Rutgers University Press, 1962. — 724 p.
This dense brick of a book starts with a warning to the unwary - an (untranslated) Latin dedication. It was written by a Czech priest who eventually became a Harvard professor of Byzantine history. He informs readers that this book enlarges upon a Harvard course on Slavic history from the 13th to the 17th centuries.
Europe to the Thirteenth Century
The Last Premyslides, Bohemia, and Poland
John of Bohemia, Emperor Louis IV, and Poland
Charles IV, Emperor and King of Bohemia, and Casimir the Great, King of Poland
The Second Bulgarian Empire, the Rise of Serbia
The Political Organization of Medieval Slavic States
Slavic Medieval Cultural Achievements
The Czech Reformation and Its Aftermath
The Russian Principalities, the Rise of Lithuania and Moscow, the Jagiellonian Federation
The Jagdellonian Dynastic Commonwealth and the Turkish Danger
Poland-Lithuania and the Baltic
The Growth of Muscovy and Its Relations with Poland-Lithuania
The Renaissance and the Slavs. Slavic Cultural Achievements in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
Social and Political Development of the Western and Southern Slavs from the Fifteenth to the Seventeenth Century
The Growth of Muscovite Autocracy: Social and Political Changes in East Russia
The Reformation and the Slavs
The Habsburgs, Muscovy, Poland-Lithuania, and Bohemia
Poland, Muscovy’s “Time of Troubles,” and the Birth of the Ukraine
The Muscovite State under the First Romanovs
Imperial Russia and the Slavic World
Lists of Rulers.