| Alphabet, Letters of the:— |
| Capitals |
Appendices to the German White Book entitled:
“The Violation of International Law in the Conduct of the Belgian People’s-War”
(dated Berlin, 10th May, 1915); Arabic numerals after the capital letter refer to the
depositions contained in each Appendix. |
| Lower Case |
Sections of the “Appendix to the Report of
the Committee on Alleged German Outrages, Appointed by His Britannic
Majesty’s Government and Presided Over by the Right Hon. Viscount Bryce, O.M.”
(Cd. 7895); Arabic numerals after the lower case letter refer to the depositions
contained in each Section. |
| Ann(ex) |
Annexes (numbered 1 to 9) to the Reports of the
Belgian Commission (vide infra). |
| Belg. |
Reports (numbered i to xxii) of the Official Commission
of the Belgian Government on the Violation of the Rights of Nations and of the Laws
and Customs of War. (English translation, published, on behalf of the Belgian
Legation, by H.M. Stationery Office, two volumes.) |
| Bland |
“Germany’s Violations of the Laws of War, 1914-5”;
compiled under the Auspices of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and translated
into English with an Introduction by J. O. P. Bland. (London: Heinemann. 1915.) |
| Bryce |
Appendix to the Report of the Committee on Alleged German Outrages
appointed by His Britannic Majesty’s Government. |
| Chambry |
“The Truth about Louvain,”
by Réné Chambry. (Hodder and Stoughton. 1915.) |
| Davignon |
“Belgium and Germany,” Texts and Documents,
preceded by a Foreword by Henri Davignon. (Thomas Nelson and Sons.) |
“Eye-Witness” |
“An Eye-Witness at Louvain” (London: Eyre and Spottiswoode. 1914.) |
| “Germans” |
“The Germans at Louvain,” by a volunteer
worker in the Hôpital St.-Thomas. (Hodder and Stoughton. 1916.) |
| Grondijs |
“The Germans in Belgium: Experiences of a Neutral,”
by L. H. Grondijs, Ph.D., formerly Professor of Physics at the Technical
Institute of Dordrecht. (London: Heinemann. 1915.) |
| Höcker |
“An der Spitze Meiner Kompagnie, Three Months of Campaigning,”
by Paul Oskar Höcker. (Ullstein and Co., Berlin and Vienna. 1914.) |
| “Horrors” |
“The Horrors of Louvain,” by an Eye-witness,
with an Introduction by Lord Halifax. (Published by the London Sunday Times.) |
| Massart |
“Belgians under the German Eagle,”
by Jean Massart, Vice-Director of the Class of Sciences in the Royal
Academy of Belgium. (English translation by Bernard Miall. London: Fisher Unwin. 1916.) |
| Mercier |
Pastoral Letter, dated Xmas, 1914,
of His Eminence Cardinal Mercier, Archbishop of Malines. |
| Morgan |
“German Atrocities: An Official Investigation,”
by J. H. Morgan, M.A., Professor of Constitutional Law in the University of London.
(London: Fisher Unwin. 1916.) |
| Numerals, Roman lower case |
Reports (numbered i to xxii) of the Belgian Commission
(vide supra). |
| R(eply) |
“Reply to the German White Book of May 10, 1915.”
(Published, for the Belgian Ministry of Justice and Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
by Berger-Levrault, Paris, 1916.)
Arabic numerals after the R refer to the depositions contained in the
particular section of the Reply that is being cited at the moment:
e.g., R15 denotes the fifteenth deposition in
the section on
Louvain in the Reply when cited in the section on Louvain
in the present work; but it denotes the fifteenth deposition in the section
on Aerschot when cited in the corresponding section here.
The Reply is also referred to by pages, and in these cases
the Arabic numeral denotes the page and is preceded by “p.” |
| S(omville) |
“The Road to Liége,” by Gustave Somville.
(English translation by Bernard Miall. Hodder and Stoughton. 1916.) |
| Struyken |
“The German White Book on the War in Belgium:
A Commentary,” by Professor A. A. H. Struyken. (English Translation
of Articles in the Journal Van Onzen Tijd, of Amsterdam,
July 31st, August 7th, 14th, 21st, 1915. Thomas Nelson and Sons.) |