UlifMijiifi.i.^il ::ii:itiUii^ immm§!imiiiiim ''mm siwmmkmmimm '(■:*<■■ .•-.■.•.«WR««-«»^«r -rJ/f;4J;":;^!(^Ui=<{siMf/f? i DICTIONARY OF DATES, AND UNIVERSAL REFERENCE. jDICTIONARY OF DATES, UNIVERSAL REFERENCE, KELATING TO ALL AGES AND NATIONS ; COMPREHENDING EVERY REMARKABLE OCCURRENCE, ANCIENT AND MODERN — THE FOUNDATION, LAWS, AND GOVERNMENTS OP COUNTRIES — THEIR PROGRESS IN CIVILISATION, INDUSTRY, AND SCIENCE— THEIR ACHIEVEMENTS IN ARMS— THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL TRANSACTIONS OP THE BRITISH EMPIRE — ITS CIVIL, MILITARY, AND RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS — THE ORIGIN AND ADVANCE OF HUMAN AETS AND INVENTIONS, WITH COPIOUS DETAILS OP ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, AND IRELAND; THE WHOLE COMPREHENDING A BODY OF INFORMATION, CLASSICAL, POLITICAL, AND DOMESTIC, FROM THE EARLIEST ACCOUNTS TO THE PRESENT TIME. By JOSEPH HAYDN. SEVENTH EDITION, WITH ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS By B. VINCENT, Assistant Secretary and Keeper of the Library of the Royal Institution of Great Britain. LONDON : EDWAED MOXON, DOVER STEEET. 1855. , LONDON : BRADBUEY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFEIARS. PREFACE. The design of the Author has heen, to attempt the compression of the greatest body of general information that has ever appeared in a single volume, and to produce a Book of Reference whose extensive usefulness may render its possession material to every individual — ^in the same manner that a London Directory is indis- pensable, on business affairs, to a London merchant. He grounds his hope of the Public taking an interest in this work altogether upon its own intrinsic utility. Its articles are drawn principally from historians of the first rank, and the most authentic annalists ; and the Dictionary of Dates will, in almost every instance, save its possessor the trouble of turning over voluminous authors to refresh his memory, or to ascertain the date, order, and features of any particular occurrence. The volume contains upwards of Fifteen Thousand Articles, alphabetically arranged ; and, from the selection of its materials, it must be important to every man in the British Empire, whether learned or unlearned, or whether connected with the professions or engaged in trade. It would be difficult to name all the authors from whose works the Compiler of this volume has copiously extracted; but he may VI PREFACE. mention among the classics, Herodotus, Livy, Pliny, and Plutarch. He has chosen, in general chronology, Petavius, Usher, Blair, Prideaux, and the Abbe L'Engiet du Fresnoy. For the events embraced in Foreign history, he has relied upon Henault, Voltaire, La Combe, EoUin, Melchior Adam, the Nouveau Dictionnaire, and chief authors of their respective countries. On subjects of general literature, his authorities are Cave's Historia Literaria, Moreri, Bayle, Priestley, and others of equal rejjute. And English occur- rences are drawn from Camden, Stow, Hall, Baker, Holinshed, Chamberlayne, Bapin, Hume, Gibbon, Goldsmith, &c. Besides these, the Compiler has freely used the various abridgments that have brought facts and dates more prominently forward ; and he is largely indebted to Chambers, Aspin, Beatson, Anderson, Beckmann, the Cyclopedias, Annual Register, Statutes at Large, and numerous other compilations. In almost every instance the authority is quoted for the extract made and date assigned, though inadvertence may have prevented, in some few cases, a due acknowledgment. The leading events of every country, whether ancient or modern kingdoms, are to be found in the annals of each respectively, as in the cases, for instance, of Greece, Eome, the Eastern Empire, England, France, and Germany. But, independently of this plan of reference, when any historical occurrence claims, from its importance, more specific mention, it is made in a separate article, according to alphabetical arrangement. Thus, in the annals of England, the dates are given of the foundation of our universities, the institution of honorary orders, and signature of Magna Charta ; we find, in those annals, the periods of our civil wars, and remarkable eras in our history, set down as they have occurred ; but if more ample information be necessary to the Eeader, and if he desire to know more than the mere date of any fact or incident, the particulars are supplied under a distinct head. In the same way, the pages of PREFACE. Vll Battles supply the date of each, in the order of time ; yet in all instances where the battle has any relation to our own country, or is memorable or momentous, the chief features of it are stated in another part of the volume. The Compiler persuades himself that the Dictionary of Dates will be received as a useful companion to all Biographical works, relating, as it does, to things as those do to persons, and affording information not included in the range or design of such publications. London, May, 1841. The printing of the Seventh Edition of this work had commenced when its Compiler was prevented by illness from continuing his labours. Underthese circumstances, at the request of the Publisher, I undertook to correct the press, and to supply such additions as