworm. The helminthes of the pig, although not very detrimental to the animal itself, are nevertheless of great importance as regards the entozoa of man. Allusion must be made to Trichinella spiralis, which causes trichinosis. The male is rVt-h, fl be the female Jth in. long, and the embryos j&th to ^th in. p ™' The ova measure TsVT» tn * n - i n their long diameter; they are hatched within the body of the female worm. When scraps of trichinqus flesh or infested rats have been ingested by the pig, the cysts en- closing the larval trichinae arc dissolved by the gastric juice in about eighteen hours, and the worms are found free in the intestine. In twenty-four to forty-eight hours later these larvae, having under- gone certain transformations, become sexually mature; then they copulate, and after an interval the embryos leave the body of the female worm and immediately begin to penetrate the intestinal wall in order to pass into various voluntary muscles, where they become encysted. About twelve days elapse from the time they begin their wandering. Usually each larva is enveloped in a capsule, but two or even three larvae have been found in one investment. They have been known to live in their capsules for. eighteen months to two years. Cysticercus cellulosae is the larval form of Taenia solium of man (see Tapeworms). " Measlv pork " is caused by the presence in the flesh of the pig of this entozoon, which is bladder-like in form. It has also been discovered in the dog. Other important parasites of the pig are Stephanurus dentatus, or crown-tailed strongyle, Echinorhynchus gigas, or thorn-headed worm, Ascaris suis, or pig ascarid, and Strongyloides suis. For these the most useful remedies arc castor oil seeds, given with the food, and oil of turpentine in milk, followed by a dose of Epsom salts. Of all the domesticated animals the dog is by far the most fre- quently infested with worms. A very common round-worm is Ascaris marginata (3 to 8 in. long), a variety of the ascarid (A. mysiax) of the cat. It occurs in the intestine or stomach of young dogs. The symptoms arc emaciation, drooping belly, irritable skin, irregular appetite, vomiting the worms in mucus, colic and diarrhoea. The treatment comprises the administration of areca or santonin in milk, followed by a dose of purgative medicine. A nematode, Filaria immitis, inhabits the heart of the dog, and its larvae may be found in the blood, causing endocarditis, obstruction of the vessels, and fits, which often end in death. Spiroptera sanguinolenta may be found in the^ dog encysted in the wall of the stomach. Other nematodes of the dog are Anchylostomuni trigonocephalum, which causes frequent bleeding from the nose and pernicious anaemia, and Trichocephalus depressius- culus, or whip-worm, which is found in the caecum. The dog harbours eight species of taeniae and five species of Bothriocephalus, Taenia serrata, about 3 ft. in length, is found in about 10% of fa the dog. VETERINARY SCIENCE 13 English dogs, most frequently in sporting dogs and those employed on farms, owing to their eating the viscera of rabbits, &c, in which the larval form (Cysticercus pisiformis) of this tapeworm dwells'. T. marginaia is the largest cestode of the dog. It varies in length from 5 to 8 ft., and is fuund in the small intestine of 30% of dogs in Great Britain ; its cystic form (C. tenuicollis) occurs in the peritoneum of sheep. T. coenurus causes gid in sheep as previously stated. It seldom exceeds 3 ft. in length. Dogs contract this parasite by eating the heads of sheep infested with the bladder- worm (Coenurus cerebralis). Dipyiidium caninum, T. cucumerina, or melon seed tapeworm, is a very common parasite of dogs. It varies in length from 3 to 15 in.; its larval form (Cryptocystis trichodectis et pulicis) is found in the abdomen of the dog-flea (Pulex serraiiceps), the dog- louse (Trichodectis latus) and in the flea (P. irriians) of the human subject. The dog contracts this worm by swallowing fleas or lice containing the cryptocysts. T. echinococcus may be distinguished from the other tapeworms by its small size. It seldom exceeds i in. in length, and consists of four segments including the head. The fourth or terminal proglottis when ripe is larger than all the rest. Its cystic form is Echinococcus veterinorum, which causes hydatid disease of the liver, lunge, and other organs of cattle, pigs, sheep, horses, and even man. This affection may not be discovered during life. In well-marked cases the liver is much deformed, greatly enlarged, and increased in weight; in the ox the hydatid liver may weigh from 50 to 100 lb or more. Another tapeworm (T. serialis) sometimes occurs in the small intestine. Its cystic form is found in rodents. Bothriocephalus latus, or broad tapeworm, about 25 ft. long and I in. broad, is found in the intestine of the dog and sometimes in man. Its occurrence appears to be confined to certain parts of the European continent. Its larval form is met with in pike, turbot, tench, perch, and other fishes. The heart- shaped bothriocephalus (B. cordatus) infests the dog and man in Greenland. For the expulsion of tapeworm male fern extract has been found the most effectual agent; areca powder in linseed oil, and a combination of areca. colocynth and jalap, the dose varying according to the age, size and condition of the dog, have also proved beneficial. The parasites which cause numerous skin affections in the domesticated animals may be arranged in two groups, viz. _ _ animal parasites or Dermatozoa, and vegetable parasites erma- or D ernm [ pfiyi es _ The dermatozoa, or those which * produce pruritus, mange, scab, &c, are lice, fleas, ticks, acari or mange mites, and the larvae of certain flies. The lice of the horse are Haematopinus macrocephalus, Trichodecles pilosus and T. pubescens; those of cattle, H. eurysternus, or large ox-louse, H. vituli, or calf-louse, and T. scalaris, or small ox-louse; and sheep may be attacked by T. sphaerocephalus. or sheep-louse, and by the louse-like ked or fag (Melophagus ovinus) which belongs to the fmpiparous diptera. Dogs may be infested with two species of ice, H. piliferus and T. latus, and the pig with one, II. urius. Ticks belong to the family Ixodidae of the order Acarina. A few species have been proved responsible for the transmission of diseases caused by blood parasites, and this knowledge has greatly increased the importance of ticks in veterinary practice. The best known ticks are Ixodes ricinus, or castor-bean tick, and I. hexagonus, which are found all over Europe, and which attack dogs, cattle, sheep, deer and horses. Rhipicephalus annulatus, or Texan fever-tick of the United States, Rh. decnloralus, or hlue-tick of South Africa, and Rh. australis, or scrub-tick of Australia, transmit the parasite of red water or bovine piroplasmosis. Rh. appendiculatus carries the germs of East Coast fever, Rh- bursa is the bearer of the parasite of ovine piroplasmosis, and Rh. evertsi distributes the germs of equine biliary fever. Amblyomma hebraeum conveys the parasite of " heart-water " of cattle and sheep, and TIaemaphysalis leachi transmits the parasite of canine piroplasmosis. Hyalommaaegyptium, or Egyptian tick, Rh. simus and Rh. capensis, are common in most parts of Africa. The acari of itch, scab or mange are species of Sarcoptes, which burrow in the skin; Psoroptes, which puncture the skin and live on the surface sheltered by hairs and scurf ; and Chorioptes, which live in colonies and simply pierce the epidermis. Representatives of these three genera have been found on the horse, ox and sheep ; varieties of the first genus (Sarcoptes) cause mange in the dog and pig; and Chorioptes cynoiis sometimes invades the ears of the dog and cat. These parasites live on the exudation produced by the irritation which they excite. Another acarus (Demodex folliculorum) invades the dog's skin and sometimes occurs in other animals. It inhabits the hair follicles and sebaceous glands, and causes a very intractable acariasis — the follicular or demodecic mange of the dog (see Mite). A useful remedy for mange in the horse is a mixture of sulphur, oil of tar and whale oil, applied daily for three days, then washed off and applied again. For the dog, sulphur, olive oil and potassium carbonate, or oil of tar and fish oil, may be tried. Various approved patent dips are employed for scab in sheep. A good remedy for destroying lice may be compounded from Stavesacre powder, soft soap and hot water, applied warm to the skin. Follic- ular mange is nearly incurable, but recent cases should be treated by daily rubbing with an ointment of 5 parts cyllin and 100 parts of lanoline. The vegetable parasites, or Dermatophytes, which cause tinea or ringworm in horses, cattle and dogs, belong to five distinct genera: Trichophyton, Microsporum, Eidamella, Achorion and Oospora. Ringworm of the horse is either aTricho- Dermato- phytosis produced by one of four species of iungi (7'richo- P h y tea * phyton mentagropkytes, T. flavum, T. equinum and T. verrucosum) , or a Microsporosis caused by Microsporum audouini. Ringworm of cattle is always a Trichophytosis, and due to T. mentagropkytes.. Four different dermatophytes (J\ caninum, M. audouini var. caninum, Eidamella spinosa and Oospora canina) affect the dog, producing Trichophytic, Microsporous and Eidamellian ringworm and favus. Little is known of ringworm in sheep and swine. The fungi attack the roots of the hairs, which after a time lose their elasticity and break off, leaving a greyish-yellow, bran-like crust of epidermic products, dried blood and sometimes pus. In favus the crusts are yellow, cupped, almost entirely composed of fungi, and have an odour like that of mouldy cheese. Ringworm may affect any part of the skin, but occurs principally on the head, face, neck, back and hind quarters. It is very contagious, and it may be communicated from one species to another, and from animals to man. The affected parts should be carefully scraped and the crusts destroyed by burning; then the patches should be dressed with iodine tincture, solution of copper sulphate or carbolic acid, or with oil of tar. Bibliography.— Modern veterinary literature affords striking evidence of the progress made by the science; excellent text-books, manuals and treatises on every subject belonging to it are numerous, and arc published in every European language, while the abundant periodical press, with marked ability and discrimination, records and distributes the ever- increasing knowledge. The substantial advances in veterinary pathology, bacteriology, hygiene, surgery and preventive medicine point to a still greater rate of progress. The schools in every way are better equipped, the education and training — general and technical — of students of veterinary medicine are more comprehensive and thorough, and the appliances for observation and investigation of disease have been greatly improved. Among the numerous modern works in English on the various branches of veterinary science, the following may be mentioned; McFadvean, Anatomy of the Horse: a Dissection Guide (London, 1902) ; Chauvcau, Comparative Anatomy of the Domesticated Animals (London, 1891); Cuyer, Artistic Anatomy of Animals (London, 1905) ; Share- Jones, Surgical Anatomy of the Horse (London, x 907j; Jowett, Blood-Serum Therapy and Preventive Inoculation (London, 1906); Swithinbank and Newman, The Bacteriology of Milk (London, 1905); Fleming, Animal Plagues (London, 1882); Merillat, Animal Dentistry (London, 1905) ; Liautard, Animal Castration (9th ed., London, 1902); Moussu and Dollar, Diseases of Cattle, Sheep, Goats and Swine (London, 1905); Reeks, Common Colics of the Horse (London, 1905); Sessions, Cattle Tuberculosis (London, 1905); Scwell, Dogs: their Management (London, 1897); Hobday, Surgical Diseases of the Dog and Cat (London, 1906); Hill, Management and Diseases of the Dog (London, 1905); Sewell, The Dog's Medical Dictionary (London, 1907); Goubaux and Barrier, Exterior of the Horse (London, 1904); Reeks, Diseases of the Foot of the Horse (London, 1906); Robcrge, The Foot of the Horse (London, 1894); Jensen, Milk Hygiene: a Treatise on Dairy and Milk Inspection, &?c. (London, 1907); Smith, Manual of Veterinary Hygiene (London, 1 905) ; Fleming, Human and Animal Variolae (Condon, 1881); Hunting, The Art of Horse- shoeing (London, 1899); Fleming, Horseshoeing (London, 1900) ; Dollar and Wheatley, Handbook of Horseshoeing (London, 1898) ; Lungwitz, Text-Book of Horseshoeing (London, 1904); Axe, The Horse: its Treatment in Health and Disease (9 vols., London, 1905); Hayes, The Points of the. Horse (London, 1904); Robertson, Equine Medicine (London, 1883); Hayes, Horses on Board Ship (London, 1902); FitzWygram, Horses and Stables (London, 1901); Liautard, Lameness of Horses (London, 1888); Walley, Meat Inspection (2nd ed., London, 1901); Osrertag, Handbook of Meat Inspection (London, 1907); Courtcnay, Practice of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery (London, 1902); Williams, Principles and Practice of Veterinary Medicine (8th ed., London, 1897); J. Law, Text-book of Veterinary Medicine (5 vols., New r York, 1905); Cadiot and Dollar, Clinical Veterinary Medicine and Surgery (London, 1900); Steel, Diseases of the Ox (London, 1881); Leblanc, Diseases of the Mam- mary Gland (London, 1904); De Bruin, Bovine Obstetrics (London, 1901); Fleming, Veterinary Obstetrics (London, 1896); Dalrymple, Veterinary Obstetrics (London, 1S98); Neumann, Parasites and Parasitic Diseases of the Domesticated Animals (London, 1905); F. Smith, Veterinary Physiology (3rd ed., London, 1907); Meade Smith, Physiology of the Domestic Animals (London, 1889); Kitt, Comparative General Pathology (London, 1907); Friedberger and Frohncr, Veterinary Pathology (London, 1905); Brown, Atlas of the Pig (London, 1900) ; Rush worth , Sheep and their Diseases (London, 1903); Fleming, Operative Veterinary Surgery (London, r 903); Williams, Principles and Practice of Veterinary Surgery (10th ed., London, 1903); Mollcr and Dollar, Practice of Veterinary Surgery (London. 1904) ; Frohner, General Veterinary Surgery (New York, 1906); Merillat, Principles of Veterinary Surgery ana Surgical Pathology (London, 1907); Cadiot and Almy, Surgical H VETO Therapeutics of Domestic Animals (London, 1906); Hayes, Stable Management (London, 1903); Dun, Veterinary Medicines: their Actions and Uses (nth ed., Edinburgh, 1906); Tuson, A Pharma- copoeia (London, 1904); Hoare, Veterinary Therapeutics and Pharmacology (London, 1907); Grcssweil, The Veterinary Pharma- copoeia and Manual of Therapeutics (London, 1903) ; Winslow, Veterinary Materia Medica and Therapeutics (New York, 1901); Nunn, Veterinary Toxicology (London, 1907)1 Lavcran and Mesnil, Trypanosomata and the Trypanosomiases (London, 1907); Journal of Comparative Pathology and Therapeutics (quarterly, Edinburgh) ; The Veterinary Journal (monthly, London); The Veterinary Record (weekly, London) ; The Veterinary News (weekly. London). (G. Fl.; J. Mac.) VETO (Lat. for " I forbid "), generally the right of preventing any act, or its actual prohibition; in public law, the constitu- tional right of the competent authority, or in republics of the whole people in their primary assembly, to protest against a legislative or administrative act, and to prevent wholly, or for the time being, the validation or execution of the same. It is generally stated that this right was called into existence in the Roman republic by the tribunicia potestas, because by this authority decisions of the senate, and of the consuls and other magistrates, could be declared inoperative. Such a state- ment must, however, be qualified by reference to the facts that intcrdico, interdicimus were the expressions used, and, in general, that in ancient Rome every holder of a magistracy would check a negotiation set on foot by a colleague, his equal in rank, by his opposition and intervention. This was a consequence of the position that each of the colleagues possessed the whole power of the magistracy, and this right of intervention must have come into existence with the introduction of colleagued authorities, i.e. with the commencement of the republic. In the Roman magistracy a twofold power must be distinguished: the positive management of the affairs of the state entrusted to each indi- vidual, and the power of restraining the acts of magistrates of equal or inferior rank by his protest. As the tribuni plcbis possessed this latter negative competence to a great extent, it is customary to attribute to them the origin of the veto. In the former kingdom of Poland the precedent first set in 1652 was established by law as a constant right, that in the imperial diet a single deputy by his protest " Nie pozwalam," i.e. " I do not permit it," could invalidate the decision sanctioned by the other members. The king of France received the right of a suspensory veto at the commencement of the French Revolution, from the National Assembly sitting at Ver- sailles in 1789, with regard to the decrees of the latter, which was only to be valid for the time being against the decisions come to and during the following National Assembly, but during the period of the third session it was to lose its power if the Assembly persisted in its resolution. By this means it was endeavoured to diminish the odium of the measure; but, as is well known, the monarchy was soon afterwards entirely abol- ished. Similarly the Spanish Constitution of 181 2 prescribed that the king might twice refuse his sanction to bills laid twice before him by two sessions of the cortes, but if the third session repeated the same he could no longer exercise the power of veto. The same was the case in the Norwegian Constitution of 1814. In the French republic the president has no veto strictly so called, but he has a power somewhat resembling it. He can, when a bill has passed both Chambers, by a message to them, refer it back for further deliberation. The king or queen of England has the right to withhold sanction from a bill passed by both houses of parliament. This royal prerogative has not been exercised since 1692 and may now be considered obsolete. The governor of -an English colony with a representative legis- lature has the power of veto against a bill passed by the legis- lative body of a colony. In this case the bill is finally lost, just as a bill would be which had been rejected by the colonial council, or as a bill passed by the English houses of parliament would be if the crown were to exert the prerogative of refusing the royal assent. The governor may, however, without refusing his assent, reserve the bill for the consideration of the crown. In that case the bill does not come into force until it has either actually or constructively received the royal assent, which is in effect the assent of the English ministry, and therefore indirectly of the imperial parliament. Thus the colonial liberty of legisla- tion is made legally reconcilable with imperial sovereignty, and conflicts between colonial and imperial laws are prevented. 