The Russell Cawthorn Collection
The Great War 1914-1918, and Associated Conflicts
The Ottoman Empire & Further East: Then to Now
The Armenian and Other Genocides
The Ottoman Empire & Further East: Then to Now
The Armenian and Other Genocides
RCC7828
The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire (1916)
by Arnold Joseph Toynbee James Bryce
ISBN
9781169370418
Purchase Price
£39.03 (new)
Date Purchased
May 30, 2019
Publisher
Hodder and Stoughton (1926, London)
Notes
This is a Kessinger Legacy reprint of the original Report. It consists of a collection of documents presented to Viscount Grey of Fallodon (sic), Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in the UK Government at the outbreak of war and subsequently. The Report was compiled by Toynbee and was the project of Viscount Bryce, who was near the end of his career, whereas Toynbee was (as described by Bryce) "a young historian of high academic distinction". Bryce's letter to Grey, introducing the Report, was ironically dated 1st July 1916. The Report was laid before the Houses of Parliament as an Official Paper. This book is nearly 700 pages long. It is a facsimile of the original, which has been produced in the USA. As far as the contents of the Report - which appears to be extremely comprehensive - are concerned, wherever one looks in the book, it is almost impossible not to be confronted with absolutely chilling narratives.
9781169370418
Purchase Price
£39.03 (new)
Date Purchased
May 30, 2019
Publisher
Hodder and Stoughton (1926, London)
Notes
This is a Kessinger Legacy reprint of the original Report. It consists of a collection of documents presented to Viscount Grey of Fallodon (sic), Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in the UK Government at the outbreak of war and subsequently. The Report was compiled by Toynbee and was the project of Viscount Bryce, who was near the end of his career, whereas Toynbee was (as described by Bryce) "a young historian of high academic distinction". Bryce's letter to Grey, introducing the Report, was ironically dated 1st July 1916. The Report was laid before the Houses of Parliament as an Official Paper. This book is nearly 700 pages long. It is a facsimile of the original, which has been produced in the USA. As far as the contents of the Report - which appears to be extremely comprehensive - are concerned, wherever one looks in the book, it is almost impossible not to be confronted with absolutely chilling narratives.