France,79,89,203,237
Franco-German War,288
Freeman, E. A.,39
Free Russia,199
Fock, General,192
Fortnightly Review,61,163
Froude, Henry,39,66,80,82,194
Germany,22,33,50,51,95,109,203,271,277,287,291,293,297
Ghiray, Hadji,31
Gibraltar,49
Girardin, Emile de,70
Gladstone, Mr. W. E., makes acquaintance of Madame Novikoff,23; what he called her,24; solitary championship of Russia,25; publishes his pamphlet,The Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East,26; his anxiety about the future of England and Russia,27; speaks at St. James's Hall,43; a misunderstood incident,44; his fearless denunciation of Turkey,45; his friendship with Madame Novikoff criticised,48; his dying utterance,53; his character,54; he reviews Madame Novikoff'sRussia and England,55; Cardinal Manning's opinion of him,56; his interest in the Old Catholics,57; a letter to Madame Novikoff,58; another letter,62-64; his interest in Shakespeare,65; a talk with Hayward,67; his love of books,68; an incident at Munich,69; at a dinner in Paris,70; his knowledge of French,71; a comment by thePall Mall Gazette,102; on the Berlin Treaty,147; urges the coercion of the Sultan,152; a letter on Lord Salisbury's position,153; on the Sultan of Turkey,154; condemns the policy of Prince Lobanoff,156; on the Cyprus Treaty,161; on the history of nations,219
Gladstone, Mrs.,40,55,67
Gladstone, Miss Helen,69,70,71
Gortschakoff, Prince,37,51,95,105
Goya, Francisco,84
Great Britain,23,34,40,48,162
Greece,49
Grey, Lady Sybil,137
Grey, Earl,137
Hague Conference, The,30,186
Hamilton, Bishop,56
Harcourt, Sir William,39
Hayward,65,67,193,194
Helen, Grand Duchess,73,74-77,141,142
Herzegovina,31
Ignatieff, General,46,47
Is Russia Wrong?by Madame Novikoff,162
Italy,32,203
Japan,197,257
Jews,112,113,114,115,116,117,119,120,121
Kaiser,20,87
"Karaims," ancestors of,122
Kinglake, A. W.,34,39,66,82,93,97,186,187,188,192,193,194
Karaite Jews, the,119
Keyserling, Count,60,77,89
Khalil Pasha,72
Khanoff, General Ali,21
Khvostoff, Mons.,23
Kiréeff, Alexander,31,32,50,125,248
Kiréeff, Nicholas,31,32,33,35,39,41,51
Kireevo,41
Kovalsky, Bishop,179
La Revue Internationale dc Théologie,61
Liszt, Franz,138,143
Lobanoff-Rostovsky, Prince,103,160
Loftus, Lord Augustus,36,37
London,23,77,87,100,102,104,114,115
Lucca,32
Manning, Cardinal,56,57
Mariavites, the,179
Mikoulin, General,189
Milan, Prince,32
Mohammedans in Russia,21
Montefiore, Mr. George,121
Moscow,17,18,19,36,37,49,51,68,85,141,142,298
Moscow Gazette,106,165
Munich,69
Murchison, Sir Roderick,89
My Secret Service,271
Naoumovitch, Father,96
Napier, Lord,39,72,73
Nesselrode, Count,95
Newmarch, Mrs.,145
Nicholas, Count,47
Nicolaevitch, Grand Duke Constantine,76,141
Nicholas I, Emperor,90-95,97-98
Nicolas, Grand Duke,74
Nihilism,199,201,202,204,276
Nineteenth Century, The,55,163
Nordau, Dr. Max,121
Novikoff, Alexander,125,127,128,170,174
Novikoff, E.,104
Novikoff, M.,129,134,135
Novikoff, Madame Olga, in Moscow,17; her ambition being realised,18; memories of 1876,19; introduction to Mr. Gladstone,23; and to Mr. Disraeli,24; what Mr. Gladstone called her,24; her fight against prejudice,26; Mr. Gladstone's visits,27; her brother, Nicholas, goes to help the Slavs,31; his death,32; effect on Russia,34; she assists the ambulance work,38; in despair she blames England,39; her English correspondents,39; letter from Mrs. Gladstone,40; at the St. James's Hall meeting,43; Mr. Gladstone sees her home,44; she writes to