^The Oxford Magazine, vols 9-10 (1890), p. 281: "... the bequest began to take effect in 1870."
^Anthony Cross, A People Passing Rude: British Responses to Russian Culture, p. 17
^W. R. S. Ralston, Early Russian History: Four Lectures Delivered at Oxford, in the Taylor Institution, according to the terms of Lord Ilchester's bequest (S. Low, Marston, Low, & Searle, 1874),
full text
^Vilhelm Thomsen, The Relations Between Ancient Russia and Scandinavia, and the Origin of the Russian State (Oxford: James Parker & Co., 1877)
^Albert Henry Wratislaw, The Native Literature of Bohemia in the Fourteenth Century: Four Lectures Delivered Before the University of Oxford on the Ilchester Foundation (G. Bell and Sons, 1878)
^Bejtullah D. Destani, ed., & Arthur Evans, Ancient Illyria: An Archaeological Exploration (2006), p. xvi
^Richard Mercer Dorson, History of British Folklore, vol. 1, p. 273
^Republished in 2000 by Lawbooks Exchange, Ltd., of Union, New Jersey
^Francis Lützow, Lectures on the Historians of Bohemia: Being the Ilchester Lectures for the Year 1904 (London: Henry Frowde, 1905)
^Roman Dyboski, Periods of Polish literary history, being the Ilchester lectures for the year 1923 (H. Milford,
Oxford University Press, 1923)
^David Talbot Rice, The Beginnings of Russian Icon Painting: Being the Ilchester Lecture Delivered in the Taylor Institution, Oxford, on 19 November 1937 (Oxford University Press, H. Milford, 1938)