1 The constitution of the United States of America contains in art. i., sect. 7, par. 2, the following order: — " Every bill which shall have passed the House of Representatives and the Senate shall, before it become a law, be presented to the president of the United States; if he approve, he" shall sign it, if not, he shall return it with his objections to that house in which it shall have originated, who shall enter the objections at large on their journal and proceed to reconsider it. If, after such recon- sideration, two-thirds of that house shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be sent, together with the objections, to the other house, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and, if approved by two- thirds of that house, it shall become a law. Every order, resolution or vote to which the concurrence of the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives may be necessary (except on a question of adjournment) shall be presented to the president of the United States, and, before the same shall take effect, shall be approved by him, or, being dis- approved by him, shall be repassed by two-thirds of the Senate and House of Representatives, according to the rules and limitations prescribed in the case of a bill." In all states of the Union except one the governors, in the same manner or to a modified extent, possess the right of vetoing bills passed by the legislature. Here, therefore, we have again a suspensory veto which is frequently exercised. According to the constitution of the German empire of 1871, the imperial legislation is executed by the federal council and imperial diet; the emperor is not mentioned. In the federal council the simple majority of votes decides. But in the case of bills concerning the army, the navy and certain specially noted taxes, as well as in the case of decisions concerning the alteration of orders for the administration, and arrangements for the execution of the laws of customs and taxes, the proposal of the federal council is only accepted if the Prussian votes are on the side of the majority in favour of the same (art. vii., sect. 3). Prussia presides in the federal council. The state of things is therefore, in fact, as follows: it is not the German emperor, but the same monarch as king of Prussia, who has the right of veto against bills and decisions of the federal council, and therefore can prevent the passing of an imperial law. The superior power of the presidential vote obtains, it is true, its due influence enly in one legislative body, but in reality it has the same effect as the veto of the head of the empire. The Swiss federal constitution grants the president of the Confederation no superior position at all; neither he nor the federal council possesses the power of veto against laws or decisions of the federal assembly. But in some cantons, viz, St Gall (1831), Basel (1832) and Lucerne (1841), the veto was introduced as a right of the people. The citizens had the power to submit to a plebiscite laws which had been debated and accepted by the cantonal council (the legislative authority), and to reject the same. If this plebiscite was not demanded within a certain short specified time, the law came into force. But, if the voting took place, and if the number of persons voting against the law exceeded by one vote half the number of persons entitled to vote in the canton, the law was rejected. The absent voters were considered as having voted in favour of the law. An attempt to introduce the veto in Zurich in 1847 failed, Thurgau and SchafThausen accepted it later. Meanwhile another arrangement has quite driven it out of the field. This is the so-called " refer- endum "—properly speaking, direct legislation by the people — which has been introduced into most of the Swiss cantons. Formerly in all cantons — with the exception of the small moun- tainous districts of Uri, Schwyz, Untcrwaldcn, Zug, Glarus and Appenzell — it was not a pure democracy, but a representative constitution that prevailed: the great councillors or cantonal councillors periodically chosen by the people were the possessors of the sovereign power, and after deliberating twice passed the bills definitely. Now they have only to discuss the bills, which 1 A.V. Dicey , Introduction to the Study of the Law of Uie Constitution, pp. in seq. (6th ed., London, 1902); Sir H. Jenkyns, British Rule and Jurisdiction beyond the Seas, pp. 1 13 seq. (London, 1902). VETTER— VEVEY 15 aw printed and sent to all voters with an explanatory message; then the people on a certain day vote for the acceptance or re- jection of the law by writing " yes " or " no " on a printed voting paper, which is placed in an urn under official control. In some cantons important financial resolutions involving large state expenses are also submitted to the decision of the people. In the revised federal constitution of 1874, under certain sup- positions which have no further interest for us at present^ a facultative referendum or Initiative (i.e. the possibility of de- manding a plebiscite under exceptional circumstances) was introduced for federal laws. Since that period it has often been employed and has operated like a veto. It is evident that by the compulsory referendum in the cantons the mere veto is rendered superfluous. In examining the question as to what position the veto occupies in jurisprudence, we must separate quite different conceptions which are comprised under the same name. 1. The veto may be a mere right of intervention on the part of a magistrate against the order of another official, or against that of an authority of equal or inferior rank. This was the case in ancient Rome. To this class belong also those cases in which, as in the French republic, the president makes his " no " valid against decisions of the general councillors, and the prefect does the same against decisions of the communal councillors. The use of the expres- sion here is quite justifiable, and this veto is not confined to bills, but refers particularly to administrative measures. It affords a guarantee against the abuse of an official position. _ 2. The veto may be a safety-valve against precipitate decisions, and so a preventive measure. This task is fulfilled by the suspensory veto of the president of the United States. Similarly, to this class belong the above-mentioned prescriptions of the Spanish and Norwegian constitutions, and also the veto of the governor of an English colony against decisions of the legislature; for this protest is only intended to prevent a certain want of harmony between the general and the colonial legislation, by calling forth a renewed investigation. This veto is neither an interference with the com- petence of an authority, nor a division of the legislative power among different factors, but simply a guarantee against precipitancy in the case of a purely legislative measure. The wisdom of estab- lishing this veto power by the constitution is thus manifest. 3. It is wrong to apply the term veto to what is merely the negative side of the sanctioning of the laws, in other words, an act of sove- reignty. It would not be in accordance with the nature of a con- stitutional monarchy to declare the monarch's consent to, a law unnecessary, or make it a compulsory duty; the legislative power is divided between him and the chambers. The sovereign must therefore be perfectly at liberty to say " yes " or " no " in each single case according to his opinion. If he says the latter, we speak of it as his veto, but this — if he possesses an absolute and not merely a suspensory veto — is not an intervention and not a preventive measure, but the negative side of the exercise of the legislative power, and therefore an act of sovereignty. That this right belongs fully and entirely to the holder of sovereign power — -however he may be called — is self-evident. One chamber can also by protest prevent a hill of the other from coming into force. The " placet of the temporal power for church affairs — when it occurs — also involves in this manner in itself the veto or non placet." Where in pure democracies the people in their assembly have the right of veto or referendum, the exercise of it is also a result of the sovereign rights of legislature. (For the question of the conflict between the two houses of England, see Representation.) The peculiar power of- veto possessed by the (Prussian) president of the federal council of Germany lies on the boundary between (2) and (3). (A. v. 0.) VETTER [ Vatter or Wetter, often written, with the addition of the definite article, Vettern], a lake of southern Sweden, 80 m. long, and 18 m. in extreme breadth. It has art area of 733 sq. m., and a drainage area of 2528 sq. m.; its maximum depth in 390 ft., and its elevation above sea-level 289 ft. It drains eastward by the Motala river to the Baltic. Its waters are of remarkable transparency and blueness, its shores pictur- esque and steep on the east side, where the Omberg (863 ft.) rises abruptly, with furrowed flanks pierced by caves. The lake is subject to sudden storms. Its northern part is crossed from Karlsborg to Motala (W. to E.) by the Gota canal route. At the southern end is the important manufacturing town of Jonkoping, and 15 m. N. of it the picturesque island of Vising, with a ruined palace of the 17th century and a fine church. Vadstena, 8 m. S. of Motala, with a staple industry in lace, has a convent (now a hospital) of St Bridget or Birgitta (1383), a beautiful monastic church (1395-1424) and a castle of King Gustavus Vasa. At Alvastra, 16 m. S. again, are ruins of a Cistercian monastery of the nth century. Close to Motala are some of the largest mechanical- workshops in Sweden, building warships, machinery, bridges, &c. VETULONIUM, or Vetulonia (Etruscan Velfuna),a,n ancient town of Etruria, Italy, the site of which is probably occupied by the modern village of Vetulonia, which up to 1887 bore the name of Coionna. It lies 1130 ft. above sea-level, about 10 m. direct N.W. of Grosscto, on the N.E. side of the hills which project from the flat Maremma and form the promontory of Castiglione. The place is little mentioned in ancient literature, though Silius Italicus tells us that it was hence that the Romans took their magisterial insignia (fasces, curule chair,- purple toga and brazen trumpets), and it was undoubtedly one of the twelve cities of Etruria. Its site was not identified before 1881, and the identification has been denied in various works by C. Dotto dei Dauli, who places it on the Poggio Castiglione near Massa Marittima, where scanty remains of buildings (possibly of city walls) have also been found. This site seems to agree better with the indications of medieval documents. But certainly an Etruscan city was situated on the hill of Coionna, where there are remains of city walls of massive limestone, in almost hori- zontal courses. The objects discovered in its extensive necro- polis, where over icoo tombs have been excavated, are now in the museums of Grosscto and Florence. The most important were surrounded by tumuli, which still form a prominent feature in the landscape. See G. Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria (London, 1883), ii. 263; Notizie degli Scavi, passim; I. Falchi, Ricerche di Vetulonia (Frato, 1881), and other works, especially Vetulonia e la sua necropoli antiehissima (Florence, 1891); G. Sordini, Vetulonia (Spoleto, 1894) and references. (T. As.) VEUILLOT, LOUIS (1813-1883), French journalist and man of letters., was born ot humble parents at Boynes (Loiret) on the nth of October 1 8 1 3 . When Louis Veuillot was five years old his parents removed to Paris. After a very slight education he entered a lawyer's office, and was sent in 1830 to serve on a Rouen paper, and afterwards to Perigueux. He returned to Paris in 1837, and a year later, visited Rome during Holy Week. There he embraced extravagant ultramontane sentiments, and was from that time an ardent champion of Catholicism. The results of his conversion appeared in Peler- inage en Suisse (1839), Rome e-t Larette (1841) and other works. In 1843 he entered the staff of the Univers religieux. His violent methods of journalism had already provoked more than one duel, and for his polemics against the university of Paris in the Univers he was imprisoned for a short time. In 1848 he became editor of the paper, which was suppressed in i860, but revived in 1867, when Veuillot recommenced his ultra- montane propaganda, which brought about a second suppression of his journal in 1874. When his paper was suppressed Veuillot occupied himself in writing violent pamphlets directed against the moderate Catholics, the Second Empire and the Italian government. His services to the papal see were fully recog- nized by Pius IX., on whom he wrote (1878) a monograph. He died on the 7th of March 1S83. Some of his scattered papers were collected in Melanges religieux, historiques et litteraires (12 vols., 1857-75), and his Correspondance (6 vols., 1883-85) has great political interest. His younger brother, Eugene Veuillot, published (1901-4) a comprehensive and valuable life, Louis Veuillot. VEVEY [German Vivis], a small town in the Swiss canton of Vaud and near the eastern extremity of the Lake of Geneva. It is by rail 12 m. S.E. of Lausanne or 3^ m. N.W. of the Veraex- Montreux railway station, while it is well served by steamers plying over the Lake of Geneva. In 1900 it had a population of 11,781, of whom 8878 were French-speaking, while there were 82.77 Protestants to 3424 Romanists and 56 Jews. It is the second town in point of population in the canton, coming next after Lausanne, though inferior to the " agglomeration " known as Montreux. It stands at the mouth of the Veveyse and commands fine views of the snowy mountains seen over the glassy surface of the lake. The whole of the surrounding i6 VEXILLUM— VIANDEN country is covered with vineyards, which (with the entertain- ment of foreign visitors) occupy the inhabitants. Every twenty years or so (last in 1889 and 1905) the Fete des Vigncronsis held here by an ancient gild of vinedressers, and attracts much attention. Besides a railway line that joins the Montreux- Bernese Oberland line at Chamby (5 m. from Vevey and i-£ rm below Les Avants) there is a funicular railway from Vevey up the Mont Pelerin (3557 ft.) to the north-west. Vevey was a Roman settlement [Viviscus] and later formed part of the barony of Vaud, that was held by the counts and dukes of Savoy till 1536, when it was conquered by Bern. In 1798 It was freed from Bernese rule and became part of the canton du Leman (renamed canton de Vaud in 1803) of the Helvetic Republic. (W. A. B. C.) VEXILLUM (Lat. dim. of velum, piece of cloth, sail, awning, or from vehere, veetum, to carry), the name for a small ensign consisting of a square cloth suspended from a cross-piece fixed to a spear. The vexillum was strictly the ensign of the maniple, as signum was of the cohort, but the term came to be used for all standards or ensigns other than the eagle (aqmla) of the legion (see Flag). Caesar {B.G. ii. 20) uses the phrase vexillum Proponere of the red flag hoisted over the general's tent as a signal for the march or battle. The standard-bearer of the maniple was styled vexillarius, but by the time of the Empire vexillum and vexillarius had gained a new significance. Tacitus uses these terms frequently both of a body of soldiers serving apart from the legion under a separate standard, and also with the addition of some word implying connexion with a legion of those soldiers who, after serving sixteen years with the legion, continued their service, under their own vexillwn, with the legion. The term is also used for the scarf wrapped round a bishop's pastoral staff (q.v.). Modern science has adopted the word for the web or vein of a feather of a bird and of the large upper petal of flowers, such as the pea, whose corolla is shaped like a butterfly. VEXIO, or Wexio, a town and bishop's see of Sweden, capital of the district (l-an) of Kronoberg, 124 m. N.E. of Malm6 by rail. Pop. (1900) 7365. It is pleasantly situated among low wooded hills at the north end of Lake Vexio, and near the south end of Lake Helga. Its appearance is modern, for it was burnt in 1843. The cathedral of St Siegfrid dates from about 1300, but has been restored, the last time in 1898. The Smaland Museum has antiquarian and numismatic collections, a library and a bust of Linnaeus. There are iron foundries, a match factory, &c. At Ostrabo, the episcopal residence without the town, the poet Esaias Tegner died in 1846, and he is buried in the town cemetery. On the shore of Lake Helga is the royal estate of Kronoberg, and on an island in the lake the ruins of a former castle of the same name. VEZELAY, a village of France, in the department of Yonne, 10 m. W.S.W. of Avallon by road. Its population, which was over Lo,ooo in the middle ages, was 524 in 1906. It is situated on the summit and slopes of a hill on the left bank of the Cure, and owes its renown to the Madeleine, one of the largest and most beautiful basilicas in France. The Madeleine dates from the 1 2th century and was skilfully restored by Viollet-le-Duc. It consists of a narthex, with nave and aisles; a triple nave, without triforium, entered from the narthex by three door- ways; transepts; and a choir with triforium. The oldest portion of the church is the nave, constructed about 1125. Its groined vaulting is supported on wide, low, semicircular arches, and on piers and columns, the capitals of which are embellished with sculptures full of animation. The narthex was probably built about 1140. The central entrance, leading from it to the nave, is one of the most remarkable features of the church; it consists of two doorways, divided by a central pier supporting sculptured figures, and is surmounted by a tympanum carved with a representation of Christ bestowing the Holy Spirit upon His apostles. The choir and transepts are later in date than the rest of the church, which they surpass in height and grace of proportion. They resemble the eastern portion of the church of St Denis, and were doubtless built in place of a Romanesque choir damaged in a fire in 1165. A crypt beneath the choir is perhaps the relic of a previous Romanesque church which was destroyed by fire in n 20. The west facade of the Madeleine has three portals; that in the centre is divided by a pier and surmounted by a tympanum sculptured with a bas-relief of the Last Judgment. The upper portion of this front belongs to the 13th century. Only the lower portion of the northernmost of the two flanking towers is left, and of the two towers which formerly rose above the transept that to the north has disappeared. Of the other buildings of the abbey, there remains a chapter-house (13th century) adjoining the south transept. Most of the ramparts of the town, which have a circuit of over a mile, are still in existence. In particular the Porte Neuve, consisting of two massive towers flanking a gateway, is in good preservation. There are several interesting old houses, among them one in which Theodore of Beza was born. Of the old parish church, built in the 17th century, the clock-tower alone is left. A mile and a half from V£zelay, in the village of St Pere-sous-Vezelay, there is a remarkable Burgundian Gothic church, built by the monks of Vezelay in the 13th century. The west facade, flanked on the north by a fine tower, is richly decorated; its lower portion is formed of a projecting porch surmounted by pinnacles and adorned with elaborate sculpture. The history of Vezelay