386 bibliography
David Lesly, and now remaining in his hands at mercy.
With an true accompt of all those officers of stat removed
which had a hand in the late engagement against En-
gland: with the names of those placed in their roomes by
the Parliament of Scotland. London, 1649.
Letter from Sir Joseph de Cancy, Knight of the Hospital
of St. John of Jerusalem, to King Edward I. (1281),
and Letter from King Edward I. to Sir Joseph (1282).
Communicated to the Palestine Pilgrims’ Text Society by
William Basevi Sanders, Esq. London: The Palestine
Pilgrims’ Text Society, 1890.
“A Letter from the Lord General Monck and The Officers
Here, to the Several and Respective Regiments and
Other Forxes in England, Scotland, and Ireland.”
London: Printed by John Macock, 1660.
“A Letter from the Nobility, Barons and Commons of
Scotland, in the Year 1320, yet Extant under all
the Seals of the Nobility: Directed to Pope John,
Wherein they declare their firm Resolutions, to ad-
here to their King Robert the Bruce, as the Restorer
of their Safety, and Liberties of the People, and as
Having the true right of Succession: But Without,
They notwithstanding Declare, That if the King
should offer to subvert their Civil Liberties, they will
disown him as an Enemy, and choose another King
for their own Defence. Translated from the Original,
in Latine, as it is insert by St. George McKenzie of
Rosebaugh, in his Observations on Precedency, &c.”
Edinburgh: Privately published, 1689.
“A Letter Sent from Maynhem (Marnheim) concerning
the late defeate given the Duke of Brunswicke by
Monsieur Tilly: Whereunto is Added a Couranto of
other Newes from Vienna, Prague, the Palatinate and
other Places this 20. of June. 1622.” London: Printed
by Bernard Alsop for Nathaniel Butter, 1622.
Letters of and Relating to Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke
of Newcastle under Lynn. Newcastle, U.K.: University
of Nottingham Library, 1725–1771.
Lewin, Ronald. Rommel as Military Commander. London:
Batsford, 1968.
———. Slim: The Standard Bearer. London: Cooper,
1976.
Lewis, Charles Lee. Famous Old-World Sea Fighters. Lon-
don: G. G. Harrap, 1929.
———. The Romantic Decatur. Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press, 1937.
Lewis, Lloyd. Sherman: Fighting Prophet. New York: Har-
court, Brace & Company, 1932.
Lewis, Meriwether Liston. Montcalm: The Marvelous
Marquis. New York: Vantage Press, 1961.
Liddell Hart, Basil H. Foch: Man of Orléans, 2 vols. Lon-
don: Penguin, 1937.
———. A Greater Than Napoleon: Scipio Africanus. Lon-
don: W. Blackwood & Sons, Ltd., 1926.
———. “Sherman—Modern Warrior.” American Heri-
tage 12, no. 5 (August 1962): 20–23, 102–06.
Liddell Hart, Basil H., ed. The Other Side of the Hill: Ger-
many’s Generals with their Own Account of Military
Events, 1939–45. London: Cassell, 1948.
———. The Rommel Papers. London: Hamlyn Paper-
backs, 1983.
Lie, A. G. The Inscriptions of Sargon II of Assyria: Translit-
erated and Translated with notes by A. G. Lie. Paris,
France: Librarie Orientaliste P. Guenther, 1929.
The Life and Military Actions of His Royal Highness Prince
Eugene, of Savoy. With an Account of his Death and
Funeral. London, 1739.
The Life of Cornelius Van Tromp, Lieutenant-Admiral of
Holland and Westfriesland: Containing Many Remark-
able Passages relating to the War between England and
Holland. As also the Sea-Fights, and Other Memorable
Actions of this Great Man, from the Year 1650, to the
Time of his Death. London, 1697.
The Life of St. Alexander Nevsky, from a Sixteenth-Century
Russian Illuminated Codex, [from] the Saltykov-Sche-
drin Public Library, St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg,
Russia: Aurora Art Publishers, 1992.
Lind, John. “Early Russian Swedish Rivalry: The Clenches
and Birger Magnusson’s Second Crusade to Tavastia
into the Neva in 1240.” Scandinavian Journal of His-
tory 16 (1991): 269–295.
A List of all the Ships and Frigots of England with their num-
ber of men, guns, and of what rates. Also, the names of
all the commanders in their expedition in May, 1653,
against the Dutch, with the number of men and guns
which every ship carryed at that memorable fight on the
2d and 3d of June, 1653. In which through Gods bless-
ing on the said fleet, they took and destroyed between
20 and 30. Dutch men of war, and tooke 1350 prison-
ers, and pursued the Dutch to their own harbours: the
ships taken are marked with the letter P. in the margent.
Moreover, the fleet sent to the Sound under the con-
duct of the Right honourable, Generall Edward Lord
Montague Admirall, William Goodson Vice Admirall,
and Sr Richard Stayner Rear Admirall; with the num-
ber of ships, men, and guns, and the names of all the