him,45; back in Russia,48; Russia declares war against Turkey,49; she publishes her book,Russia and England,54; which Mr. Gladstone reviews,55; a letter from Mr. Gladstone,58; she publishes a German pamphlet,60; a letter from Prof. E. Michaud,61; Mr. Gladstone writes to her,62; Hayward, the critic,65; her memory of Tyndall,68; a visit to Miss Helen Gladstone,69; her Thursday receptions in Russia,72; her mother-in-law,74; at the Grand Duchess Helen's ball,75; she meets the Campbell-Bannermans,77; her last talk with Sir Henry,79; visits from Carlyle and Froude,80; she visits Carlyle on his death-bed,81-82; a memory of Mark Twain,82; her friendship with Verestchagin,84; her meeting with Skobeleff,85; his last visit to her,86; a talk with Prince Gortschakoff,95; a reminiscence of childhood,96; a tribute from Sir Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett,99; her detestation of the word "mission,"101; a remark of thePall Mall Gazette,102; a letter from Prince Lobanoff-Rostovsky,103; her brother, E. Novikoff,104; a Press comment on her friendship with Count Shouvaloff,105; her last interview with Prince Gortschakoff,105; why she used the initials "O.K.,"106; in London,108; a speech on Shakespeare,110-111; her first public expression of views on the Jewish question,112; letters toThe Times,114--116; her comment on the Sydney Street affair,118; her attitude towards Jews,121; in Russia, the famine,125; her son, Alexander Novikoff,127; interviewed byThe Week's News,128-136; a visit to Paris,139; about Nicolas Rubinstein,140-142; a talk with the Grand Duchess Helen,142; memories of well-known musicians,143-146; she hears of the Armenian massacres,152; letters from Mr. Gladstone,153-154; she tries to persuade her country that Disraeli does not represent England,156; what she was told about the Cyprus Treaty,161; she publishesIs Russia Wrong?162; her dream of an Anglo-Russian understanding,165; a conversation on the drink question in Russia,166-170; in Petrograd,175; in the village of Novo Alexandrovka,177; about the "Mariavites,"179; memories of Scotland,184; her first meeting with John Bright,186; a talk with Kinglake,187; his weekly letters,193; about the Dogger Bank affair,197; in London,200; on the English idea of Siberia,216; why prisoners are sent to Siberia,217; her introduction toSiberia as it is,220; her friend, Helen Voronoff,226; on Russian prisons,227; a visit from Dostoyevsky,236; about Russia in 1905; on the Grand Duke Constantine,247; a letter from him,251; on Prince Oleg Constantinovitch,252; a visit from ex-President Grant,266; on prisoners of war,272; on the Russian Slavophils,282; her ideal in life,286; on Prussianism,289; on England,295
Pall Mall Gazette, The,102
Paris,70,73,139
Parliamentary system in Russia,214
Pasha, Madame Nubar,100
Pears, Sir Edwin,26,47
Pears, Sir Edwin,Forty Years in Constantinople,47
Petrograd,18,19,36,49,68,72,97,100,111,115,118,139,141,144,166,170,175,242,243,269,299
Pobyedonostzeff, C. P.,68
Rakovitz,32
Ratchinsky, Mr. Serge,176,177
Revue des Deux Mondes,70
Roumiantzoff Museum, Moscow,41,86
Rubinstein, Nicolas,138,140,141,142,143
Russia and England, by Madame Novikoff,54,107,163