is bound up with its Benedictine abbey, which was founded in the Qth century under the influence of the abbey of Cluny. This dependence was soon shaken off by the younger monastery, and the acquisition of the relics of St Magdalen, soon after its foundation, began to attract crowds of pilgrims, whose presence enriched both the monks and the town which had grown up round the abbey and ac- knowledged its supremacy. At the beginning of the 12th century the exactions of the abbot Artaud, who required money to defray the expense of the reconstruction of the church, and the refusal of the monks to grant political independ- ence to the citizens, resulted in an insurrection in which the abbey was burnt and the abbot murdered. During the next fifty years three similar revolts occurred, fanned by the counts of Nevers, who wished to acquire the suzerainty over Vezelay for themselves. The monks were, however, aided by the influence both of the Pope and of Louis VII., and the towns- men were unsuccessful on each occasion. During the 12th century Vezelay was the scene of the preaching of the second crusade in 1146, and of the assumption of the cross in 1190 by Richard Cceur de Lion and Philip Augustus. The influence of the abbey began to diminish in 1280 when the Benedictines of St Maximin in Provence affirmed that the true body of St Magdalen had been discovered in their church; its decline was precipitated during the wars of religion of the 16th century, when Vezelay suffered great hardships. VIANDEN, an ancient town in the grand duchy of Luxem- burg, on the banks of the Our, close to the Prussian frontier. Pop. (1905) 2350. It possesses one of the oldest charters in Europe, granted early in the 14th century by Philip, count of Vianden, from whom the family of Nassau- Vianden sprang, and who was consequently the ancestor of William of Orange and Queen Wilhelmina of Holland. The semi-mythical foundress of this family was Bertha, " the White Lady " who figures in many German legends. The original name of Vianden was Viennensis or Vienna, and its probable derivation is from the Celtic Vien (rock). The extensive ruins of the ancient castle stand on an eminence of the little town, but the chapel which forms part of it was restored in 1849 by Prince Henry of the Netherlands. The size and importance of this castle in its prime may be gauged from the fact that the Knights* Hall could accommodate five hundred men-at-arms. A re- markable feature of the chapel is an hexagonal hole in the centre of the floor, opening upon a bare subterranean dungeon. This has been regarded as an instance of the " double chapel," but it seems to have been constructed by order of the crusader Count Frederick II. on the model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. In the neighbourhood of Vianden are other ruined castles, notably those of Stolzemburg and Falkenstein. The VIANNA DO CASTELLO— VICAIRE r 7 little town and its pleasant surroundings have been praised by many, among others by Victor Hugo, who resided here on several occasions. During his last visit he wrote his fine work V Annie terrible. In the time of the Romans the Vianden ■ valley was covered with vineyards, but at the present day its chief source of wealth is derived from the rearing of pigs. VIANNA DO CASTELLO, a seaport and the capital of the district of Vianna do Castello, Portugal; at the mouth of the river Lima, which is here crossed by the iron bridge of the Oporto- Vale n pa do Minho railway. Pop. (1900) 10,000. Vianna do Castello has manufactures of lace and dairy produce. Its fisheries are important. Salmon and lampreys are exported, both fresh and preserved. The administrative district of Vianna do Castello coincides with the northern part of the ancient province of Entre Minho e Douro (q.v.). Pop. (1900) 215^267; area, 857 sq. m. VIAREGGIO, a maritime town and sea-bathing resort of Tus- cany, Italy, in the province of Lucca, on the Mediterranean, 13 m. N.W. of Pisa by rail, 7 ft. above sea-level. Pop. (1006) 14,863 (town); 21,557 (commune). Being sheltered by dense pine-woods on the north, and its malaria having been banished by drainage, it is frequented as a winter resort, and in summer by some thousands for its sea-bathing. In 1740 the population was only 300, and in 1841, 6549. The body of Shelley was burned on the shore near Viareggio after his death by drowning in 1822. The town possesses a school of navigation and a technical school, and carries on some shipbuilding. VIATICUM (a Latin word meaning " provision for a journey"; Gr. to. k65ia), is often used by early Christian writers to denote the sacrament of the Eucharist, and is sometimes also applied to baptism. Ultimately it came to be employed in a restricted sense to denote the last communion given to the dying. The 13th canon of the council of Nicaea is to the effect that " none, even of the lapsed, shall be deprived of the last and most neces- sary viaticum (e834, of whom 8147 were negroes; (1910 census) 20,814, being the second largest city In Mississippi. It is served by the Alabama & Vicksburg, the Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific, and the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley railways, and by steamboat lines. It is built among the Walnut Hills, which rise about 260 ft. above the river. Among the principal buildings and institutions are the court-house, standing on one of the highest hills, a fine Federal building, the city hall, a state charity hospital, an 1 The channel of the Mississippi has changed greatly: until 1876 the entire city was on the Mississippi, which made a bend forming a tongue of land opposite the city; in 1876 the river cut across this tongue and formed an island, making the northern part of the city front on the shallow " Lake Centennial." The Federal govern- ment, by turning the Yazoo through a canal across the upper end of the old channel, gave the city a river front once more. infirmary, a sanatorium, a public library, the medical college of the university of Mississippi, All Saints' Episcopal College (Protestant Episcopal, 1909) for girls, Saint Francis Xavier's Academy, and Saint Aloysius College (Roman Catholic). The Civil War battle-ground has been converted into a beautiful National Military Park, embracing 1283 acres and containing numerous markers, memorials and monuments, including one (1910) to Lieut. -General Stephen Dill Lee, who was super- intendent of the Military Park from 1899 until his death in 1908. On the bluffs just beyond the northern limits of the city and ad- joining the Military Park is the Vicksburg National Cemetery, in which are the graves of 16,892 Federal soldiers (12,769 unknown). The principal industry of Vicksburg is the construction and repair of rolling stock for steam railways. It has also a dry dock and cotton compresses; and among its manufactures are cottonseed oil and cake, hardwood lumber, furniture, boxes and baskets. In 1905 the factory products were valued at $1,887,924. The city has a large trade in long-staple cotton grown in the surrounding country. It is a port of entry but has practically no foreign trade. The French built Fort St Peter near the site of Vicksburg early in the 18th century, and on the 2nd of January 1730 its garrison was murdered by the Yazoo Indians. As early as 1783 the Spanish erected Fort Nogales, and in 1798 this was taken by some United States troops and renamed Fort McHenry. The first permanent settlement in the vicinity was made about 1811 by Rev. Newell (or Newit) Vick (d. 1819), a Methodist preacher. In accordance with his will a town was laid out in 1824; and Vicksburg was incorporated as a town in 1825, and was chartered as a city in 1836. The campaigns of which it was the centre in 1862 and 1863 are described below. Vicks- burg was the home of Seargent Smith Prentiss from 1832 to 1845- See H. F. Simrall, " Vicksburg: the City on the Walnut Hills," in L. P. Powell's Historic Towns of the Southern States (New York, 1900). Campaign of 1862-63. — Vicksburg is historically famous as being the centre of interest of one of the most important cam- paigns of the Civil War. The command of the Mississippi, which would imply the severance of the Confederacy into two halves, and also the reopening of free commercial navigation from St Louis to the sea, was one of the principal objects of the Western Union armies from the time that they began their southward advance from Illinois, Missouri and Kentucky in February 1S62. A series of victories in the spring and summer carried them as far as the line Memphis-Corinth, but in the autumn they came to a standstill and were called upon to repulse the counter-advance of the Southern armies. These armies were accompanied by a flotilla of thinly armoured but powerful gunboats which had been built on the upper Mississippi in the autumn of 1861, and had co-operated with the army at Fort Donelson, Shiloh and Island No. 10, besides winning a victory on the water at Memphis. At the same time a squadron of sea-going vessels under Flag-officer Farragut had forced the defences of New Orleans (q.v.) and, accompanied by a very small military force, had steamed up the great river. On reaching Vicksburg the heavy vessels again forced their way past the batteries, but both at Vicksburg and at Port Hudson they had to deal, no longer with low-sited fortifications, but with inconspicuous earth- works on bluffs far above the river-level, and they failed to make any impression. Farragut then returned to New Orleans. From Helena to Port Hudson the Confederates maintained complete control of the Mississippi, the improvised fortresses of Vicksburg, Port Hudson and Arkansas Post (near the mouth of Arkansas river) being the framework of the defence. It was to be the task of Grant's army around Corinth and the flotilla at Memphis to break up this system of defences, and, by joining hands with Farragut and clearing the whole course of the Mississippi, to cut the Confederacy in half. The long and painful operations by which this was achieved group themselves into four episodes: (a) the Grenada expedition 2% VICKSBURG of Grant's force, (b) the river column under McClemand and Sherman, (c) the operations in the bayoux, and {d) the final " overland " campaign from Grand Gulf. The country in which these operations took place divides itself sharply into two zones, the upland east of the river, upon which it looks down from high bluffs, and the levels west of it, which are a maze of bayoux, backwaters and side channels, the intervening land being kept dry near the river itself by artificial banks (levees) but elsewhere swampy. At Vicksburg, it is important to observe, the bluffs trend away from the Mississippi to follow the course of the Yazoo, rejoining the great river at Memphis. Thus there are two obvious lines of advance for the Northern army, on the upland (Memphis and Grand Junction on Grenada- Jackson), and downstream through the bayou country (Memphis-Helena-Vicksburg) . The main army of the defenders, who were commanded by Lieut.-General J. C. Pemberton, between Vicksburg and Jackson and Grenada, could front either north against an advance by Grenada or west along the bluffs above and below Vicksburg. VICKSBURG £| A&CSErT*'^ JGK VLgmphjs »r> c N A ESS EE * £f^i. -.*\ O rAn( lJutM; EngllSti Miles jfc.-_.-j. " " ? J ™ ■ ¥ j* /V ;&lIoHySn rina" 1 c y^fC old water /\ iHelena fe«* 'sl^ \ \ V i \hr /^ /Oxford r \ ) Panola / i *V f >> ~. $£&->- Afkfcnsasy % / ? B t $^ A *W >os \ ~# f~J t\y 0, sland / i S i *)« Okolona< ? y * / *M s *fS if \ >- «? tyFT?PEMBERTON / ! £*£> w J< \l< < %i?$ 1 /fe y§ s J L S r m, $$ \ fj 4 7w> EY«ooCity/( ^/ f "c «Lc?-) &~ A f t ~^~~ ; 03 J% / < ^^^Br^eepoit /£_ eHfllsBb** i* y i 7T ' ' ' ~ sBorg ^^^dKackyn,^-**^' '" ' '■"*•**- cj" ^Meridian ^s^£f$*^ < Emery Walter sc. The first advance was made at the end of November 1862 by two columns from Grand Junction and Memphis on Grenada. The Confederates in the field, greatly outnumbered, fell back without fighting. But Grant's line of supply was one long single-line, ill-equipped railway through Grand Junction to Columbus, and the opposing cavalry under Van Dorn swept round his flank and, by destroying one of his principal magazines (at Holly Springs), without further effort compelled the abandon- ment of the advance. Meantime one of Grant's subordinates, McClemand, was intriguing to be appointed to command an expedition by the river-line, and Grant meeting half-way an evil which he felt himself unable to prevent, had sent Sherman with the flotilla and some 30,000 men to attack Vicksburg from the water-side, while he himself should deal with the Confederate field army on the high ground. But the scheme broke down completely when Van Dorn cut Grant's line of supply, and the Confederate army was free to turn on Sherman. The latter, ignorant of Grant's retreat, attacked the Yazoo bluffs above Vicksburg (battle of Chickasaw Bayou) on Decem- ber 29th; but a large portion of Pemberton's field army had arrived to help the Vicksburg garrison, and the Federals were easily repulsed with a loss of 2000 men. McClernand now appeared and took the command out of Sherman's hands, informing him at the same time of Grant's retreat. Sherman thereupon proposed, before attempting fresh operations against Vicksburg, to clear the country behind them by destroying the Confederate garrison at Arkansas Post. This expedition was completely successful: at a cost of about 1000 men the fort and its 5000 defenders were captured on theiith : o£ January 1863. McClernand, elated at his ■ victory, would have continued to ascend the Arkansas, but such an eccentric operation would have been profitless if not dangerous, and Grant, authorized , by the general-in-chief, Halleck, per- emptorily ordered McClernand back to the Mississippi. ypd y*^--^ Vt^'V^ So'v . H^rJ^X^^rU 2^T3p 2^K$^Sife&^ »?^|\jLx "^^WiT *«^^_Jr^7V «^T jP^f $ *Hy| g»^( T^B^r^^^^X^ X \%£ . c*^^?' *3ji/\^ a ft*a4SftiM/^ S\<0^ *mr<& t>^%i \ ^ ac aB&Si^— ' eirfon^, ^-^T^iiJf^S* ^"X~ Jj^A //*"*Vv»w ~ V^K^ JSCfv^^5^— -— r^B SksizC \Jfy* A !/* — ^fcf""* 8 \^ iJW^f \ f^ l\ id^?Vj£^\ ub ™ivti * "^^^^ .ndGulf^ ^^^jTCampalgti against \*^ Ty. a\ pj^ /•*"'# VICKSBURG ^p^BrU^tiurgJ''' / April and May,i8<3 i±±^> r^scs- ■~-jf ZaRlnhhllM ■^R^ty - ^ Retreating from the upland, Grant sailed down the river and joined McClernand and Sherman at Milliken's Bend at the beginning of February, and, superseding the resentful McClernand, assumed command of the three corps (XIII., McClernand; XV. ; Sherman; XVII., McPherson) available. He had already imagined the daring solution of his most difficult problem which he afterwards put into . execution, but for the present he tried a series of less risky expedients to reach the high ground beyond Pemberton's flanks, without indeed much confidence in their success, yet desirous in these unhealthy flats of keeping up the spirits of his army by active work, and of avoiding, at a crisis in the fortunes of the war, any appearance of discouragement. Three such attempts were made in all, with the co-operation of the flotilla under Captain David D. Porter. First, Grant endeavoured to cut a canal across the bend of the Mississippi at Vicksburg, hoping thus to isolate the fortress, to gain a water connection with the lower river, and to land an army on the bluffs beyond Pemberton's left flank. This was unsuccessful. Next he tried to make a practicable channel from the Mississippi to the upper Yazoo, and so to turn Pemberton's right, but the Confederates, warned in time, constructed a fort at the point where Grant's advance emerged from the bayoux. Lastly, an advance through a maze of creeks (Steele's Bayou expedition), towards the middie Yazoo and Haines's Bluff, encountered the enemy, not on the bluffs, but in the low-lying woods and islands, and these so harassed and delayed the progress of the expedition that: Grant recalled it. Shortly afterwards Grant determined on the manoeuvre in rear of Vicksburg which established his repu- tation. The troops marched overland from Milliken's Bend to New Carthage, and on the 16th of April Porter's gunboat flotilla and the transports ran past the Vicksburg batteries. All this, which involved careful arrangement and hard work, was done by the 24th of April. General Banks, with a Union army from New Orleans, was now advancing up the river to invest Port Hudson, and by way of diverting attention from the Mississippi, a cavalry brigade under Benjamin Grierson rode from La Grange to Baton Rouge (600 m. in 16 days), destroying railways and magazines and cutting the telegraph VICO 23 wires en route. Sherman's XV. corps, too, made vigorous demonstrations at Haines's Bluff, and in the confusion and uncertainty Pemberton was at a loss. On the. 30th of April McClemand and the XIII. corps crossed the Mississippi 6 m. below Grand Gulf, followed by McPherson. The nearest Confederate brigades, attempting to oppose the advance at Port Gibson, were driven back. Grant had now deliberately placed himself in the middle of the enemy, and although his engineers had opened up a water-line for the barges carrying his supplies from Milliken's Bend to New Carthage, his long line of supply curving round the enemy's flank was very exposed. But his resolute purpose outweighed all text-book strategy. Having crossed the Mississippi, he collected wheeled transport for five days' rations, and on Sherman's arrival cut loose from his base altogether (May 7th). Free to move, he aimed north from the Big Black river, so as to interpose between the Confederate forces at Vicksburg and those at Jackson. A fight took place at Raymond on the 12th of May, and Jackson was captured just in time to forestall the arrival of reinforcements for Pemberton under General Joseph E Johnston. The latter, being in supreme command of the Confederates, ordered Pemberton to come out of Vicksburg and attack Grant. But Pemberton did not do so until it was too late. On May i6th< Grant, with all his forces well in hand, defeated him in the battle of Champion Hill with a loss of nearly 4000 men, and sharply pursuing him drove him into Vicksburg. By the 19th of May Vicksburg and Pemberton's army in it was invested by land and water. Grant promptly assaulted his works, but was repulsed with loss (May 19th); the assault was repeated on the 22nd of May with the same result, and Grant found himself compelled to resort to a blockade. Reinforcements were hurried up from all quarters, Johnston's force (east of Jackson), was held off by a covering corps under Blair (afterwards under Sherman), and though another un- successful assault was made on the 25th of June, resistance was almost at an end. On the 4th of July, the day after, far away in Pennsylvania, the great battle of Gettysburg had closed with Lee's defeat, the garrison of Vicksburg, 37,000 strong, surrendered. VICO, GIOVANNI BATTISTA (1668-1744), Italian jurist and philosopher, was born at Naples on the 23rd of June 1668. At the university he made rapid progress, especially in juris- prudence, though preferring the study of history, literature, juridical science and philosophy. Being appointed tutor to the nephews of the bishop of Ischia, G. B. Rocca, he accom- panied them to the castle of Vatolla, near Cilento, in the province of Salerno. There he passed nine studious years, chiefly de- voted to