Table of Contents:
Introduction: The Slavs and Non-Slavs in Eastern Europe
PART I: Great Baltica: The Lithuanian Logos and Unrealized Civilization
Chapter 1: The Proto-Balts
Chapter 2: On the Baltic Gods and Baltic People
Chapter 3: The Lithuanian Historial
Chapter 4: The Historial of Latvia
Chapter 5: Baltic Philosophy: Overcoming Subtle Chaos
PART II: Black Dacia: Mioritic Space and the Romanian Idea
Chapter 6: The Thracians and their Identity
Chapter 7: Images and Structures of Thracian Religion
Chapter 8: Thrace and Dacia: Polities and Conquests
Chapter 9: Dacia Unbowed
Chapter 10: The Gods of Dacia
Chapter 11: The Transylvanian Historial
Chapter 12: Walachia: The Orthodox Kingdom of Dracula
Chapter 13: Moldova and its Historial
Chapter 14: Romania in the 20th Century
Chapter 15: The Burning Bush of Romanian Thought
Chapter 16: The Romanian Absurd: The Dark Horizons of Decomposition
PART III: The Hungarians and the Scythian Idea
Chapter 17: The Magyars in Europe
Chapter 18: The Ancient Magyar Faith
Chapter 19: Medieval Hungary
Chapter 20: Hungary and Modernization
Chapter 21: The Hungarian Language and its Poetry
Chapter 22: In Anticipation of Hungarian Philosophy
Chapter 23: Black Hungary: In the Captivity of Melancholy
PART IV: From Illyria to Albania: Dragons and Warriors
Chapter 24: Albanian Antiquities
Chapter 25: Albanian Myths: Female and Male Dragons
Chapter 26: The Albanian Historial
Chapter 27: The Albanian Logos
Chapter 28: The Noology of the Albanian Eagle
PART V: The Jews of Eastern Europe: The Fiery Nihilism of Liberation
Chapter 29: Hypotheses on the Jewish Horizon of Eastern Europe
Chapter 30: The Spiritual Currents of Eastern European Jewry
Chapter 31: Eastern European Jews and Political Ideologies
Chapter 32: The Gestalts of Eastern European Jewry
Chapter 33: The Roma
Chapter 34: Gypsy Sacrality
Chapter 35: The Noology of Gypsy Identity