Russia, Tsar's reception in Petrograd and Moscow,18; sympathy for oppressed Slavs, "Red Cross" collections,19; pledge to save Serbia,20; Mohammedans,21; Emperor's New Year address,21; political unity,22; attitude towards Great Britain in 1876 and in 1914,23; crisis between Great Britain and Russia,25; inclination for war with Turkey,26; bitterness against Disraeli's policy,29; England blamed for Slav oppression,30; Russian volunteers to help Slavs,31; army eager to assist,34; effect of Nicholas Kiréeff's death,35,38,39; Cossacks in disguise sent to Balkans,36; chivalry of Russian nature,37; Great Britain and Russia's distrust of each other,40; England's attitude hostile,43; war declared against Turkey, England's neutrality,48; plans ascribed to England,49; receipt of the news of declaration of war,49; mission to Afghanistan,81; eve of Russo-Turkish War,85; smoking not common among women,100; "Russians are Slavs,"106; Jewish question in Russia,112; what the Hebrews did in 1876,113; feeling between Slavs and Jews,113; Yiddish jargon not used by Russians,117; vigilance with regard to criminals,117; famine of 1892,125; sufferings of people,126,128-136; Moscow and Petrograd Conservatoriums,141; people's interest in England's expressed sympathy for oppressed Armenians,162; temperance measures,167; Germans encourage sale of alcohol in Polish provinces,178; reforms in Russia effected rapidly,180; arrest of alleged Englishwoman at Warsaw,196; Dogger Bank incident,197; and a parallel,198; feeling towards Nihilists,202; war never desired,203; effect of political murders,209; people's loyalty to Emperor,210; unlimited faith in new theories,211; difference between students of 1840 and 1860,212; parliamentary system unsatisfactory,214; Russian nature,214,215; meaning of Siberia to Englishmen,216; the convict's treatment in Siberia,217; proportion of prisoners,218; revolution of 1905,237; the "Court of Petitions,"241; the Court of Appeal to Mercy,242; prisoners taken for active service,244; political prisoners' patriotism.245; the ancient Russian parish,279; proposed reforms,281,282; appreciation of England's assistance in European War,290
Russo-Japanese War,88
Russo-Turkish War,85
Salisbury, Lord,46,47,115,152,153,161
Safonoff, M.,145
San Stéfano treaty,149,150,266,267
Sassoun,148,149,151,152
Serbia,17,20,35,41,216,217,218,248
Seymour, Sir Henry,93
Seymour, Vice-Admiral,198
Shouvaloff, Count,103,104,105
Siberia as it is, by Harry de Windt,220
Skobeleff, General,85,86
Skobeleff, Madame,85
Slavonic Saints,47
Slavs, treatment in 1875,18; Russian sympathy,19; Russia's pledge to help Serbia,20; England blamed for Turkey's cruelty,30; help from Russian volunteers,31; Mr. Gladstone's sympathy,45; Russia the only Power which cares for Slavs,95
Smirnoff, General,192
Smoking in Russia,106
Sofia,31
Staal, Baron and Baroness de,102
State and its Relation to the Churches, by Mr. Gladstone,56
Stead, W. T.,24,103,106,237
St. James's Hall Conference,43,45,51,55,105
Sultan, the,30
Sydney Street outrage,117,118
Talmudist Jews,119,122
Tchaikovsky,144
Tchernaieff, General,32,33
Tikhomirov, Leon,204-215
Times, The,112,114,115,116,154,194
Treaty of Berlin,147,159
Treaty of Paris,95,105,147
Troubetskoi, Princess Lise,100
Tsar, the,17,18,21,51,100,114,166,177
Turkey,30,39,45,46,48,49,72,96,97,150,160,162,181
Twain, Mark,82,83,84
Tyndall,60
Unsterblichkeítslehre nach der Bibel,60
Vatican, the,57
Vatican, The, by Mr. Gladstone,57
Verestchagin, Vassily,84-88
Verneuil, M. de,89
Victoria, Queen,50,54,55,108
Vienna,104
Viennese aristocracy, the,66
Villiers, Charles,39,82,291
Volnys, Madame,73
Voronoff, Miss Helen,226-228
Warsaw,196
Watson, Mr. William,157
Witte, Count,178
Zaitschar,37