classical reading, Plato and Tacitus being his favourite authors, because " the former described the ideal man, and the latter man as he really is." On his return to Naples he found himself out of touch with the prevailing Cartesianism, and lived quietly until in 1697 he gained the professorship of rhetoric at the university, with a scanty stipend of 100 scudi On this he supported a growing family and gave himself to untiring study. Two authors exercised a weighty influence on his mind — Francis Bacon and Grotius. He was no follower of their ideas; indeed often opposed to them; but he derived from Bacon an increasing stimulus towards the investigation of certain great problems of history and philosophy, while Grotius proved valuable in his study of philosophic jurispru- dence. In 170S he published his De ratione sludiorum, in 1710 De antiquissima Italorum sapientia, in 1720 De universi juris uno principle et fine uno, and in 1721 De constantia jurispru- dentis. On the strength of these works he offered himself aa a candidate for the university chair of jurisprudence, but as he had no personal or family influence was not elected. With calm courage he returned to his poverty and his favourite studies, and in 1725 published the first edition of the work that forms the basis of his renown, Principii d } una scienza nuova. In 1730 he produced a second edition of the Scienza nuova, so much altered in style and with so many substantial additions that it was practically a new work. In 1735 Charles III. of Naples marked his recognition of Vico's merits by appointing him historiographer-royal, with a yearly stipend of 100 ducats. Soon after his mind began to give way, but during frequent intervals of lucidity he made new corrections in his great work, of which a third edition appeard in 1744, prefaced by a letter of dedication to Cardinal Trojano Acquaviva. He died on the 20th of January of the same year. Fate seemed bent on persecuting him to the last. A fierce quarrel arose over his burial between the brotherhood of St Stephen, to which he had belonged, and the university professors, who desired to escort his corpse to the grave. Finally the canons of the cathedral, together with the professors, buried the body in the church of the Gerolimini. Vico has been generally described as a solitary soul, out of harmony with the spirit of his time and often directly opposed to it. Yet a closer inquiry into the social conditions of Vico's time, and of the studies then flourishing, shows him to have been thoroughly in touch with them. Owing to the historical past of Naples, and its social and economic condition at the end of the 17th century, the only study that really flourished there was that of law; and this soon penetrated from the courts to the university, and was raised to the level of a science. A great school of jurisprudence was thus formed, including many men of vast learning and great ability, although little known outside their immediate surroundings. Three men, however, obtained a wider recognition. By his exposition of the political history of the kingdom, based on a study of its laws and institutions and of the legal conflicts between the state and the court of Rome, Pietro Giannone was the initiator of what has been since known as civil history. Giovan Vincenzo Gravina wrote a history of Roman law, specially distinguished for its accuracy and elegance. Vico raised the problem to a higher plane, by tracing the origin of law in the human mind and explaining the historical changes of the one by those of the other. Thus he made the original discovery of certain ideas which constitute the modern psychologico-historic method. This problem he proceeded to develop in various works, until in his Scienza nuova he arrived at a more complete solution, which may be formulated as follows: If the principle of justice and law be one, eternal and immutable, why should there be so many different codes of legislation? These differences are not caused by difference of nationality only, but are to be noted in the history of the same people, even in that of the Romans. This problem is touched upon in his Orations or Inaugural Addresses {Orazioni Prolusioni) and in his Minor Works {Scritti minori). Finally he applied himself to its solution in his Universal Law (Diritto universale), which is divided into two books. The first of these, De uno et universi funs principio et fine uno, was subdivided into two parts; so like wise was the second, with the respective titles of De constantia philologiae and De constantia jurisprudent's. The following is the general idea derived from these researches. Vico held God to be the ruler of the world of nations, but ruling, not as the providence of the middle ages by means of continued miracles, but as He rules nature, by means of natural laws. If, therefore, the physicist seeks to discover the laws of nature by study of natural phenomena, so the philosopher must seek the laws of historical change by the investigation of human events and of the human mind. According to Vico, law emanates from the conscience of mankind, in whom God has infused a sentiment of justice and is therefore in close and continual relation with the human mind, and participates in its changes. This sentiment of justice is at first confused, uncertain and almost instinctive; — is, as it were, a divine and religious inspiration instilled by Heaven into the primi- tive tribes of the earth. It is an unconscious, universal sentiment, not the personal, conscious and rational sentiment of the superior few. Hence the law to which it gives birth is enwrapped in religious forms which are likewise visible and palpable, inasmuch as primitive man is incapable of abstract, philosophical ideas. This law is not the individual work of any philosophical legislator, for no man was, or could be, a philosopher at that time. It is first displayed in the shape of natural and necessary usages consecrated by religion. The names of leading legislators, which we so often find recorded in the history of primitive peoples, are symbols and myths, merely serving to mark an historic period or epoch by some definite and personal denomination. For nations, or rather tribes, were then distinguished by personal names only. The first obscure and con- fused conception of law gradually becomes clearer and better defined. Its visible and religious forms then give way to abstract formulae, which in their turn are slowly replaced by the rational manifestation of the philosophic principles of law that gains the victory in the final stage of development, designated by Vico as that of civil and human law. This is the period of individual and philosophic legislators. Thus Roman law has passed through three great periods — the divine, the heroic and the human — which are like- wise the three chief periods of the history of Rome, with which it is intimately and intrinsically connected. Nevertheless, on careful examination of these three successive stages, it will easily be seen that, in spite of the apparent difference between them, all have a common foundation, source and purpose. The human and civil 24 VICO philosophic law of the third period is assuredly very different in form from the primitive law; but in substance it is merely the abstract, scientific and philosophic manifestation of the same senti- ment of justice and the same principles which were vaguely felt in primitive times. Hence one development of law may be easily translated into another. Thus in the varied manifestations of law Vico was able to discover a single and enduring principle (De unimrsi juris uno principio etfine uno). On these grounds it na3 been sought to establish a close relation between Vico and Grotius. The latter clearly distinguished between a positive law differing in different nations and a natural law based on a general and unchanging prin- ciple of human nature, and therefore obligatory upon all. But Vico was opposed to Grotius, especially as regards his conception of the origin of society, and therefore of law. Grotius holds that its origin was not divine, but human, and neither collective, spontaneous nor unconscious, but personal, rational and conscious. He believed, moreover, that natural law and positive law moved on almost constant and immutable parallel lines. But Vico maintained that the one was continually progressing towards the other, positive law showing an increasing tendency to draw nearer to natural and rational law. Hence the conception that law is of necessity a spontaneous birth, not the creation of any individual legislator; and hence the idea that it necessarily proceeds by a natural and logical process of evolu- tion constituting its history. Vico may have derived from Grotius the idea of natural law; but his discovery of the historic evolution of law was first suggested to him by his study of Roman law. He saw that the history of Roman jurisprudence was a continuous progress of the narrow, rigorous, primitive and almost iron law of the XII. Tables towards tiie wider, more general and more humane jus gentium. Having once derived this conception from Roman history, he was easily and indeed necessarily carried on to the next— that the positive law of all nations, throughout history, is a continual advance, keeping pace with the progress of civilization, towards the philosophic and natural law founded on the principles of human nature and human reason. As already stated, the Scienza nuova appeared in three different editions. The third may be disregarded ; but the first and second editions are almost distinct works. In the former the author sets forth the analytical process by which the laws he discovered were deduced from facts. In the second he not only enlarges his matter and gives multiplied applications of his ideas, but also follows the synthetic method, first expounding the laws he had dis- covered and then proving them by the facts to which they arc applied. In this edition the fragmentary and jerky arrangement, the intricate style, and a peculiar and often purely conventional terminology seriously checked the diffusion of the work, which accordingly was little studied in Italy and remained almost un- known to the rest of Europe. Its fundamental idea consists in that which Vico, in his peculiar terminology, styles " poetical wisdom " (sapienza poetica) and " occult wisdom " {sapienza riposta), and in the historical process by which the one is merged in the other. He frequently declares that this discovery was the result of the literary labours of his whole life. Vico was the first thinker who asked, Why have we a science of nature, but no science of history? Because our glance can easily be turned outwards and survey the exterior world; but it is far harder to turn the mind's eye inwards and contemplate the world of the spirit. All our errors in explaining the origin of human society arise from our obstinacy in believing that primitive man was entirely similar to ourselves, who are civilized, i.e. developed by the results of a lengthy process of anterior historic evolution. We must learn to issue from ourselves, transport ourselves back to other times, and become children again in order to comprehend the infancy of the human race. As in children, imagination and the senses prevailed in those men of the past. They had no abstract ideas ; in their minds all was concrete, visible and tangible. All the phenomena, forces and laws of nature, together with mental conceptions, were alike personified. To suppose that all mythical stories are fables invented by the philosophers is to write history backwards and confound the instinctive, impersonal, poetic wisdom of the earliest times with the civilized, rational and abstract occult wisdom of our own day. But how can we explain the formation of this poetic wisdom, which, albeit the work of ignorant, men, has so deep and intrinsic a philosophic value? The only possible reply is that already given when treating of the origin of law. Providence has instilled into the heart of man a sentiment of justice and goodness, of beauty and of truth, that is manifested differently at different times. The ideal truth within us, constituting the inner life that is studied by philosophers, becomes transmuted by the facts of history into assured reality. For Vico psychology and history were the two poles of the new world he discovered. After having extolled the work of God and proclaimed Him the source of all knowledge, he adds that a great truth is continually flashed on us and proved to us by history, namely, " that this world of nations is the work of man, and its explanation therefore only to be found in the mind of man." Thus poetical wisdom, appearing as a spon- taneous emanation of the human conscience, is almost the product of divine inspiration. From this, by the aid of civilization, reason and philosophy, there is gradually developed the civil, cccult wisdom. The continual, slow arid laborious progress from the one to the other is that which really constitutes history, and man be- comes civilized by rendering himself the conscious and independent possessor of all that in poetical wisdom remained impersonal, unconscious, that came, as it were, from without by divine afflatus. Vico gives many applications of this fundamental idea. .The religion of primitive peoples is no less mythical than their history, since they could only conceive of it by means of myths. On these lines he interprets the whole history of primitive Rome. One book of the second edition of the Scienza nuova h devoted to " The Discovery of the True Homer." Why all the cities of Greece dispute the honour of being his birthplace is because the Iliad and the Odyssey are not the work of one, but of many popular poets, and a true creation of the Greek people which is in every city of Greece. And because the primitive peoples are unconscious and self -ignorant Horner is represented as being blind. In all parts of history in which he was best versed Vico pursues a stricter and more scientific method, and arrives at safer conclusions. This is the case in Roman history, especially in such portions as related to the history of law. Here he sometimes attains, even in details, to divinations of the truth afterwards confirmed by new documents and later research. The aristocratic origin of Rome, the struggle between the patricians and the plebeians, the laws of the XII. Tables, not, as tradition would have it, imported from Greece, but the natural and spon- taneous product of ancient Roman customs, and many other similar theories were discovered by Vieo, and expounded with his usual originality, though not always without blunders and exaggerations. ; Vico may be said to base his considerations on the history of two nations. The greater part of his ideas on poetical wisdom were derived from Greece. Nearly all the rest, more especially the transi- tion from poetical to occult wisdom, was derived from Rome. Having once formulated his idea, he made it more general in order to apply it to the histpry of all nations. From the savage state, through the terror that gives birth to religions, through the creation of families by marriage, through burial rites and ■ piety towards the dead, men approach civilization with the 'aid of poetic wisdom, and pass through three periods — the divine, heroic and. human— •- in which they have three forms of government, language, litera- ture, jurisprudence and civilization. The primary government is aristocratic. Patrician tyranny rouses the populace to revolt, and then democratic equality is established under a republic. Democratic excesses cause the rise of an empire,; which, becoming corrupt, declines into barbarism, and, again emerging from it, re- traces the same course. This is the 'law of cycles, constituting that which is designated by Vico as the " eternal ideal 'history,- or rather course of humanity, invariably followed by all nations." It must not be held to imply that one nation imitates the course pursued by another, nor that the points of resemblance between them are transmitted by tradition from one to the other, but merely that all are subject to one law, inasmuch as this is based on the human nature common to all alike. Thus, while on the one hand the various cycles traced and retraced by all nations are similar and yet independent, on the other hand, being actually derived from Roman history, they become converted in the Scienza nudva into a bed of Procrustes, to which the history of all nations has to be fitted by force. And wherever Vico's historical^ know- ledge failed he was led into increased error by this artificial and arbitrary effort. It has been justly observed by many that this continuous cyclical movement entirely excludes the progress of humanity towards a better future. It has been replied that these cvcles are similar without being identical, and that, if one might differ from another, the idea of progress was not necessarily excluded by the law of cycles. Vico undoubtedly considered the poetic wisdorh of the Middle Ages to be different from that of the Greeks and Romans, and Christianity to be very superior to the pagan religion. But he never investigated the question whether, since there is a law of progressive evolution in the history of different nations, separately examined, there may not likewise be another law ruling the general history of these nations, every one of which must. have rcpresenteil a new period, as it were, in the history of humanity at. large. There- fore, although the Scienza nuova cannot be said absolutely to deny the law of progress, it must be allowed that Vico not only failed to solve the problem but even shrank from attacking it. Vico founded no school, and though during his lifetime and for a while after his death he had many admirers both in Naples and the northern cities, his fame and name were soon obscured, especially as the Kantian system dominated the world of thought. At the beginning of the 19th century, however, some Neapolitan exiles at Milan called attention to the merits of their great countryman, and his reinstatement was completed by Michelet, who in. 1827 translated the Scienza nuova and other works with a laudatory introduction. Vico's writings suffer through their author's not having followed a regular course of studies, and his style is very involved. He was a deeply religious man, but his exemption of Jewish origins from the canons of historical inquiry which he elsewhere applied was probably due to the conditions of his age, which preceded the dawn of Semitic investigation and regarded the Old Testament and the Hebrew religion as sui generis. VICTOR— VICTOR, SEXTUS AURELIUS 25 For Vico's personal history see his autobiography, written at the request of the Conte di Forcia, and his letters; also Cantom, G. B. Vico, Studii Critici e Comparative (Turin, 1867); R. Flint, Vico (Edinburgh and London, 1884). For editions of Vico's own works, see Opere, ed. Giuseppe Ferrari, with introductory essay, " La Mentc de Vico " (6 vols., Milan, 1834-35), and Michelet, CEuvres Chais-ies de Vico (2 vols., Paris, 1835). A full list is given in B. Croce, Bibliograjla Vickiana (Naples, 1904J. See also O. Kle mm , G. B. Vico als Gesch icktsph ilosoph und V olkerpsycholog (Leipzig. 