the lapse of time required. These additions have enlarged the book by twenty pages, although some comparatively unimportant articles have been omitted. In conclusion, I would take this opportunity of stating, that I shall thankfully receive corrections and suggestions for the benefit of future editions. B. Vincent. Royal Institution, October, 1855. DICTIONARY OF DATES. ABA ABD ABACUS. The capital of the Corinthian order in architecture had its origin in a simple incident : — On the death of a young maid of Coi-inth, her lover gathered the ornaments she had most valued when living, and placed them in a wicker basket, covered by a tile, upon her tomb. Close to her grave an acanthus had taken root, and the flower shooting forth in the spring, its leaves twined aroimd the basket, and convolved beneath the tile in the form of volutes. Atti-acted by this display, Callimachus, the founder of the Corinthian order, made it the model for his capital ; the tile being the abacus, the foliage of the acanthus the volutes, and the whole forming the capital which adorns his column, about 540 B.C. — Perault. ABBEYS. They were founded in the third century, near the close of which the sister of St. Anthony is said to have retired to one. An abbey was founded by St. Anthony at Phaim, in Upper Egypt, a.d. 305. The first founded in France was at Poitiers, in 360. The first in Ireland was in the fifth century : see Clogher, Elphin, Down. The first in Scotland was in the sixth century : see Ides. And the first in Britain was in SCO : see Banr/or. The abbey of Mount Cassino, near Naples, founded by St. Benet in 529, was esteemed the richest in the world, and furnished many thousands of saints to the Church. 110 monasteries and priories were suppressed in England by order in council, 2 Henry V. 1414. — Salmon. The revenues of 193 abbeys which were dissolved at the Preformation amounted to 2,653,000^ Of this vast amount, a large part went to Rome, a great number of the superiors, of both sexes, being foreigners, and many of the richest among them altogether residing there. These foundations were totally suppressed throughout the realm, 31 Henry VIII. 1539. See Monaste7-i. 170. — Bossuet. ABYSSINIAN ERA. This era is reckoned from the period of the creation, which they place in the 5493rd year before our era, on the 2yth August, old style; and their dates consequently exceed ours by 5492 years, and 125 days. To reduce Abyssinian time to the Julian year, subtract 5492 years, and 125 days. ACADEMIES. Societies of learned men to promote literature, sciences, and the arts, are of very early date. Academia was a shady grove without the walls of Athens (bequeathed to Academus for gymnastic exercises), where Plato first taught philo- sophy, and his followers took the title of Academics, 378 B.C. — Stanley. Ptolemy Soter is said to have founded an academy at Alexandria, about 314 B.C. Theodosius B 2 ACA ACE tlie Youn2;er and Charlemagne are also uamed as founders. Italy has been celebrated for its academies; and Jarckius mentions 550, of which 25 were in the city of Milan. The first philosophical academy in France was established by Pere Mersenne, in 1635. Academies were introduced into England by Boyle and Hobbes ; and the Royal Society of London was formed in 1660. The following are among the principal academies : — Aucoua, of the Caglinosi, 1642. Basil, 1400. Berlin, Royal Society, 1700 ; of Princes, 1703 ; Arohitecture, 1799. Bologna, Ecclesiastical, 16S7 ; Mathematics, 1690 ; Sciences and Arts. 1712. Brescia, of the Erranti, 1626. Brest and Toulon, Military, 1682. Brussels, Belles^ Lettres, 1773. Caen, Belles Lettres, 1705. Copenhagen, Polite Arts, 1742. Cortona, Antiquities, 1726. Dublin, Arts, 1742 ; Royal Irish, Science and Literature, 1786; Painting, Sculpture, &c., 1823. Erfurt, Saxony, Sciences, 1754. Faeuza, the Philoponi, 1612. i'loreuce. Belles Lettres, 1272 ; JDella Crusca, (now united with the Florentine, and merged under that name), 1582 ; Antiquities, 1807. Geneva, Medical, 1715. Genoa, Painting, &;c., 1751 ; Sciences, 1783. Germany, Medical, 1617; Natural History, 1652 ; Military, 1752. Haerlem, the Sciences, 1760. Lisbon, History, 1720 ; Sciences, 1779. London ; its various academies are described through the volume. Lyons, Sciences, 1710; had Physic and Mathe- matics added, 1768. Madrid, the Royal Spanish, 1713 ; History, 1730 ; Painting and the Arts, 1753. Mannheim, Sculpture, 1775. Mantua, the Vigilanti, Sciences, 1704. Marseilles, Belles Lettres, 1726. Massachusetts, Arts and Sciences, 1780. Milan, Architecture, 1380 ; Sciences, 1719. Munich, Arts and Sciences, 1759. Naples, Rossana, 1540 ; Mathematics, 1560 ; Sciences, 1695 ; Herculanezi.m, 1755. New York, Literature and Philosophy, 1814. Nismes, Royal Academy, 1682. Padua, for Poetry, 1613; Sciences, 1792. Palermo, Medical, 1645. Paris, Sorbonne, 1256 ; Painting, 1391 ; Music, 1543 ; French, 1635 ; Medals and Belles Lettres, 1663 ; Arcliitecture, 1671 ; Surgery, 1731 ; Military, 1751 ; Natural Philosophy, 1790. Parma, the Innominati, 1550. Perousa, Insensati, 1561 ; Filirgiti, 1574. Petersburg, Sciences, 1725 ; Military, 1732 ; the School of Arts, 1764. Philadelphia, Arts and Sciences, 1749. Portsmouth, Naval, 1722 ; enlarged, 1806. Rome, Umoristi, 1611 ; Fantascici, 1625 ; Infe- condi, 1653; Painting, 1665; Arcadi, 1690; English, 1752. Stockholm, of Science, 1741 ; Belles Lettres, 1753 ; Agriculture, 1781. Toulon, Military, 1682. Turin, Sciences, 1759 ; Fine Arts, 1778. Turkey, Military School, 1775. XJpsal, Royal Society, Sciences, 1720. Venice, Medical, &c., 1701. Verona, Music, 1643 ; Sciences, 1780. Vienna, Sculpture and the Arts, 1705; Sur- gery. 1783 ; Oriental, 1810. Warsaw, Languages and Histoiy, 1753. Woolwich, Military, 1741. ACANTHUS. The Acanthus or model of the foliage on the Corinthian chapiter : for its origin, see article Abacus. ACAPULCO, SHIP. This was the celebrated prize, a Spanish galleon, from Acapulco, laden with gold and precious wares, and estimated by some annalists at 1,000,000/. sterling, and upwards ; taken by loi'd Anson, who had pi-eviously acquired booty in his memorable voyage amounting to 600,000Z. Admiral Anson arrived at Spithead in the Centurion with his gains, after having circumnavigated the globe, June 15, 1744. ACCENTS. The most ancient manuscripts are written without accents, and without any separation of words ; nor was it until after the ninth century that the copyists began to leave spaces between the words. Michaelis, after Wetstein, ascribes the insertion of accents to Euthalius, bishop of Sulca, in Egypt, A.D. 458; but his invention was followed up and improved upon by other grammarians in the various languages. ACCESSION, The. By this term is usually understood the accession of the house of Hanover to the throne of England, in the person of George I. the elector of Hanover, as the Protestant descendant of Elizabeth, the daughter of James I. ; he being the son of Sophia, who was the daughter of that princess. He succeeded to the crown August 1, 1714, by virtue of the act of settlement passed in the reign of William III., June, 1701. See article Hanoverian Succession. ACCUSERS. By the occult writers, such as Agrippa, accusers are the eighth order of devils, whose chief is called Asteroth, or spy, and who, in the Revelation of St. John, is, by way of eminence, called the accuser of the brethren. He is an accuser who charges another with a crime, whether the charge be true or false. False accusers were hanged in England by statute 24 Henry VI. 1446. They were burnt in the face with an F by statute 37 Henry VIII. 15i5.—Stow's Chron. ACELDAMA (Chakeldam). The field which the Jewish priests bought with the thirty pieces of "silver given to Judas Iscariot for betraying Our Saviour. It was called by this name, for Judas Iscariot, terrified at what he had done, came, and having thrown down the money, forthwith fled, and hanged himself. The priests not judging it righteous to put money, the price of blood, into the treasury of the Temple, bought ACH 5 ACR with it a field, called the potters'-field, to bury strangers in. The field is still shown to travellers; and being small, is covered with an arched roof; and retains the name Aceldama, that is, "the field of blood/' to this day. — Matthciv, xxvii. 3 to 11 ; Acts, i. 15" to 22,.— Univ. Hist. ACHAIA. This country was governed by a race of kings, but even their names are all forgotten. The capital, Achaia, was founded by Achajus, the son of Xuthus, 1080 B.C. The kingdom was united with Sicyon or subject to the /Etolians until about 2S4 B.C. The Achffii were descendants of Acha3us, and originally inhabited the neighbourhood of Argos; but when the Heraclidjc drove tliom thence, they retired among the lonians, exi^ellcd the natives, and seized their thirteen cities, viz. Pelene, ..•Egira, ^geum, Bura, Tritgea, Leontium, Rhypse, Cei'aunia, Olenos, Helice, Patraj, Dymse, and Phara3. The Acb:«an league .... B.C. 281 Aratus made prastor 251 Fortress of Atheuasum built . . . 228 Defeat of the Achisans by the Spartans, and Lysiades killed 226 Battle of Sell isla 222 The Social war begun ; battle of Caphyse, in Arcadia ; Aratus defeated . . . 220 Tiie Peloponnesus ravaged by the .ffitolians 219 Aratus poisoned at iEgium . . . 215 Battle of Mantinea ; Philopoemen defeats the Spartan tyrant Machanidas . . 208 Alliance with the Romans . . . 201 Philopoemen defeated by Nabis, in a naval battle B.C. 194 Sparta joined to the league . . . . 191 The Achfcaus overrun Slessenia with fire and sword ...... 182 The Romans enter Achaia, and carry off numbers of tlie people, among whom is the celebrated Polybius . . . . 165 Metellus enters Greece .... 147 The Acha;an league dissolved . . . 