. The history of the world; a survey of a man's record . os, the fal-coner, Count St. Julian, the armourer and shield-bearer, both Counts of Sinzendorf, the master ofthe mint. Count von Sprinzenstein, the standard bearer, Count Abensberg-Traun, the warder,Count von PoUlieim, the master of the kitchens, Freiherr von Hegenmiiller, the keeper of theplate. Count Kufstein, the master of the hunt. Count von Zinzendorf, the cupbearer, Count vonHardegg, the court marshal. Count von Starhenberg, the chamberlain. Count Brenner, the Landhofmeister. Prince Trautsohn. In place of the lord high steward. Cou


. The history of the world; a survey of a man's record . os, the fal-coner, Count St. Julian, the armourer and shield-bearer, both Counts of Sinzendorf, the master ofthe mint. Count von Sprinzenstein, the standard bearer, Count Abensberg-Traun, the warder,Count von PoUlieim, the master of the kitchens, Freiherr von Hegenmiiller, the keeper of theplate. Count Kufstein, the master of the hunt. Count von Zinzendorf, the cupbearer, Count vonHardegg, the court marshal. Count von Starhenberg, the chamberlain. Count Brenner, the Landhofmeister. Prince Trautsohn. In place of the lord high steward. Count Schdnborn, who wasBishop of Bamberg and WUrzberg, went the Count von Hamilton. On two sides of the triangular statue (erected under Leopold I, 1682, by Fischer von Erlach asa thankotfering for deliverance from the plague) are drawn up the city guards of Vienna. Behind the royal chair goes the captain of the imperial horse guards, Count von Daun, andthe captain of the life guards, Count von Cardana. In the foreground, spectators of different Tin; uk Fkaltv tu Tiiiin>,.v hkss w on ;!-:!! 2i, 174UFrom Kiic-sl-3 ••oath of frally, , 1742. (After tW oriiiinal in llu- Oi-mii,nic Xalional Miisfiim at NiirnlKT)j.) The Rise of IheGreat Pouers ] HISTORY OF THE WORLD 525 family owing to the collapse of the Winter kingdom, and also for the Schwiebusdistrict, which his grandfather, Ferdinand I, had been forced to cede. In eithercase the question of the justice of the claim was to him a matter of grasped at the chance of recovering these districts for which therehad been so much strife, for he considered that he required Lower Silesia toround off his possessions on the Oder, and had no intention of letting slip an op-portunity so favourable for his own aggrandisement. He offered Maria Theresa hissupport against Bavaria, and was ready to vote for the election of her husband asemperor;


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectworldhi, bookyear1902