1906) ; M. H. Rafferty in Journal of the Society of Com- parative Legislation, New Series, xvii., xx. VICTOR, the name taken by three popes and two antipopes. Victor I. was bishop of Rome from about 190 to 198. He submitted to the opinion of the episcopate in the various parts of Christendom the divergence between the Easter usage of Rome and that of the bishops of Asia. The bishops, particu- larly St Ircnacus of Lyons, declared themselves in favour of the usage of Rome, but refused to associate themselves with the excommunication pronounced by Victor against their Asiatic colleagues. At Rome Victor excommunicated Theodotus of Byzantium on account of his doctrine as to the person of Christ. St Jerome attributes to Victor some opuscula in Latin, which are believed to be recognized in certain apo- cryphal treatises of St Cyprian. Victor II., the successor of Leo IX., was consecrated in St Peter's, Rome, on the 13th of April 1055. His father was a Swabian baron, Count Hartwig von Calw, and his own baptismal name was Gebhard. At the instance of Gebhard, bishop of Regensburg, uncle of the emperor Henry III., he had been appointed while still a young man to the see of Eichstadt; in this position his great talents soon enabled him to render important services to Henry, whose chief adviser he ultimately became. His nomination to the papacy by Henry, at Mainz, in September 1054, was made at the instance of a Roman deputation headed by Hildebrand, 'whose policy doubtless was to detach from the imperial interest one of its ablest supporters. In June 1055 Victor met the emperor at Florence, and held a council, which anew condemned clerical marriages, simony and the alienation of the estates of the church. In the. follow- ing year he was summoned to Germany to the side of the emperor, and was with him when he died at Botfeld in the Harz on the 5th of October 1056. As guardian of Henry's infant son, and adviser of the empress Agnes, Victor now wielded enormous power, which he began to use with much tact for the maintenance of peace throughout the empire and for strengthening the papacy against the aggressions of the barons. He died shortly after his return to Italy, at Arezzo, on the 28th of July 1057. His successor was Stephen IX. (Frederick of Lorraine). (L. D.*) Victor III. (Dauferius Epifani), pope from the 24th of May 1086 to the 16th of September 1087, was the successor of Gregory VII. He was a son of Landolfo V., prince of Bene- vento, and was born in 1027. After studying in various monasteries he became provost of St Benedict at Capua, and in 1055 obtained permission from Victor II. to enter the cloister at Monte Cassino, changing his name to Desiderius. He succeeded Stephen IX. as abbot in 1057, and his rule marks the golden age of that celebrated monastery; he promoted literary activity, and established an important school of mosaic. Desiderius was crealed cardinal priest of Sta Cecilia by Nicholas II. in 1059, and as papal vicar in south Italy conducted frequent negotiations between the Normans and the pope. Among the four men suggested by Gregory VII. on his death-bed as most worthy to succeed him was Desiderius, who was favoured by the cardinals because of his great learning, his connexion with the Normans and his diplomatic ability. The abbot, however, declined the papal crown, and the year 1085 passed without an election. The cardinals at length proclaimed him pope against his will on the 24th of May 1086, but he was driven from Rome by imperialists before his consecration was complete, and, laying aside the papal insignia at Terracina, he retired to his beloved monastery. As vicar of the Holy See he convened a synod at Capua on the 7th of March 1087, resumed the papal insignia on the 2 1 st of March, and received tardy consecration at Rome on the 9th of May. Owing to the presence of the antipope, Clement III. (Guibert of Ravenna), who had powerful partisans, his stay at Rome was brief. He sent an army to Tunis, which defeated the Saracens and compelled the sultan to pay tribute to the papal see. In August 1087 he held a synod at Bene- vento, which renewed the excommunication of Guibert; banned Archbishop Hugo of Lyons and Abbot Richard of Marseilles as schismatics; and confirmed the prohibition of lay investiture. Falling ill at the synod, Vicar returned to Monte Cassino, where he died on the 16th of September 1087. He was buried at the monastery and is accounted a saint by the Benedictine order. His successor was Urban II. Victor III., while abbot of Monte Cassino contributed personally to the literary activity of the monastery. He wrote Dialogi de miraculis S. Benedicii, which, along with his Epistolae, are in J. P. Migne, Patrol, hat. vol. 149, and an account of the miracles of Leo IX. (in Acta Sanctorum, 39th of April). The chief sources for his life are the " Chronica monasterii Casincnsis," in the Mon. Germ. hist. Script vu., and the Vitae in J. P. Migne, Patrol, hat. vol. 149, and in J. M. Wattcrich, Pontif. Roman. Vitae. See J. Langen, Geschichte defromischen Kirche von Gregor VII. bis Innocenz III. (Bonn, 1893); F. Grcgorovius, Rome in the Middle Ages, vol. 4, trans, by Mrs G. W. Hamilton (London, 1900-2); K. J. von Hcfele, Conciliengeschichte (2nd cd., 1873-90), vol. 5; Hirsch, " Desiderius von Monte Cassino als Papst Victor III.," in Forschungen zur deutschen Geschichte, vol. 7 (Gottingen, 1867); H. II. Milman, History of Latin Christianity, vol. 3 (repub. London, 1S99). Victor IV. was a title taken by two antipopes. (1) Gregorio Conti, cardinal priest of Santi Dodici Apostoli, was chosen by a party opposed to Innocent II. in succession to the antipope Anacletus II., on the 15th of March IJ38, but through the in- fluence of Bernard of Clairvaux he was induced to make his submission on the 29th of May. (2) Octavian, count of Tusculum and cardinal deacon of St Nicola in carcere Tulliano, the Ghi- belline antipope, was elected at Rome on the 7th of September 1159, m opposition to Alexander III., and supported by the emperor Frederick Barbarossa. Consecrated at Farfa on the 4th of October, Victor was the first of the series of antipopes supported by Frederick against Alexander III. Though the excommunication of Frederick by Alexander in March 1160 made only a slight impression in Germany, this pope was never- theless able to gain the support of the rest of western Europe, because since the days of Hildebrand the power of the pope over the church in the various countries had increased so greatly that the kings of France and of England could not view with indifference a revival of such imperial control of the papacy as had been exercised by the emperor Henry III. He died at Lucca on the 20th of April 1164 and was succeeded by the anti- pope Paschal III. (1 164-1 168) . See M. Meyer, Die Wahl Alexanders III. und Victors IV. n$Q (Gottingen, 1871); and A. Hauck, Kirchengeschichte Deutschlands, Band iv. (C. H. Ha.) VICTOR, GAIUS JULIUS (4th cent, a.d.), Roman writer on rhetoric, possibly of Gallic origin. His extant manual (in C. Halm's Rketores Latini Minores, 1863) is of some importance as facilitating the textual criticism of Quintilian, whom he closely follows in many places. VICTOR, SEXTUS AURELIUS, prefect of Pannonia about 360 (Amm. Marc. xxi. 10), possibly the same as the consul (jointly with Valentinian) in 373 and as the prefect of the city who is mentioned in an inscription of the time of Theodosius. Four small historical works have been ascribed to him on more or less doubtful grounds — (1) Origo Gcntis Rotnanae, (2) De Viribus Illustrious Romas, (3) De Caesaribus, (4) De Vita et Moribtts Imperatorum Romanorum execrpta ex Libris Sex. Aur. Victoris. The four have generally been published together under the name Historia Romana, but the fourth piece is a rechauffe of the third. The second was first printed at Naples about 1472, in 4to, under the name of Pliny (the younger), and the fourth at Strassburg in 1505. The first edition of all four was (hat of A. Schottus (8vo, Ant- werp, 1579). The most recent edition of the De Caesaribus is by F. Pichlmayr (Munich, 1892). 26 VICTOR AMEDEUS IL— VICTOR EMMANUEL II. VICTOR AMEDEUS II. (1666-1732), duke of Savoy and first king of Sardinia, was the son of Duke Charles Emmanuel II. and Jeanne de Savoie-Nemours. Born at Turin, he lost his father in 167s, and spent his youth under the regency of his mother, known as " Madama Reale " (madame royale), an able but ambitious and overbearing woman. He assumed the reins of government at the age of sixteen, and married Princess Anne, daughter of rhilip of Orleans and Henrietta of England, and niece of Louis XIV., king of France. That sovereign was determined to dominate the young duke of Savoy, who from the first resented the monarch's insolent bearing. In 1685 Victor was forced by Louis to persecute his Waldensian subjects, because they had given shelter to the French Huguenot refugees after the revoca- tion of the edict of Nantes. With the unwelcome help of a French army under Marshal Catinat, he invaded the Waldensian valleys, and after a difficult campaign, characterized by great cruelty, he subjugated them. Nevertheless, he became more anxious than ever to emancipate himself from French thraldom, and his first sign of independence was his visit to Venice in 16S7, where he conferred on political affairs with Prince Eugene of Savoy and other personages, without consulting Louis. About this time the duke plunged into a whirl of dissipation, and chose the beautiful but unscrupulous Contessa di Verrua as his mistress, neglecting his faithful and devoted wife. Louis having dis- covered Victor's intrigues with the emperor, tried to precipitate hostilities by demanding his participation in a second expedi- tion against the Waldensians. The duke unwillingly complied, but when the French entered Piedmont and demanded the cession of the fortresses of Turin and Verrua, he refused, and while still professing to negotiate with Louis, joined the league of Austria, Spain and Venice. War was declared in 1690, but at the battle of Staffarda (18th of August 1691), Victor, in spite of his great courage and skill, was defeated by the French under Catinat. Other reverses followed, but the attack on Cuneo was heroically repulsed by the citizens. The war dragged on with varying success, until the severe defeat of the allies at Marsiglia and their selfish neglect of Victor's interests induced him to open negotiations with France once more. Louis agreed to restore most of the fortresses he had captured and to make other concessions; a treaty was signed in 1696, and Victor appointed generalissimo of the Franco-Piedmontese; forces in Italy operating against the imperialists. By the treaty of Ryswick (1697) a general peace was concluded. On the out- break of the war of the Spanish Succession in 1700 the duke was again on the French side, but the insolence of Louis and of Philip V. of Spain towards him induced him, at the end of the two years for which he had bound himself to them, to go over, to the imperialists (1704). At first the French were successful and captured several Piedmontese fortresses, but after besieging Turin, which was skilfully defended by the duke, for several months, they were completely defeated by Victor and Prince Eugene of Savoy (1706), and eventually driven out of the other towns they had captured. By the peace of Utrecht (17 13) the Powers conferred the kingdom of Sicily on Victor Amedeus, whose government proved efficient and at first popular. But after a brief stay in the island he returned to Piedmont and left his new possessions to a viceroy, which caused much discontent among the Sicilians; and when the Quadruple Alliance decreed in 1718 that Sicily should be restored to Spain, Victor was unable to offer any opposition, and had to content himself with receiving Sardinia in exchange. The last years of Victor Amedeus's life were saddened by domestic troubles. In 1715 his eldest son died, and in 1728 he lost his queen. After her death, much against the advice of his remaining son and heir, Carlino (afterwards Charles Emmanuel III.), he married the Contessa di San Sebastiano, whom he created Marchesa di Spigno, abdicated the crown and retired to Chambery to end his days (1730). But his second wife, an ambitious intrigante, soon tired of her quiet life, and induced him to return to Turin and attempt to revoke his abdication. This led to a quarrel with his son, who with quite unnecessary harshness, partly due to his minister the Marquis d'Ormea, arrested his father and confined him at Rivoli and later at Mon- calieri; there Victor, overwhelmed with sorrow, died on the 31st of October 1732. Victor Amedeus, although accused not without reason of bad faith in his diplomatic dealings and of cruelty, was undoubtedly a great soldier and a still greater administrator. He not only won for his country a high place in the council of nations, but he doubled its revenues and increased its prosperity and industries, and he also emphasized its character as an Italian state. His infidelity to his wife and his harshness towards his son Carlino are blemishes on a splendid career, but he more than expiated these faults by his tragic end. See D. Carutti, Storia del Regno di Vittorio Amedeo II. (Turin, 1856); and E. Parri, Vittorio Amedio II. ed Eugenio di Savoia (Milan, 1888). The Marchesa VitcUeschi's work, The Romance of Savoy (2 vols., London, 1905), is based on original authorities, ana is the most complete monograph on the subject. VICTOR EMMANUEL II. (1820-1878), king of Sardinia and first king of Italy, was born at Turin on the 14th of March 1830, and was the son of Charles Albert, prince of Savoy- Carignano, who became king of Sardinia in 1831. Brought up in the bigoted and chilling atmosphere of the Piedmontese court, he received a rigid military and religious training, but little intellectual education. In 1842 he was married to Adelaide, daughter of the Austrian Archduke Rainer, as the king desired at that time to improve his relations with Austria. The young couple led a somewhat dreary life, hidebound by court etiquette, which Victor Emmanuel hated. He played no part in polities during his father's lifetime, but took an active interest in military matters. When the war with Austria broke out in 1848, he was delighted at the prospect of distinguishing himself, and was given the command of a division. At Goito he was slightly wounded and displayed great bravery, and after Custozza defended the rearguard to the last (25th of July 1848). In the campaign of March 1849 he commanded the same division. After the disastrous defeat at Novara on the 23rd of March, Charles Albert, having rejected the peace terms offered by the Austrian field-marshal Radetzky, abdicated in favour of his son, and withdrew to a monastery in Portugal, where he died a few months later. Victor Emmanuel repaired to Radetzky's camp, where he was received with every sign of respect, and the field-marshal offered not only to waive the claim that Austria should occupy a part of Piedmont, but to give him an extension of territory, provided he revoked the constitution and substituted the old blue Piedmontese flag for the Italian tricolour, which savoured too much of revolution. But although the young king had not yet sworn to observe the charter, and in any cage the other Italian princes had all violated their constitutional promises, he rejected the offer. Consequently he had to agree to the temporary Austrian occupation of the territory comprised within the Po, the Sesia and the Ticino, and of half the citadel of Alessandria, to disband his Lombard, Polish and Hungarian volunteers, and to withdraw his fleet from the Adriatic; but he secured an amnesty for all the Lom- bards compromised in the recent revolution, having even threatened to go to war again if it were not granted. It was the maintenance of the constitution in the face of the over- whelming tide of reaction that established his position as the champion of Italian freedom and earned him the sobriquet of Re Galanluomo (the honest king). But the task entrusted to him was a most difficult one: the army disorganized, the treasury empty, the people despondent if not actively disloyal, and he himself reviled, misunderstood, and, like his father, accused of treachery. Parliament having rejected the peace treaty, the king dissolved the assembly; in the famous pro- clamation from Moncalieri he appealed to the people's loyalty, and the new Chamber ratified the treaty (9th of January 1850). This same year, Cavour (q.v.) was appointed minister of agri- culture in D'Azeglio's cabinet, and in 1852, after the fall of the latter, he became prime minister, a post which with brief in- terruptions he held until his death. In having Cavour as his chief adviser Victor Emmanuel was VICTOR EMMANUEL II. 27 most fortunate, and but for that statesman's astounding diplomatic genius the liberation of Italy would have been impossible. The years from 1850 to 1859 were devoted to restor- ing the shattered finances of Sardinia, reorganizing the army and modernizing the anLiquated institutions of the kingdom. Among other reforms the abolition of the foro ecclesiastico (privileged ecclesiastical courts) brought down a storm of hostility from the Church both on the king and on Cavour, but both remained firm in sustaining the prerogatives of the civil power. When the Crimean War broke out, the king strongly supported Cavour in the proposal that Piedmont should join France and England against Russia so as to secure a place in the councils of the great Powers and establish a claim on them for eventual assistance in Italian affairs (1854). The following year Victor Emmanuel was stricken with a threefold family misfortune; for his mother, the Queen Dowager Maria Teresa, his wife, Queen Adelaide, and his brother Ferdinand, duke of Genoa, died within a few weeks of each other. The clerical party were not slow to point to this circumstance as a judgment on the king for what they deemed his sacrilegious policy. At the end of 1855, while the allied troops were still in the East, Victor Emmanuel visited Paris and London, where he was warmly welcomed by the emperor Napoleon III. and Queen Victoria, as well as by the peoples of the two countries. Victor Emmanuel's object now was the expulsion of the Austrians from Italy and the expansion of Piedmont into a North Italian kingdom, but he did not regard the idea of Italian unity as coming within the sphere of practical politics for the time being, although a movement to that end was already beginning to gain ground. He was in communication with some of the conspirators, especially with La Farina, the leader of the Societd, Nazionale, an association the object of which was to unite Italy under the king of Sardinia, and he even com>- municatcd with Mazzini and the republicans, both in Italy and abroad, whenever he thought that they could help in the expulsion of the Austrians from Italy. In 1859 Cavour's diplomacy succeeded in drawing Napoleon III. into an alliance, against Austria, although the king had to agree to the cession of Savoy and possibly of Nice and to the marriage of his daughter Clothilde to Prince Napoleon: These conditions were very painful to him, for Savoy was the hereditary home of his family, and he was greatly attached to Princess Clothilde and disliked the idea of marrying her to a man who gave little promise of proving a good husband. But