14C Greece subjected to Rome, and named the province of Achaia 146 The United States of America seem to have adopted the plan of the Achgean league in forming their constitution ; and the Swiss cantons also had a great resemblance to it in their confederacy. ACHONRY, BISHOPRIC of. Founded by St. Finian, who erected the church of Achad, usually called Achonry. about the year 520. St. Finian having built this church, conferred it on his disciple Nathy, named in Irish, Dathy, or David, who was the first bishop, and a man of great sanctity. In the ancient annals of Ireland, the prelates of this see are, for the most part, called bi.shops of Luiguy, or Liny, from the subdivision of the county wherein it is situated. The see of Achonry has been held in commendam with Killala since 1G12. — See KiUula. ACOUSTICS. The doctrine of the different sounds of vibrating strings, and communi- cation of sounds to the ear by the vibration of the atmosphere, was probably first explained by Pythagoras, about 500 B.C. Mentioned by Ai'istotle, 330 B.C. The speaking-trumpet is said to have been used by Alexander the Great, 335 B.C. The discoveries of Galileo were made about a.d. 1600. The velocity of sound was investigated by Newton before 1700. Galileo's theorem of the harmonic cui-ve was demonstrated liy Dr. Brook Taylor, in 1714 ; and further perfected by D'Alerabert, Euler, Eernouilli, and La Grange, at various periods of the eighteenth century. — See Sound. ACRE. This measure was formerly of uncertain qviantity, and differed in various parts of the realm, until made standard by statute 31 Edward I., and fixed at 40 poles or perches in length, and 4 in breadth — or 160 square poles, containing 4840 square yards, or 43,560 square feet, a.d. 1303. In certain counties and places the measure is hirger. — Pardon. ACRE, ST. JEAN D'. Anciently Ptolemais. Taken by Richard I. and other crusaders, July 12, 1191, after a siege of two years, with the loss of 6 arehbi.shops, 12 bishops, 40 earls, 500 barons, and 300,000 soldiers. Retaken by the Saracens, when 60,000 Christians perished, 1291. This capture was rendered memorable by the murder of the nuns, who had mangled their faces to repress the lust of the Infidels. Acre was attacked by Bonaparte in July, 1798 ; and was relieved by Sir Sydney Smith, who gallantly resisted twelve attempts during the memorable siege by the French, between March 6 and May 27, 1799, till, baffled by the British squadron on the water and the Turks on shore, Bonaparte relinquished his object and retreated. St. Jean dAcre is a pachalic subject to the Porte; sei/.ed iipon by Ibrahim Pacha, who had revolted, July 2, 1832. It became a point of the Syrian war in 1840, and was stormed by the British fleet under Sir Robert Stopford, and taken after a bombard- ment of a few hours, the Egyptians losing upwards of 2000 in killed and wounded, and 3000 pi-isonei-s, while the British had but 12 killed and 42 wounded, November 3, 1840. See Syria and Turkey. A CROPOLIS OF ATHENS. The citadel of Athens was built on a rock, and accessible ACT 6 ADM only on one side : Minerva Lad a temple at the bottom.^Pfms. in Attic. The roof of this vast pile, which had stood 2000 years, was destroyed in the Venetian siege, A.D. 1687. — Aspin. The Acropolis of My cense was marked by terraces, and defended by ponderous walls, on which were high towers, each at the distance of fifty feet. — Euripides. ACTIUM, BATTLE of. Between the fleets of Octavianus Ctesar on the one side, and of Marc Antony and Cleopatra on the other, and which decided the fate of Antony, 300 of his galleys going over to Csesar ; fought Sept. 2, 31 B.C. This battle made Augustus (the title afterwards conferred by the Senate upon Csesar) master of the world, and the commencement of the Roman empire is commonly dated from this year. In honour of his victory, the conqueror built the city of Nicopolis, and instituted the Actian games. — Blair. ACTRESSES. AVomen in the drama appear to have been unknown to the ancients ; men or eunuchs performing the female parts. Charles II. is said to have first encouraged the public appearance of women on the stage in England, in 1662; but the queen of James I. had previously performed in a theatre at court. — Theat. Biog. Mrs. Coleman was the first actress on the stage; she performed the part of /ami^e in Davenant's "Siege of Rhodes," in 1Q5Q.— Victor. ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. The first promulgated, 16 John, 1215. See Parliament. For a great many years the annual number of acts passed has been usually large, although varying considerably in every session. Between the 4th and 10th of George IV. 1126 acts were wholly repealed, and 443 repealed in part, chiefly arising out of the consolidation of the laws by Mr. Peel (afterwards sir Robert) : of these acts, 1344 related to the kingdom at large, and 225 to Ireland solely. The greatest number of acts passed in any one year during the last fifty years (since 1800, the year of the union with Ireland), was 562; this number was passed in 1846 : of these 402 were local and personal, 43 private, and 117 of public interest. In 1841, only 13 were passed (the lowest number), of which two were private. In three instances only, the annual number was under a hundred. The average number of the first ten years of the present century was 132 public acts. In the ten years ending 1850, the average number of acts, of public interest, was 112. In 1851, the number was 106; in 1852, 88 ; in 1853, 137; and in 1854, \25.