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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
page x note 1 See my book on The Spanish Marriages, 1841–1846. A study of the influence of dynastic ambition upon foreign policy (London, 1936), p. 86.Google Scholar
page x note 2 Robinson, L. G., Letters of Dorothea, Princess Lieven, during her residence in England, 1812–1834 (London, 1902), p. 196.Google Scholar
page xii note 1 The Spanish Marriages, 1841–1846, p. 36n.Google Scholar
page xii note 2 See my “Review of the relations between Guizot and Lord Aberdeen, 1840–1852,” in History, xxiii (1938), 25 f.Google Scholar
page xvii note 1 See History, xxiii (1938), 25–36.Google Scholar
page xix note 1 There is no evidence here for Palmerston's contention (Ashley, Palmerston (1877), I, 287 ff.Google Scholar) that the sons of Louis Philippe, with Claremont as their base, were planning a rival coup d'état in France; but it is clear that in the early autumn there was much indiscreet activity on behalf of Joinville's candidature for the Presidency (Nos. 427, 429).