he was always ready to sacrifice his own personal feelings for the good of his country. He had an interview with Garibaldi and appointed him commander of the newly raised volunteer corps, the Cacciatori delle Alpi. Even then Napoleon would not decide on immediate hostilities, and it required all Cavour's genius to bring him to the point and lead Austria into a declaration of war (April 1859). Although the Franco -Sardinian forces were successful in the field, Napoloon, fearing an attack by Prussia and disliking the idea of a too powerful Italian kingdom on the frontiers of France, insisted on making peace with Austria, while Venetia still remained to be freed. Victor Emmanuel, realizing that he could not continue the campaign alone, agreed most unwillingly to the armistice of Villafranca. When Cavour heard the news he hurried to the king's headquarters at Monzambano, and in violent, almost disrespectful language implored him to continue the campaign at all hazards, relying on his own army and the revolutionary movement in the rest of Italy. But the king on this occasion showed more political insight than his great minister and saw that by adopting the heroic course proposed by the latter he ran the risk of finding Napoleon on the side of the enemy, whereas by waiting all might be gained. Cavour resigned office, and by the peace of Zurich (10th of November 1859) Austria ceded Lombardy to Piedmont but retained Venetia; the central Italian princes who had been deposed by the revolu- tion were to be reinstated, and Italy formed into a confederation of independent states. But this solution was most unacceptable to Italian public opinion, and both the king and Cavour deter- mined to assist the people in preventing its realization, and consequently entered into secret relations with the revolutionary governments of Tuscany, the duchies and of Romagna. As a result of the events of 1859-60, those provinces were all annexed to Piedmont, and when Garibaldi decided oil the Sicilian expedition Victor Emmanuel assisted him in various ways. He had considerable influence with Garibaldi, who, although in theory a republican, was greatly attached to the bluff soldier-king, and on several occasions restrained him from too foolhardy courses. When Garibaldi having conquered Sicily was determined to invade the mainland possessions of Francis II. of Naples, Victor Emmanuel foreseeing international difficulties wrote to the chief of the red shirts asking him not to cross the Straits; but Garibaldi, although acting throughout in the name of His Majesty, refused to obey and continued his victorious march, for he knew that the king's letter was dictated by diplomatic considerations rather tharr by his own personal desire. Then, on Cavour's advice, King Victor decided to participate himself in the occupation of Neapolitan, territory, lest Garibaldi's entourage should proclaim the republic of create anarchy. When he accepted the annexation of Romagna offered by the inhabitants themselves the pope excommunicated him, but. although a devout Catholic, he continued in his course undeterred by ecclesiastical thunders, and led his army in person through the Papal States, occupying the Marches and Umbria, to Naples. On the 29th of October he met Garibaldi, who handed over his conquests to the king. The whole peninsula, except Rome and Venice, was now annexed to Piedmont, and on the 1 8th of February 1861 the parliament proclaimed Victor Emmanuel king of united Italy. The next few years were occupied with preparations for the liberation of Venice, and the king corresponded with Mazzini; Klapka, Tiirr and other conspirators against Austria in Venetia itself, Hungary, Poland and elsewhere, keeping his activity secret even from his own ministers. The alliance with Prussia and the war with Austria of 1866, although fortune did not favour Italian arms, added Venetia to his dominions.. The Roman question yet remained unsolved, for Napoleon, although he. had assisted Piedmont in 1859 and had reluctantly consented to the annexation of the central and southern provinces, and of part of the Papal States, would not permit Rome to be occupied, and maintained a French garrison there to protect the pope. When war with Prussia appeared imminent he tried to obtain Italian assistance, and Victor Emmanuel was very anxious to fly to the assistance of the man who had helped him to expel the Austrians from Italy, but he could not do so unless Napoleon gave him a free hand in Rome. This the emperor would not do until it was too late. Even after the first French defeats the chivalrous king, in spite of the advice of his more prudent councillors, wiahed to go to the rescue, and asked Thiers, the French representative who was imploring him for help, if with 100,000 Italian troops France could be saved, but Thiers could give no such undertaking and Italy remained neutral. On the 20th of September 1870, the French troops having been withdrawn, the Italian army entered Rome, and on the 2nd of July i87r Victor Emmanuel made his solemn entry into the Eternal City, which then be- came the capital of Italy. The pope refused to recognize the new kingdom even before the occupation of Rdme, and the latter event rendered relations between church and state for many years extremelysdelicate: The king himself was anxious to be reconciled with the Vatican; but the pope, or rather his entourage, rejected all overtures, and the two sovereigns dwelt side by side in Rome until death without ever meeting. Victor Emmanuel devoted himself to his duties as a constitutional king with great conscientious- ness, but he took more interest in foreign than in domestic politics and contributed not a little to improving Italy's inter- national position. In 1873 he visited the emperor Francis Joseph at Vienna and the emperor William at Berlin. He received an enthusiastic welcome in both capitals,: but the visit to Vienna was never returned in Rome, for Francis Joseph as a Catholic sovereign feared to offend the pope, a circumstance 28 VICTOR EMMANUEL III.— VICTORIA, QUEEN which served to embitter Austro-Italian relations. On the 9th of January 1878, Victor Emmanuel died of fever in Rome, and was buried in the Pantheon. He was succeeded by his son Humbert. Bluff, hearty, good-natured and simple in his habits, yet he always had a high idea of his own kingly dignity, and his really statesmanlike qualities often surprised foreign diplomats, who were deceived by his homely exterior. As a soldier he was very brave, but he did not show great qualities as a military leader in the campaign of 1S66. He was a keen sportsman and would spend many days at a time pursuing chamcis or stcinbock in the Alpine fastnesses of Piedmont with nothing but bread and cheese to eat. He always used the dialect of Piedmont when conversing with natives of that country, and he had a vast fund of humorous anecdotes and proverbs with which to illustrate his arguments. He had a great weakness for female society, and kept several mistresses; one of them, the beautiful Rosa Vercellone, he created Countess Mirariori e Fontanafredda and married morganatically in 1869; she bore him one son. Bibliography. — Besides the general works on Italy and Savoy see V. Bersezio, // Reg.no di Vittorio Emanuele II. (8 vols., Turin, 1869); G. Massari, La Vita ed il Regno di Vittorio Emanuele II. (2 vols., Milan, 1878); N. Bianchi, Storia deila Diplomazia Europea in Italia (8 vols., Turin, 1865). (L. V.*) VICTOR EMMANUEL III. (1869- ), king of Italy, son of King Humbert I. and Queen Margherita of Savoy, was born at Naples on the nth of November 1869. Carefully educated by his mother and under the direction of Colonel Osio, he outgrew the weakness of his childhood and became expert in horsemanship and military exercises. Entering the army at an early age he passed through the various grades and, soon after attaining his majority, was appointed to the command of the Florence Army Corps. During frequent journeys to Germany he enlarged his military experience, and upon his appointment to the command of the Naples Army Corps in 1896 displayed sound military and administrative capacity. A keen huntsman, and passionately fond of the sea, he extended his yachting and hunting excursions as far east as Syria and as far north as Spitsbergen. As representative of King Humbert he attended the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II. in 1896, the Victorian Jubilee celebrations of 1897, and the festivities connected with the coming of age of the German crown prince in 1900. The prince's intellectual and artistic leanings were well known; in particular, he has made a magnifi- cent collection of historic Italian coins, on which subject he became a recognized authority. At the time of the assassina- tion of his father, King Humbert (the 29th of July 1900), he was returning from a yachting cruise in the eastern Mediterranean. Landing at Reggio di Calabria he hastened to Monza, where he conducted with firmness and tact the preparations for the burial of King Humbert and for his own formal accession, which took place on the 9th and nth of August 1900. On the 24th of October 1896 he married Princess Elena of Montenegro, who, on the 1st of June i9or, bore him a daughter named Yolanda Margherita, on the 19th of November 1902 a second daughter named Mafalda, and on the 15th of September 1904 a son, Prince Humbert. VICTORIA [ALEXANDBINA VICTORIA), Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India (1819-1901), only child of Edward, duke of Kent, fourth son of King George III., and of Princess Victoria Mary Louisa of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (widow of Prince Emich Karl of Lein- ingen, by whom she already had two children), was born at Kensington Palace on the 24th of May 1819. The duke and duchess of Kent had been living at Amorbach, in Franconia, owing to their straitened circumstances, but they returned to London on purpose that their child should be born in England. In 181 7 the death of Princess Charlotte (only child of the prince regent, afterwards George IV., and wife of Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, afterwards king of the Belgians), had left the ultimate succession to the throne of England, in the younger generation, so uncertain that the three unmarried sons of George III., the dukes of Clarence (afterwards William IV.), Kent and Cambridge, all married in the following year, the two elder on the same day. All three had children, but the duke of Clarence's two baby daughters died in infancy, in 1819 and 1821; and the duke of Cambridge's son George, born on the 26th of March 1819, was only two months old when the birth of the duke of Kent's daughter put her before him in the succession. The question as to what name the child should bear was not settled without bickerings. The duke of Kent wished her to be christened Elizabeth, and the prince regent wanted Georgiana, while the tsar Alexander I., who had promised to stand sponsor, stipulated for Alexandrina. - The baptism was performed in a drawing-room of Kensington Palace on the 24th of June by Dr Manners Sutton, archbishop of Canterbury. The prince regent, who was present, named the child Alexandrina; then, being requested by the duke of Kent to give a second name, he said, rather abruptly, " Let her be called Victoria, after her mother, but this name must come after the other." 1 Six weeks after her christening the princess was vaccinated, this being the first occasion on which a member of the royal family underwent the operation. In January 1820 the duke of Kent died, five days before his brother succeeded to the throne as George IV. The widowed duchess of Kent was now a woman of thirty-four, handsome, homely, a German at heart, and with little liking for English ways. But she was a woman of experience, and shrewd; and fortunately she had a safe and affectionate adviser in her brother, Prince Leopold of Coburg, afterwards (1831) king of the Belgians, who as the husband of the late Princess Charlotte had once been a prospective prince consort of England. His former doctor and private secretary, Baron Stockmar (q.v.), a man of encyclopaedic information and remarkable judgment, who had given special attention to the problems of a sovereign's position in England, was afterwards to play an important r61e in Queen Victoria's life; and Leopold himself took a fatherly interest in the young princess's education, and contributed some thousands of pounds annually to the duchess of Kent's income. Prince Leopold still lived at this time at Claremont, where Princess Charlotte had died, and this became the duchess of Kent's occasional English home; but she was much addicted to travelling, and spent several months every year in visits to watering-places. It was said at court that she liked the demonstrative homage of crowds; but she had good reason to fear lest her child should be taken away from her to be educated according to the views of George IV. Between the king and his sister-in-law there was little love, and when the death of the duke of Clarence's second infant daughter Elizabeth in 1821 made it pretty certain that Princess Victoria would eventually become queen, the duchess felt that the king might possibly obtain the support of his ministers if he insisted that the future sovereign should be brought up under masters and mistresses designated by himself. The little princess could not have received a better education than that which was given her under Prince Leopold's direction. Her uncle considered that she ought to be kept as long as possible from the knowledge of her position, which might raise a large growth of pride or vanity in her and make her un- manageable; so Victoria was twelve years old before she knew that she was to wear a crown. Until she became queen she never slept a night away from her mother's room, and she was not allowed to converse with any grown-up person, friend, tutor or servant without the duchess of Kent or the Baroness Lehzen, her private governess, being present. Louise Lehzen, a native of Coburg, had come to England as governess to the Princess Fecdore of Leiningen, the duchess of Kent's daughter 1 The question of her name, as that of one who was to be queen, remained even up to her accession to the throne a much-debated one. In August 1831, in a discussion in parliament upon a grant to the duchess of Kent, Sir M. W, Ridley suggested changing it to Elizabeth as " more accordant to the feelings of the people " ; and the idea of a change seems to have been powerfully, supported. In 1836 William IV. approved of a proposal to change it to Charlotte ; but, to the princess's own delight, it was given up. VICTORIA, QUEEN 29 by her first husband, and she became teacher to the Princess Victoria when the latter was five years old. George IV. in 1827 made her a baroness of Hanover, and she continued as lady-in- attendance after the duchess of Northumberland was appointed official governess in 1S30, but actually performed the functions first of governess and then of private secretary till 1842, when she left the court and returned to Germany, where she died in 1870. The Rev. George Davys, afterwards bishop of Peter- borough, taught the princess Latin; Mr J. B. Sale, music; Mr West all, history; and Mr Thomas Steward, the writing master of Westminster School, instructed her in penmanship. In 1830 George IV. died, and the duke of York (George III.'s second son) having died childless in 1827, the duke of Clarence became king as William IV. Princess Victoria now became the direct heir to the throne. William IV. cherished affectionate feelings towards his niece; unfortunately he took offence at the duchess of Kent for declining to let her child come and live at his court for several months in each year, and through the whole of his reign there was strife between the two; and Prince Leopold was no longer in England to act as peacemaker. In the early hours of the 20th of June 1S37, William IV. died. His thoughts had dwelt often on his niece, and he repeatedly said that he was sure she would be " a good woman and a good queen. It will touch every sailor's heart to have a girl queen to fight for. They'll be tattooing her face on their arms, and I'll be bound they'll all think she was christened after Nelson's ship." Dr Howley, archbishop of Canterbury, and the marquis of Conyngham, bearing the news of the king's death, started in a landau with four horses for Kensington, which they reached at five o'clock. Their servants rang, knocked and thumped; and when at last admittance was gained, the primate and the marquis were shown into a lower room and there left to wait. Presently a maid appeared and said that the Princess Victoria was " in a sweet sleep and could not be disturbed." Dr Howley, who was nothing if not pompous, answered that he had come on state business, to which everything, even sleep, must give place. The princess was accordingly roused, and quickly came downstairs in a dressing-gown, her fair hair flowing loose over her shoulders. Her own account of this interview, written the same day in her journal (Letters, i. p. 97), shows her to have been quite prepared. The privy council assembled at Kensington in the morning; and the usual oaths were administered to the queen by Lord Chancellor Cottenham, after which all present did homage. There was a touching incident when the queen's uncles, the dukes of Cumberland and Sussex, two old men, came forward to perform their obeisance. The queen blushed, and descending from her throne, kissed them both, without allowing them to kneel. By the death of William IV., the duke of Cumberland had become King Ernest of Hanover, and immediately after the ceremony he made haste to reach his kingdom. Had Queen Victoria died without issue, this prince, who was arro-' gant, ill-tempered and rash, would have become king of Great Britain; and, as nothing but mischief could have resulted from this, the young queen's life became very precious in the sight of her people. She, of course, retained the late king's ministers in their offices, and it was under Lord Melbourne's direction that the privy council drew up their declaration to the kingdom. This document described the queen as Alexandrina Victoria, and all the peers who subscribed the roll in the House of Lords on the 20th of June swore allegiance to her under those names. It was not till the following day that the sovereign's style was altered to Victoria simply, and this necessitated the issuing of a new declaration and a re-signing of the peers' roll. The public proclamation of the queen took place on the 21st at St James's Palace with great pomp. The queen opened her first parliament in person, and in a well-written speech, which she read with much feeling, adverted to her youth and to the necessity which existed for her being guided by enlightened advisers. When both houses had voted loyal addresses, the question of the Civil List was considered, and a week or two later a message was brought to parliament requesting an increase of the grant formerly made to the duchess of Kent. Government recommended an addition of £30,000 a year, which was voted, and before the close of the year a Civil List Bill was passed, settling £385,000 a year on the queen. The duchess of Kent and her brothers, King Leopold and the duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, had always hoped to arrange that the queen should marry her cousin, Albert (q.v.) of Saxe-Coburg- Gotha, and the prince himself had been made acquainted with this plan from his earliest years. In 1836 Prince Albert, who was born in the same year as his future wife, had come on a visit to England with his father and with his brother, Prince Ernest, and his handsome face, gentle disposition and playful humour had produced a favourable impression on the princess. The duchess of Kent had communicated her projects to Lord Mel- bourne, and they were known to many other statesmen, and to persons in society; but the gossip of drawing-rooms during the years 1837-38 continually represented that the young queen had fallen in love with Prince This or Lord That, and the more imaginative babblers hinted at post-chaises waiting outside Ken- sington Gardens in the night, private marriages and so forth. The coronation took place on the 28th of June 1838. No more touching ceremony of the kind had ever been performed in Westminster Abbey. Anne was a middle-aged married woman at the time of her coronation; she waddled M y 0fl , and wheezed, and made no majestic appearance upon her throne. Mary was odious to her Protestant subjects, Eliza- beth to those of the unreformed religion, and both these queens succeeded to the crown in times of general sadness; but the youthful Queen Victoria had no enemies except a few Chartists, and the land was peaceful and prosperous when she began to reign over it. The cost of George IV. 