—Parl. Returns. ADAM AND EVE, ERA of. Set down by Christian writers as being 4004 B.C. There have been as many as one hundred and forty opinions on the distance of time between the creation of the world and the birth of the Redeemer : some make it 3616 yeai-s, and some as great as 6484 years. See Creation. ADAMITES. A sect that imitated Adam's nakedness before the fall, arose a.d. 130. They assembled qiiite naked in their places of worship, asserting that if Adam had not sinned, there would have been no marriages. Theii" chief was named Prodicus ; they deified the elements, rejected prayer, and said it was not necessary to confess Christ. — Evbsebius. This sect, with an addition of many blasphemies, and teaching from the text " increase and multiply," was renewed at Antwerp in the thirteenth century, under a chief named Tandeme, who, being followed by 3000 soldiers, violated females of every age, calling their crimes by spiritual names. A Flaudrian, named Picard, again revived this sect in Bohemia, in the fifteenth century, whence they spread into Poland and existed some time, — Bayle ; Pardon. ADDINGTON ADMINISTRATION". Mr. Pitt having identified himself with Roman Catholic emancipation to secure the union with Ireland, and being thus unable to propose his "resolutions" in relation to that measure, as a minister, resigned, and a new ministry was formed. Right hon. Henry Addington, first lord of the treasury and chancellor of the exchequer ; lord Eldon, lord chancellor ; duko of Portland, lord president; earl of Westmoreland, lord privy seal ; lord Pelham, home, lord Hawkes- bury, foreign, and lord Hobart, colonial secretaries ; earl St. Vincent, admiralty ; earl of Chatham, ordnance; right hon. Charles Yorke, secretary-at-war ; viscount Lewisham, lord Auckland, &c. March, et seq. 1801. Terminated May 11, 1804. ADMINISTRATIONS of ENGLAND, and of GREAT BRITAIN, from the accession of Henry VIII. The following were the prime ministers, or favourites, or the chiefs of administrations, in the respective reigns. For a fuller account of each administra- tion, see them respectively through the volume. KINO HENRY VIII. Bisliop Fisher, bishop Fox, and the carl of Surrey 1509 Cardinal Thomas Wolsey .... 1514 The earl of Surrey, aud Tuustall, bishop of London 1523 ADM ADM ADMINISTRATIONS of ENGLAND, and of GREAT BRITAIN, continued. Sir Thomas More, bishops Tuustall and Gardiner, and Cranmer, a/tencards archbishop of Canterbury . . . 1529 Archbishop of Cautei-buiy, lord Crom- well, afterwards uiirl of Esse'X. ; Thomas Boleyn, carl of Wiltshire, &c. . .1532 Heury, earl of Surrey ; Thomas, lord Audley ; bishop Gardiner, sir Ralph Sadler, (fee 1540 Lord Wriotheslcy ; Thomas, duke of Norfolk ; lord Lisle, sir William Petx'e, sir William Paget, &c 1544 KING EDWARD VI. Lord Wriothesley, now earl of Hertford, lord protector, created duke of Somer- set ; John, lord Russell ; Henry, earl of Arundel; Thomas, lord Seymour; sir William Paget, sir W^ilUam Petre, &c. 1547 John Dudley, late lord i^isle and earl of Warwick, created duke of Northum- berland ; Jolm, earl of Bedford ; bishop Goodrich, sir William Cecil, &e. . . 1551 QUEEN MART. Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester; Edmvmd Bonner, bishop of London ; William, marquess of Winchester ; sir William Hastings, &c 1554 QUEEN ELIZABETH. Sir Nicholas Bacon : Edward, lord Clin- ton ; sir Robert Dudley, n/^eru'ords earl of Leicester ; sir William Cecil, after- wards loi-d Burleigh, (fee. . . . 155S Sir William Cecil, iww lord Burleigh (who continued minister during nearly the whole of this long reign) ; sir Nicholas Bacon, &c. . . . . 1572 AVilliam, lord Burleigh ; sir Thomas Bromley; Robert Devereux, earl of Essex (a favourite) ; the earl of Leices- ter, earl of Lincoln, sir Walter Mild- may, sir Francis Walsingham, (fee. . 1579 Lord Burleigh ; Robert, earl of Essex ; sir Chi-istopher Hatton, i&c. . . . 1587 Thomas Sackville, lord Buckhurst, after- wards s-m\ of Dorset ; sir Thomas Eger- ton, afterwards lord Ellesmere and vis- count Brackley ; sir Robert CecU, (fee. 1599 KING JAMES I. Thomas, earl of Dorset ; Thomas, lord Ellesmere ; Charles, earl of Notting- ham ; Thomas, earl of Suffolk, Edward, earl of Worcester ; Robert Cecil, after- wards earl of Salisbury, (fee. . . 1G03 Robert Cecil, earl of Salisbury ; Thomas, lord Ellesmere ; Henry, earl of North- ampton ; Charles, earl of Nottingham ; Thomas, earl of Sutfolk, (fee. . . .1609 Henry, earl of Nortliampton ; Thomas, lord Ellesmere; Edward, earl of Wor- cester ; sir Ralpli Winwood : Charles, earl of Nottingham ; Robert, viscount Rochester, afterwards earl of Somer- set. &c 1612 Thomas, lord Ellesmere : Thomas, earl of Suffolk ; Charles, earl of Nottingham ; sir George Villiers (a favourite), after- wards viscount Villiers, and siicces- sively earl, marquess, and duke of Buekingliam 1615 Sir Henry. Montagu, afterwardu viscount Maude ville and earl of M.anchestcr . 1620 Lionel, lord Cranfield, afterwards earl of Mid(llescx ; Edward, earl of Worcester; John, earl of Bristol ; John Williams, dean of Westminster ; George Villiers, now marquess of Buckingham ; sir Edward Conway, &c 1621 KING CHARLES I. Richard, lord Weston, afterwards earl of Portland ; sir Thomas Coventry, after- wards lord Coventry ; Henry, earl of Manchester (succeeded by James, carl of Marlborough, wlio, in turn, gave place to Edward, lord, afttrioards vis- count, Conway) ; William Laud, bishop of London ; sir Albertus Morton, (fee. 1628 William Laud, now archbishop of Canter- bury; Francis, lordCottington; James, marquess of Hamilton ; Edward, earl of Dorset ; sir John Coke, sir Francis Windebank, (fee 1635 William Juxon, bishop of London ; sir John Finch afterwards lord Finch ; Francis, lord Cottington ; Wentworth, earl of Strafford ; Algernon, earl of Northumberland ; James, marquess of Hamilton ; Laud, archbishop of Can- terbury ; sir Francis Windebank, sir Henry Vane, (fee. . . ■ . . 1640 [When the civil war commenced all went into confusion. The unfortunate king was beheaded, Jan 30, 1649.] COMMONWEALTH. Oliver Cromwell, made protector. He named a council whose number at no time was to exceed twenty-one mem- bers, nor be less than thirteen. . . 1653 Richard Cromwell, son of Oliver, suc- ceeded on the death of the latter. A council of officers ruled at Wallingford House 1658 KINO CHARLES II.* Sir Edward Hyde, aftencards earl of Clarendon; George Monk, created duke of Albemarle ; Edward Montagu, created earl of Sandwich ; lord Saye and Sele, earl of Manchester ; lord Seymour ; sir Robert Long, (fee. . . 1660 George Monk, duke of Albemai-le, made first commissioner of the treasury, (fee. 1667 The "Cabal" Ministi-y. Sir Thomas Clifford, afterimrds lord Clifford (C); Anthony Ashley, aftencards earl of Shaftesbury (A); George Villiers, duke of Buckingham (B) ; Henry, lord Ar- lington, afterwards earl of Arlington (A); and John, dukeof L.auderdale(L). This private council obtained the name of the Cabal from the initial letters of their five names, which composed the ■word.— Charles Home's England . . 1670 Tliomas, lord Clifford ; Antliony, earl of Sliaftesbury; Henry, earl of Arlington; Arthur, earl of Anglesey ; sir Thomas Osliorne, created viscount Latimer; rt. hou. Hem-y Coventry, sir George Carteret, Edward Seymour, uu- das, &c. Dec • ^i°^ [During Mr. Pitt's long administration, numerous modifications in the mkiistry took place.] ^t. i. Rt. hon. Henry Addington, duke of 1 ort- land, earl of Westmorland, lord Pelham, lord Eldon, lord Hawkesbury, lord Ho- bart earl St. Vincent, earl of Chatham, rt. hon. Charles Yorke, viscount Lewisham, lord Auckland, &c. March, ct acq ^^"^ Rt. hon. William Pitt, lord Eldon, duke of Portland (succeeded by lord Sid- mouth, late Mr. Addington), carl of AVestmorlaud, lord Hawkesbury, lord Harrowby (succeeded by lord Mul- grave), earl Camden (succeeded by viscount Castlereagh); viscount Mel- ville (succeeded by lord Barham), duke of Montrose, lord Mulgrave, rt. hon. Jlr. Duudas; rt. hon. George Canning, &c. May. at seq. . . . 1804 [The death of Mr. Pitt led to the forma- tion of another cabinet.] " All the Talents " administration : lord Grenvillo, lord Henry Petty, lord Erskiue, earl Fitzwilliam, viscount Sidmouth, Charles James Fox, carl Spencer, William Windham, earl of Moira, sir Charles Grey (afterwards viscount Howick and earl Grey), lord Minto, lord Auckland, &c.— Lord EUeuborough, lord chief justice, had a seat in the cabinet. Feb. . . • 1806 [The death of Mr. Fox led to numerous changes in the cabinet.] Duke of Portland, lord Eldon, earl Cam- den, earl of Westmorland, hon. Spencer Perceval, lord Hawkesbury, viscount Castlereagh, Jlr. Camiing, carlofChat- liam, earl Bathurst, Mr. Duudas, lord Ttlulgrave, &c. March . ■ ■ 1807 Rt. hon. Socnccr I'erccval, earl Camden, carl of Westmorland, lord Eldon, hunt Palmerston, mar- quess of Lansdowne, Mr. Huskisson, Mr. Charles Grant, &c. Auejust . . 1827 Duke of Wellington, lord Lyndhurst, eari Bathurst, lord EUeuborough, Jlr. Goulburn, Mr. Peel, carl Dudley, Mr. Huskisson, Sir. Grant, (aftencards lord Glonelg) lord Palmerston, earl of Aberdeen, Mr. Herries, Mr. Arbuth- not &c Jd'iv . • • * • Ioao Duke'of Wellington, lord Lyndhurst, earl of Aberdeen, earl Bathurst, Mr. Peel, sir George ^Murray, lord EUenborough, viscount Lowther, viscount Melville, sir Henry Hardinge. May and June . 1828 [This last remodeUing of the ministry was consequent u[ion the retirement of the earl of Dudley, lord Palmerston, Mr. Grant, and Mr. Huskisson.] KINO WILLIAM IV. Duke of Wellington and his colleagues continued. June 26 . . • .• 1*30 Earl Grey, marquess of Lansdowne, vis- count Althorpe, earl of Duriiam, vis- counts Melbourne, Palmerston, and Goderich; sir James Graham, Mr. Grant, lord Auckland, lord John Russell, Lord Brougham, &c. ^ov. . 1830 [Earl Grey resigns office, owing to a majority against him in the lords ou a fiuestion relating to tho Refoiin bill. May 10, 1832 ; but he resumes his post, May IS, following.] Viscount Mell)ourne, marquess of Lans- downe, carl Mulgrave, viscount Al- thorpe', viscount Palmerston, viscount Duucannou. Mr. Spring Rice, lord Brougham, lord John Russell, lord Auckland, sir John Hobhouse, Mr. EUice, Mr. Grant, Mr. Littleton, &c. July ,. • 1834 [Viscount Melbourne's administration dissolved. The duke of Wellington tiikes the helm of state provisionally, waiting the return of sir Robert Peel from It;ily.] ,.^ , „ Sir Robert Peel, lord Wliai-ncliffe, earl of Rosslyn, lord Lvndhurst, Mr. Goul- 1 burn, duke of Wellington, earl of ADM 10 ADM ADMINISTRATIONS of ENGLAND, and Aberdeen, earl de Grey, rt. hou. Alexander Baring, lord EUeuborough, sir George Murray, &c. Nov. and Dee. 1834 Viscount Melbourne, marquess of Lans- downe, viscount Duncannou, Mr. Spring Rice, lord John Russell, vis- count Palmerston, lord Glenelg {late Mr. Cbarles Grant), earl of Miuto, sir John Hobhouse, Mr. Poulett Thomson, lord Holland, viscount Howick, sir Henry Paruell, Mr. Labouchere, lord Morpeth, &c. April .... 