's coronation amounted to £240,000; that of William IV. had amounted to £50,000 only; and in asking £70,000 the government had judged that things could be done with suitable luxury, but without waste. The traditional banquet in Westminster Hall, with the throwing down of the glove by the king's champion in armour, had been dispensed with at the coronation of William IV., and it was resolved not to revive it. But it was arranged that the sove- reign's procession to the abbey through the streets should be made a finer show than on previous occasions; and it drew to London 400,000 country visitors. Three ambassadors for different reasons became objects of great interest on the occasion. Marshal Soult, Wellington's old foe, received a hearty popular welcome as a military hero; Prince Esterhazy, who represented Austria, dazzled society by his Magyar uniform, which was encrusted all over, even to the boots, with pearls and diamonds; while the Turkish ambassador, Sarim Effendi, caused much diversion by his bewilderment. He was so wonder-struck that he could not walk to his place, but stood as if he had lost his senses, and kept muttering, " All this for a woman I " Within a year the court was brought into sudden disfavour with the country by two events of unequal importance, but both exciting. The first was the case of Lady Flora Hastings. The In February 1830 this young lady, a daughter of the "Bed- marquis of Hastings, and a maid of honour to the ^5 a f n ,* er duchess of Kent, was accused by certain ladies of the bedchamber of immoral conduct. The charge having been laid before Lord Melbourne, he communicated it to Sir James Clark, the queen's physician, and the result was that Lady Flora was subjected to the indignity of a medical examination, which, while it cleared her character, seriously affected her health. In fact, she died in the following July, and it was then discovered that the physical appearances which first provoked suspicion against her had been due to enlargement of the liver. The queen's conduct towards Lady Flora was kind and sisterly from the beginning to the end of this painful business; but the scandal was made public through some indignant letters which the marchioness of Hastings addressed to Lord Melbourne pray- ing for the punishment of her daughter's traducers, and the general opinion was that Lady Flora had been grossly treated at the instigation of some private court enemies. While the agitation about the affair was yet unappeased, the political 3^ VICTORIA, QUEEN crisis known as the " Bedchamber Plot " occurred. The Whig ministry had introduced a bill suspending the Constitution of Jamaica because the Assembly in that colony had refused to adopt the Prisons Act passed by the Imperial Legislature. Sir Robert Peel moved an amendment, which, on a division (6th May), was defeated by a majority of five only in a house of 583, and ministers thereupon resigned. The duke of Wellington was first sent for, but he advised that the task of forming an administration should be entrusted to Sir Robert Peel. Sir Robert was ready to form a cabinet in which the duke of Welling- ton, Lords Lyndhurst, Aberdeen and Stanley, and Sir James Graham would have served; but he stipulated that the mistress of the robes and the ladies of the bedchamber appointed by the Whig administration should be removed, and to this the queen would not consent. On the 10th of May she wrote curtly that the course proposed by Sir Robert Peel was contrary to usage and repugnant to her feelings; the Tory leader then had to inform the House of Commons that, having failed to obtain the proof which he desired of her majesty's confidence, it was im- possible for him to accept office. The ladies of the bedchamber were so unpopular in consequence of their behaviour to Lady Flora Hastings that the public took alarm at the notion that the queen had fallen into the hands of an intriguing coterie; and Lord Melbourne, who was accused of wishing to rule on the strength of court favour, resumed office with diminished prestige. The Tories thus felt aggrieved; and the Chartists were so prompt to make political capital out of the affair that large numbers were added to their ranks. On the 14th of June Mr Attwood, M.P. for Birmingham, presented to the House of Commons a Chartist petition alleged to have been signed by 1,280,000 people. It was a cylinder of parchment of about the diameter of a coach- wheel, and was literally rolled up on the floor of the house. On the day after this curious document had furnished both amuse- ment and uneasiness to the Commons, a woman, describing herself as Sophia Elizabeth Guelph Sims, made application at the Mansion House for advice and assistance to prove herself the lawful child of George IV. and Mrs Fitzherbert; and this incident, trumpery as it was, added fuel to the disloyal flame then raging. Going in state to Ascot the queen was hissed by some ladies as her carriage drove on to the course, and two peeresses, one of them a Tory duchess, were openly accused of this unseemly act. Meanwhile some monster Chartist demon- strations were being organized, and they commenced on the 4th of July with riots at Birmingham. It was an untoward coinci- dence that Lady Flora Hastings died on the 5th of July, for though she repeated on her deathbed, and wished it to be published, that the queen had taken no part whatever in the proceedings which had shortened her life, it was remarked that the ladies who were believed to have persecuted her still retained the sovereign's favour. The riots at Birmingham lasted ten days, and had to be put down by armed force. They were followed by others at Newcastle, Manchester, Bolton, Chester and Macclesfield. These troublous events had the effect of hastening the queen's marriage. Lord Melbourne ascertained that the queen's dis- The positions towards her cousin, Prince Albert, were un- queen's changed, and he advised King Leopold, through M. marriage. y an in fact, ^JU" the title was intended to impress the idea of British suzerainty forcibly upon the minds of the native princes, and upon the population of Hindustan. The prince of Wales's voyage to India in the winter of 1875-76 had brought the heir to the throne into personal relationship with the great Indian vassals of the British crown, and it was felt that a further demonstra- tion of the queen's interest in her magnificent dependency would confirm their loyalty. The queen's private life during the decade 1870-80 was one of quiet, broken only by one great sorrow when the Princess Alice died in 1878. In 1867 her majesty had started in author- ship by publishing The Early Days ■ of the Prince uf™* Consort, compiled by General Grey; in 1869 she gave to the world her interesting and simply written diary entitled Leaves from the Journal of our Life in the Highlands, and jn 1874 appeared the first volume of The Life and, Letters of the Prince Consort (2nd vol. in 1880), edited by Sir Theodore Martin. A second instalment of the Highland journal appeared in 1885. These literary occupations solaced the hours of a life which was mostly spent in privacy. A few trips to the- Continent, in which the queen .was always accompanied by her youngest daughter, the Princess Beatrice, brought a little variety into the home-life, and aided much in keeping up the good health which the queen enjoyed almost uninterruptedly. So far as public ceremonies were concerned, the prince and princess of Wales were now coming forward more and more to represent the royal family. People noticed meanwhile that the queen had taken a great affection for her Scottish man-servant, John Brown, who had been in her service since 1849; she made him her constant personal attendant, and looked on him more as a friend than as servant. When he died in 1883 the queen's grief was intense. From 1880 onwards Ireland almost monopolized the field of domestic politics. The queen was privately opposed to Gladstone's Home Rule policy; but she observed in public a constitutional reticence on the subject. In the year, however, of the Crimes Act 1887, an event took place which was of more intimate personal concern to the queen, and of more attractive import to the country and the empire at large. June 20th was the fiftieth anniversary of her accession to jubilee. the throne, and on the following day, for the second time in English history, a great Jubilee celebration was held to commemorate so happy an event. The country threw VICTORIA, QUEEN 35 itself into the celebration with unchecked enthusiasm; large sums of money were everywhere subscribed; in every city, town and village something was done both in the way of rejoicing and in the way of establishing some permanent memorial of the event. In London the day itself was kept by a solemn service in Westminster Abbey, to which the queen went in state, surrounded by the most brilliant, royal, and princely escort that had ever accompanied a British sovereign, and cheered on her way by the applause of hundreds of thousands of her subjects. The queen had already paid a memorable visit to the East End, when she opened the People's Palace on the 14th of May. On the 2nd of July she reviewed at Buckingham Palace some 28,000 volunteers of London and the home counties. On the 4th of July she laid the foundation stone of the Imperial Institute, the building at Kensington to which, at the instance of the prince of Wales, it had been determined to devote the large sum of money collected as a Jubilee offering, and which was opened by the queen in 1S93. On the 9th of July the queen reviewed 60,000 men at Aldcrshot; and, last and chief of all, on the 23rd of July, one of the most brilliant days of a brilliant summer, she reviewed the fleet at Spithead. The year 1888 witnessed two events which greatly affected European history, and in a minor, though still marked, degree Thequeca the life of the English court. On the 9th of March and the emperor William I. died at Berlin. He was Bismarck. succeec ied by his son, the emperor Frederick III., regarded with special affection in England as the husband of the princess royal. But at the time he was suffering from a malignant disease of the throat, and he died on the 15th of June, being succeeded by his eldest son, the emperor William II., the grandson of the queen. Meanwhile Queen Victoria spent some weeks at Florence at the Villa Palmieri, and returned home by Darmstadt and Berlin. In spite of the illness of the emperor Frederick a certain number of court festivities were held in her honour, and she had long con- versations with Prince Bismarck, who was deeply impressed by her majesty's personality. Just before, the prince, who was still chancellor, had taken a very strong line with regard to a royal marriage in which the queen was keenly interested— the proposal that Prince Alexander of Battenberg, lately ruler of Bulgaria, and brother of the queen's son-in-law, Prince Henry, should marry Princess Victoria, the eldest daughter of the emperor Frederick. Prince Bismarck, who had been anti- Battenberg from the beginning, vehemently opposed this mar- riage, on the ground that for reasons of state policy it would never do for a daughter of the German emperor to marry a prince who was personally disliked by the tsar. This affair caused no little agitation in royal circles, but in the end state reasons were allowed to prevail and the chancellor had his way. The queen had borne so well the fatigue of the Jubilee that during the succeeding years she was encouraged to make some- what more frequent appearances among her subjects. In May 1888 she attended a performance of Sir Arthur Sullivan's Golden Legend at the Albert Hall, and in August she visited Glasgow to open the magnificent new municipal buildings, remaining for a couple of nights at Blythswood, the seat of Sir Archibald Campbell. Early in 1889 she received at Windsor a special embassy, which was the beginning of a memorable chapter of English history: two Matabele chiefs were sent by King Lobengula to present his respects to the " great White Queen," as to whose very existence, it was said, he had up till that time been sceptical. Soon afterwards her majesty went to Biarritz, and the occasion was made memorable by a visit which she paid to the queen-regent of Spain at San Sebas- tian, the only visit that an English reigning sovereign had ever paid to the Peninsula. The relations between the court and the country formed matter in 18S9 for a somewhat sharp discussion in parliament and in the press. A royal message was brought by Mr W. PI. Smith on the 2nd of July, expressing, on the one hand, the queen's desire to provide for Prince Albert Victor of Wales, and, on the other, informing the house of the intended marriage of the prince of Wales's daughter, the Princess Louise, to the earl (afterwards duke) of Fife. On the proposal of Mr Smith, seconded by Gladstone, a select committee mentary was appointed to consider these messages and to grant to report to the house as to the existing practice and as theptince to the principles to be adopted for the future. The ° aIld ^ s S evidence laid before the committee explained to the country for the first time the actual state of the royal income, and on the proposal of Gladstone, amending the proposal of the government, it was proposed to grant a fixed addition of £36,000 per annum to the prince of Wales, out of which he should be expected to provide for his children without further application to the country. Effect was given to this proposal in a bill called " The Prince of Wales's Children's Bill," which was carried in spite of the persistent opposition of a small* group of Radicals. In the spring of 1890 the queen visited Aix-les-Bains in the hope that the waters of that health resort might alleviate the rheumatism from which she was now frequently tsanni suffering. She returned as usual by way of Darmstadt, and shortly after her arrival at Windsor paid a visit to Baron Ferdinand Rothschild at Waddesdon Manor. In February she launched the battleship " Royal Sovereign " at Portsmouth; a week later she visited the Horse Show at Islington. Her annual spring visit to the South was this year paid to the little town of Grasse. At the beginning of 1892 a heavy blow fell upon the queen in the death of the prince of Wales's eldest son Albert Victor, duke of Clarence and Avondale. He had never been jy eat ^ of a robust constitution, and after a little more than of the a week's illness from pneumonia following influenza; tfuAe of he died at Sandringham. The pathos of his death areace. was increased by the fact that only a short time before it had been announced that the prince was about to marry his second cousin, Princess May, daughter of the duke and duchess of Teck. The death of the young prince threw a gloom over the country, and caused the royal family to spend the year in such retirement as was possible. The queen this year paid a visit to Costebelle, and stayed there for some quiet weeks. In 1893 the country, on the expiration of the royal mourning, began to take a more than usual interest in the affairs of the royal family. On the 19th of February, the queen ■ left home for a visit to Florence, and spent it in the Villa Palmieri. She was able to display remarkable energy in visiting the sights of the city, and even went as far afield as San Gimignano; and her visit had a notable effect in strengthening the bonds of friendship between the United Kingdom and the Italian people. On 28th April she arrived home, and a few days later the prince of Wales's second son, George, duke of York (see George V.), who by his brother's death had been left in the direct line of succession to the throne, was betrothed to the Princess May, the marriage being celebrated on 6th July in the Chapel Royal of St James's Palace. In 1894 the queen stayed for some weeks at Florence, and on her return she stopped at Coburg to witness the marriage between two of her grandchildren, the grand duke - of Hesse and the Princess Victoria Melita of Coburg. On the next day the emperor William officially announced the betrothal of the Cesarevitch (afterwards the tsar Nicholas II.) to the princess Alix of Hesse, a granddaughter whom the queen had always regarded with special affection. Aftet a few weeks in London the queen went northwards and stopped at Manchester, where she opened the Ship Canal. Two days afterwards she celebrated her seventy-fifth birthday in quiet at Balmoral. A month later (June 23) took place the birth of a son to the duke and duchess of York, the child receiving the thoroughly English name of Edward. In 1895 the queen lost her faithful and most efficient private secretary, General Sir Henry Ponsonby, who for many years 36 VICTORIA, QUEEN Batten- berg. had helped her in the management of her most private affairs and had acted as an intermediary between her and her ministers Death of wu:ri singular ability and success. His successor was Prince Sir Arthur Bigge. The following year, 1896, was Henry of marked by a loss which touched the queen even more nearly and more personally. At his own urgent request Prince Henry of Battenberg, the queen's son-in-law, was permitted to join the Ashanti expedition, and early in January the prince was struck down with fever. He was brought to the coast and put on board her majesty's ship *' Blonde," where, on the 20th, he died. In September 1S96 the queen's reign had reached a point at which it exceeded in length that of any other English The sovereign; but by her special request all public Diamond celebrations of the fact were deferred until the follow- Jubiiee. | n g j une? which marked the completion of sixty years from her accession. As the time drew on it was obvious that the celebrations of this Diamond Jubilee, as it was popularly called, would