1835 Sir Charles C. Pepys, created lord Cot- tenham, and made lord chancellor. Jan 1886 QUEEN VICTORIA. Viscount Melbourne and his colleagues, continued. June 20 ... . 1837 [Among the subsequent accessions and changes, were the following : rt. hon. F. T. Baring, marquess of Normanby, late earl of Mulgrave, earl of Claren- don, Mr. T. B. Macaulay, &c.] [Viscount Melbourne resigns, and sir Robert Peel receives the queen's com- mands to form a new administration, May 8. This command is withdrawn, and on May 10, lord Melbourne and his friends return to power.] . . 1839 Sir Robert Peel, duke of "Wellington, lord Wharncliffe, lord Lyndhurst, duke of Buckingham, sir James Graham, earl of Aberdeen, loi-d Stanley, Mr. Goulburn, earl of Haddington, earl of Ripon, sir George Murray, sir Henry Hardinge, lord Ellenborough, 845 Procas 80S Numitor 795 Amulius, the brother of Numitor, seizes the throne '94 He is restored by his grandson, Romulus, who puts Amuhus to deatii . . . 754 The kingdom is conquered by Tullus UostUius, who incorporates it with his Roman dominions .... 665 C ALB 18 ALD When Amulius dethroned his brother, he condemned Ilia, the daughter of Numitor, to a life of celibacy, by obliging her to take the vows and office of a vestal, thereby to assure his safety in the usurpation. His object vras however frustrated; violence was offered to Ilia, and she became the mother of twins, for which Amulius ordered her to be buried alive, and her offspring to be thrown into the Tiber, 770 B.C. But the little bark in which the infants were sent adrift stopped near mount Aventine, and was brought ashore by Faustulus, the king's chief shepherd, who reared the children as his own, and called them Romulus and Remus. His wife, Acca-Laurentia, was surnamed Lwpa; whence arose the fable that Romulus and his brother were suckled by a she-wolf. At sixteen years of age, Romulus avenged the wrongs of Ilia and Numitor, 754 B.C., and the next year founded Rome. — Varro. ALBIGENSES. They had their origin about a.d. 1160, at Albigeois, in Languedoc, and at Toulouse ; they opposed the doctrines of the Church of Rome, and professed a hatred of all the corruptions of that religion. Simon de Montfort commanded against them, and at Bezieres he and the pope's legate put friends and foes to the sword. At Minerba, he burnt 150 of the Albigenses alive; and at La Vaur, he hanged the governor, and beheaded the chief people, drowning the governor's wife, and murdering other women. They next defeated the count of Toulouse with the loss of 17,000 men. Simon de Montfort afterwards came to England. See Waldenses. ALBION. The island of Britain is said to have been first so called by Julius Caesar, on account of the chalky cliffs upon its coast, on his invasion of the country, 54 B.C. The Romans conquered it, and held possession about 400 years. On their quitting it, it was successively invaded by the Scots, Picts, and Saxons, who drove the original inhabitants from the plain country, to seek refuge in the steeps and wilds of Cornwall and Wales; the Danes and Normans also settled at various times in England: and from a mixture of these nations, the present race of Englishmen is derived. See Britain. ALBUERA OR ALBUHERA, BATTLE of. Between the French, commanded by marshal Soult, and the British and Anglo-Spanish army, commanded by marshal, afterwards lord Beresford, May 16, 1811. After an obstinate and sanguinary engagement, the allies obtained the victory, one of the most bi-illiant achievements of the peninsular war. The French loss exceeded 7000 men previously to their retreat ; but the allies lost an equal number. On the side of the allies, the chief brunt of the action fell on the Bi'itish : " Col. Inglis, 22 officers, and more than 400 men, out of 570 who had mounted a hill, fell in the 57th regiment alone ; the other regiments were scarcely better off, not one-third being left standing; 1800 imwounded men, the remnant of 6000 unconquerable British soldiers, stood triumphant on this fatal hill." — Sir W. F. P. Napier. ALCHEMY. A pretended branch of chemistry, which affected the transmutation of metals into gold, an alkahest, or universal menstruum, and things equally ridiculous. If regard be had to legend and tradition, alchemy must be as old as the Flood ; yet few philosophers, poets, or physicians, from Homer, till 400 years after Christ, mention any such thing. Pliny says, the emperor Caligula was the first who prepared natural arsenic, in order to make gold of it, but left it off, because the charge exceeded the profit. Others say, the Egyptians had this mystery. The Arabians are said to have invented this mysterious art, wherein they were followed by Roger Bacon, Albertus Magnus, Aquinas, Raymond Lullius, Paracelsus, and others, who never found anything but ashes in their furnaces. Another author on the subject is Zosimus, about a.d. 410. — Fah. Bib. Grwc. A license for practising alchemy with all kinds of metals and minerals granted to one Richard Carter, 1476. — Fymer's Feed. Dr. Price, of Guildford, published an account of his experiments in this way, and pretended to success : he brought his specimens