exceed in magnificence those of the Jubilee of 1887, Mr Chamberlain, the secretary for the colonies, induced his colleagues to seize the opportunity of making the jubilee a festival of the British empire. Accordingly, the prime ministers of all the self-governing colonics, with their families, were invited to come to London as the guests of the country to take part in the Jubilee procession; and drafts of the troops from every British colony and dependency were brought home for the same purpose. The procession was, in the strictest sense of the term, unique. Here was a display, not only of Englishmen, Scotsmen, Irishmen, Welsh- men, but of Mounted Rifles from Victoria and New South Wales, from the Cape and from Natal, and from the Dominion of Canada. Here were Hausas from the Niger and the Gold Coast, coloured men from the West India regiments, zaptiehs from Cyprus, Chinamen from Hong Kong, and Dyaks — now civilized into military police — from British North Borneo. Here, most brilliant sight of all, were the Imperial Service troops sent by the native princes of India; while the detachments of Sikhs who marched earlier in the procession received their full meed of admiration and applause. Altogether the queen was in her carriage for more than four hours, in itself an extraordinary physical feat for a woman of seventy-eight. Her own feelings were shown by the simple but significant message she sent to her people throughout the world: " From my heart I thank my beloved people. May God bless them." The illuminations in London and the great provincial towns were magnificent, and all the hills from Ben Nevis to the South Downs were crowned with bonfires. The queen herself held a great review at Aldershot; but a much more significant display was the review by the prince of Wales of the fleet at Spithead on Saturday, the 26th of June. No less than 165 vessels of all classes were drawn up in four lines, extending altogether to a length of 30 m. The two years that followed the Diamond Jubilee were, as regards the queen, comparatively uneventful. Her health remained good, and her visit to Cimiez in the spring of 1898 was as enjoyable and as beneficial as before. In May 1899, after another visit to the Riviera, the queen performed what proved to be her last ceremonial function in London: she proceeded in " semi-state " to South Kensington, and laid the foundation stone of the new buildings completing the Museum —henceforth to be called the Victoria and Albert Museum — which had been planned more than forty years before by the prince consort. Griefs and anxieties encompassed the queen during the last year of her life. But if the South African War proved more The serious than had been anticipated, it did more to queen's weld the empire together than years of peaceful last year, progress might have accomplished. The queen's frequent messages of thanks and greeting to her colonies and to the troops sent by them, and her reception of the latter at Windsor, gave evidence of the heartfelt joy with which she saw the sons of the empire giving their lives for the defence of its integrity; and the satisfaction which she showed in the Federation of the Australian colonies was no less keen. The reverses of the first part of the Boer cam- paign, together with the loss of so many of her officers and soldiers, caused no small part of that " great strain " of which the Court Circular spoke in the ominous words which first told the country that she was seriously ill. But the queen faced the new situation with her usual courage, devotion and strength of will. She reviewed the departing regiments; she entertained the wives and children of the Windsor soldiers who had gone to the war; she showed by frequent messages her watchful interest in the course of the campaign and in the efforts which were being made throughout the whole empire; and her Christmas giFt of a box of chocolate to every soldier in South Africa was a touching proof of her sympathy and interest. She relinquished her annual holiday on the Riviera, feeling that at such a time she ought not to leave her country. Entirely on her own initiative, and moved by admiration for the fine achievements of " her brave Irish " during the war, the queen announced her intention of paying a long visit to Dublin; and there, accordingly, she went for the month of April 1900, staying in the Viceregal Lodge, receiving many of the leaders of Irish society, inspecting some 50,000 school children from all parts of Ireland, and taking many a drive amid the charming scenery of the neighbourhood of Dublin. She went even further than this attempt to conciliate Irish feeling, and to show her recognition of the gallantry of the Irish soldiers she issued an order for them to wear the shamrock on St Patrick's Day, and for a new regiment of Irish Guards to be constituted. In the previous November the queen had had the pleasure of receiving, on a private visit, her grandson, the German Em- peror, who came accompanied by the empress and by two of their sons. This visit cheered the queen, and the successes of the army which followed the arrival of Lord Roberts in Africa occasioned great joy to her, as she testified by many published messages. But independently of the public anxieties of the war, and of those aroused by the violent and unexpected out- break of fanaticism in China, the year brought deep private griefs to the queen. In 1899 her grandson, the hereditary prince of Coburg, had succumbed to phthisis, and in iqoo his father, the duke of Coburg, the queen's second son, previously known as the duke of Edinburgh, also died (July 30). Then Prince Christian Victor, the queen's grandson, fell a victim to enteric fever at Pretoria; and during the autumn it came to be known that the empress Frederick, the queen's eldest daughter, was very seriously ill. Moreover, just at the end of the year a loss which greatly shocked and grieved the queen was experienced in the sudden death, at Windsor Castle, of the Dowager Lady Churchill, one of her oldest and most intimate friends. These losses told upon the queen at her advanced age- Throughout her life she had enjoyed excellent health, and even in the last few years the only marks of age were rheumatic stiffness of the joints, which prevented walking, and a diminished power of eyesight. In the autumn of 1900, however, her health began definitely to fail, and though arrangements were made Death for another holiday in the South, it was plain that her of the strength was seriously affected. Still she continued Queen, the ordinary routine of her duties and occupations. Before Christmas she made her usual journey to Osborne, and there on the 2nd of January she received Lord Roberts on his return from South Africa and handed to him the insignia of the Garter. A fortnight later she commanded a second visit from the field- marshal; she continued to transact business, and until a week before her death she still took her daily drive. A sudden loss of power then supervened, and on Friday evening, the i8th of January, the Court Circular published an authoritative announce- ment of her illness. On Tuesday, the 22nd of January 1901, she died. Queen Victoria was a ruler of a new type. When she ascended the throne the popular faith in kings and queens was on the decline. She revived that faith; she consolidated her throne; she not only captivated the affections of the multitude, but VICTORIA, T. L. DA— VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) won the respect of thoughtful men; and all this she achieved by methods which to her predecessors would have seemed im- practicable — methods which it required no less shrewdness to discover than force of character and honesty of heart to adopt steadfastly. Whilst all who approached the queen bore witness to her candour and reasonableness in relation to her ministers, all likewise proclaimed how anxiously she considered advice that was submitted to her before letting herself be persuaded that she must accept it for the good of her people. Though richly endowed with saving common sense, the queen was not specially remarkable for high development of any specialized intellectual force. Her whole life, public and private, was an abiding lesson in the paramount importance of character. John Bright said of her that what specially struck him was her absolute truthfulness. The extent of her family connexions, and the correspondence she maintained with foreign sovereigns, together with the confidence inspired by her personal character, often enabled her to smooth the rugged places of international relations; and she gradually became in later years the link between all parts of a demo- cratic empire, the citizens of which felt a passionate loyalty for their venerable queen. By her long reign and unblemished record her name had become associated inseparably with British institutions and imperial solidarity. Her own life was by choice, and as far as her position would admit, one of almost austere simplicity and homeliness; and her subjects were proud of a royalty which involved none of the mischiefs of caprice or ostentation, but set an example alike of motherly sympathy and of queenly dignity. She was mourned at her death not by her own country only, nor even by all English-speaking people, but by the whole world. The funeral in London on the ist and 2nd of February, including first the passage of the coffin from the Isle of Wight to Gosport between lines of warships, and secondly a military procession from London to Windsor, was a memorable solemnity: the greatest of English sovereigns, whose name would in history mark an age, had gone to her rest. There is a good bibliographical note at the end of Mr Sidney Lee's article in the National Dictionary of Biography. See also the Letters of Queen Victoria (1907), and the obituary published by The Times, from which some passages have been borrowed above. (H . Ch.) VICTORIA (or Vittoria), TOMMASSO LUDOVICO DA (r. 1540-c. 1013), Spanish musical composer, was born at Avila (unless, as Haberl conjectures, his title of Presbyter Abulensis refers not to his birthplace but to his parish as priest, so that his name would indicate that he was born at Vittoria). In rS73 he was appointed as Maestro di Cappella to the Collegium Germani- cum at Rome, where he had probably been trained. Victoria left Rome in r^Sg, being then appointed vice-master of the Royal Chapel at Madrid, a post which he held until 1602. In r6o3 he composed for the funeral of the empress Maria the greatest requiem of the Golden Age, which is his last known work, though in 1613 a contemporary speaks of him as still living. He was not ostensibly Palestrina's pupil; but Palestrina had the main influence upon his art, and the personal relations between the two were as intimate as were the artistic. The work begun by Morales and perfected by Palestrina left no stumbling-blocks in Victoria's path and he was able from the outset to express the purity of his ideals of religious music without having to sift the good from the bad in that Flemish tradition which had entangled Palestrina's path while it enlarged his stvlc. From Victoria's first publication in 1572 to his last requiem (the Ojjkium Defunctorum of 1605) there is practically no change of style, all being pure church music of unswerving loftiness and showing no inequality except in concentration of thought. Like his countryman and predecessor Morales, he wrote no secular music; 1 yet he differs from Morales, perhaps more than can be accounted for by his later date, in that his devotional spirit is impulsive rather than ascetic. His work 1 One French song is mentioned by Hawkins, but no secular music appears in the prospectus of the modern complete edition of his works published by Breitkopf and Hartel. 37 is the crown of Spanish music: music which has been regarded as not constituting a special school, since it absorbed itself so thoroughly in the Rome of Palestrina. Yet, as has been aptly pointed out in the admirable article " Vittoria " in Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Roman music owes so much to that Spanish school which produced Guerrero, Morales and Victoria, that it might fairly be called the Hispano- Roman school. In spite of the comparative smallness of Victoria's output as compared with that of many of his contemporaries, there is no mistaking his claim to rank with Palestrina and Orlando di Lasso in the triad of supreme 16th-century masters. In any extensive anthology of liturgical polyphony such as the Muska Divina of Proske, his work stands out as impressively as Palestrina's and Lasso's; and the style, in spite of a resem- blance to Palestrina which amounts to imitation, is as individual as only a successful imitator of Palestrina can be. That is to say, Victoria's individuality is strong enough to assert itself by the very act of following Palestrina's path. When he is below his best his style does not become crabbed or harsh, but over-facile and thin, though never failing in euphony. If he seldom displays an elaborate technique it is not because he conceals it, or lacks it. His mastery is unfailing, but his methods are those of direct emotional effect; and the intellectual qualities that strengthen and deepen this emotion are themselves innate and not sought out. The emotion is reasonable and lofty, not because he has trained himself to think correctly, but because he does not know that any one can think otherwise. His works fill eight volumes in the complete edition of Messrs Breitkopf and Hartel. ( D. F. T.) VICTORIA, a British colonial state, occupying the south- eastern corner of Australia. Its western boundary is in 140° 58' E.; on the cast it runs out to a point at Cape Howe, in 150 E. long., being thus rudely triangular in shape; the river Murray constitutes nearly the whole of the northern 1 boundary, its most northerly point being in 34° S. lat.; the southern boundary is the coast-line of the Southern Ocean and of Bass Strait; the most southerly point is Wilson's Promontory in 39° S. lat. The greatest length east and west is about 480 m.; the greatest width, in the west, is about 250 m. The area is officially stated to be 87,884 sq. Tn. The coast-line may be estimated at about 800 m. It begins about the 141st meridian with bold but not lofty sand- stone cliffs, worn into deep caves and capped by grassy undu- lations, which extend inland to pleasant park-like lands. Capes Bridgewater and Nelson form a peninsula of forest lands, broken by patches of meadow. To the east of Cape Nelson lies the moderately sheltered inlet of Portland Bay, consisting of a sweep of sandy beach flanked by bold granite rocks. Then comes a long unbroken stretch of high cliffs, which, owing to insetting currents, have been the scene of many calamitous wrecks. Cape Ot way is the termination of a wild mountain range that here abuts on the coast. Its brown cliffs rise verti- cally from the water; and the steep slopes above are covered with dense forests of exceedingly tall timber and tree-ferns. Eastwards from this cape the line of cliffs gradually diminishes in height to about 20 to 40 ft. at the entrance to Port Phillip. Next comes Port Phillip Bay, at the head of which stands the city of Melbourne. When the tide recedes from this bay through the narrow entrance it often encounters a strong current just outside; the broken and somewhat dangerous sea thus caused is called "the Rip." East of Port Phillip Bay the shores consist for 15 m. of a line of sandbanks; but at Cape Schanck they suddenly become high and bold. East of this comes Western Port, a deep" inlet more than half occupied by French Island and Phillip Island. Its shores are flat and uninteresting, in some parts swampy. The bay is shallow and of little use for navigation. The coast continues rocky round Cape Liptrap. Wilson's Promontory is a great rounded mass of granite hills, with wild and striking scenery, tree-fern gullies and gigantic gum-trees, connected with the mainland by a narrow sandy isthmus. At its extremity lie a multitude of rocky islets, with steep granite edges. North of this cape, and VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 2 MbarrfneT~jwS^ I Af*]cy ,\ • ,• • opening to the east, lies Comer Inlet, which is dry at low water. The coast now continues low to the extremity of the colony. The slight bend northward forms a sort of bight called the Ninely Mile Beach, but it really exceeds that length. It is an unbroken line of sandy shore, backed by low sandhills, dn which grows a sparse dwarf vegetation. Behind these hills comes a succession of lakes, surrounded by excellent land, and beyond these rise the soft blue outlines of the mountain masses of the interior. The shores on the extreme east are somewhat higher, and occasionally rise in bold points. They terminate in Cape Howe, off which lies Gabo Island, of small extent but containing 1 an important lighthouse and signalling station. The western half of Victoria is level or slightly undulating, and as a rule tame in its scenery, exhibiting only thinly timbered grassy lands, with all the appearance of open parks. . The north-west corner of the colony, equally flat, is dry and sometimes sandy, and frequently bare of vegetation, though in one part some seven or eight millions of acres are covered with the dense brushwood known as " mallee scrub." This wide western plain is slightly broken in two places. In the south the wild ranges of Cape Otway are covered over a considerable area with richly luxurious but almost impassable forests. This district has been reserved as a state forest and its coast forms a favourite holiday resort, the scenery being very attractive. The middle of the plain is crossed by a thin line of mountains, known, as the Australian Pyrenees, at the western extremity of which_ there are several irregularly placed transverse ranges, the chief being the Grampians, the Victoria Range and the Sierra Range. Their highest point is Mount William (3600 feet). The eastern half of the colony is wholly different. Though there is plenty of level land, it occurs in small patches, and chiefly in the south, in Gippsland, which extends from Corner Inlet to Cape Howe. But a great part of this eastern half is occupied with the complicated mass of ranges known collectively as the Australian Alps. The whole forms a plateau averaging from 1000 to 2000 ft. high, with many smaller table- lands ranging from 3000 to 5000 ft. in height. The highest peak, Bogong, is 6308 ft. in altitude. The ranges are so densely covered with vegetation that it is extremely difficult to penetrate them. About fifteen peaks over 5000 ft. in height have been measured. Along the ranges grow the giant trees for which Victoria is famous. The narrow valleys and gullies contain exquisite scenery, the rocky streams being overshadowed by groves of graceful tree-ferns, from amid whose waving fronds rise the tall smooth stems of the white gums. Over ten millions of acres are thus covered with forest-clad mountains which in due time will become a very valuable asset of the state. The Australian Alps arc connected with the Pyrenees by a long ridge called the Dividing Range (1500 to 3000 ft. high). Victoria is fairly well watered, but its streams are generally too small to admit of navigation. This, however, is not the case with _. the Murray river (