of gold to the king, affirming that they were made by means of a red and white powder ; he being a Fellow of the Royal Society, was required, upon pain of expulsion, to repeat his experiments before Messrs. Kirwan and Woulfe ; but after some equivocation he took poison and died, August 1783. ALCORAN. See Koran^ Mahometism, Mecca, &c. ALDERMEN. The word is derived from the Saxon Ealdorman, a senior, and among the Saxons the rank was conferred iipon elderly and sage, as well as distinguished persons, on account of the experience that their age had given them. At the time of the Heptarchy, aldermen were the governors of provinces or districts, and are so mentioned up to a.d. 882. After the Danes were settled in England, the title ALD 19 ALE was changed to that of earl, and the Normang introduced that of count, which though different in its original signification, yet meant tlie same thing. Henry III. may be said to have given its basis to this city distinction. In modern British poUty, an alderman is a magistrate next in dignity to the mayor. Appointed in London, where there are twenty-six, in 1242; and in Dublin, where there are twenty-four, in 1323. Cbosen for life, instead of annually, 17 Eichard II., 1394. Present mode of election established 11 George I., 1725. Aldermen were made justices of the peace 15 George IL, 1741. ALDERNEY, RACE of. Through this strait the French made their escape after their defeat at the battle of La Hogue, by admiral Rooke, in 1692. It is celebrated for two memorable and fatal occurrences : William of Normandy, son of Henry I. of England, with a vast crowd of young nobility, (as many as 140 youths of the principal families of France and Britain,) was overtaken by a storm, and all were lost, in 1120. The British man-of-war Victory, ol 110 guns and 1100 men, was also wrecked here, October 8, 1744, when the admiral, sir John Balchan, and all his crew, perished on the rocks. ALDERSHOTT CAMP, near Farnham, about 35 miles from London. In April 1854, the War Office having obtained a grant of 100,000^. jjurchased 4000 acres of land, for a permanent camp for 20,000 men, which is now in progress (June 1855). ALE AND WINE. They are said to have been invented by Bacchus ; the former in Egypt, where the soil was considered unable to produce grapes. Ale was known as a beverage at least 404 B.C. Herodotus ascribes the first discovery of the art of brewing barley- wine to Isis, the wife of Osiris. The Romans and Germans very early learned the process of preparing a liquor from coi'n by means of fermentation, from the Egyptians. — Tacitus. Alehouses are made mention of in the laws of Ina, king of Wessex. Booths were set up in England, a.d. 728, when laws were passed for their regulation. Ale-houses were licensed in 1621 ; and excise duty on ale and beer was imposed on a system nearly similar to the present, 13 Charles IL, 1660. See £eer, Porter, Wine. ALEMANNI, or ALL MEN {i.e. men of all nations). A body of Suevi were defeated by Caracalla, a.d. 214. On one occasion, 300,000 of this warlike i^cople are said to have been vanquished, in a battle near Milan, by Gallienus, at the head of 10.000 Romans. Their battles were numerous with the Romans and Gauls. They ultimately sub- mitted to the Franks. — Gibbon. ALEPPO. A large city of Syria, called by the natives Haleb, and anciently Bersea. The pachalic of Aleppo is one of the five governments into which Syria is divided. The depopulation occasioned by the plague has frequently been dreadful ; 60,000 persons were computed to have perished by it in 1797. Aleppo suffered severely from the terrible earthquakes in 1822 and 1830. It has also often been the scene of fanatical massacres. The last massacre was caused by an attack of the Mahometans upon the Christian inhabitants — numbers falling victims to then- merciless assailants : the Mahometans burnt everything in their way ; three churches were destroyed, five others were plundered, and the total loss of jiroperty amounted to about a million sterling : no interference was attempted by the pacha or the Turkish soldiers. Oct. 16, 1850. ALESSANDRIA, BATTLE of. Between the Austro-Russian army under Suwarrow,and the French under Moreau, when the latter was defeated with the loss of 4000 men. The French had possessed themselves of Alessandria the year before, but they were now driven out. May 17, 1799. It was again delivered up to them after the battle of Marengo, in 1800. The village and battle-field of Marengo lie east of the town. ALEXANDER, ERA of. Dated from the death of Alexander the Great, November 12 323 B.C. In the computation of this era, the period of the creation was considered to be 5502 years before the birth of Christ, and, in consequence, the year 1 a.d. was equal to 5503. This computation continued to the year 284 a.d., which was called 5786. In the next year (285 a.d.), which should have been 5787, ten years were discarded, and the date became 5777. This is still used in the Abyssinian era, w?nck see. The date is reduced to the Christian era by subtracting 5502 until the year 5786, and after that time by subtracting 5492. ALEXANDRIA, Egypt. The walls whereof were six miles in circuit, built by Alexander the Great, 332 b.c. ; taken by Cicsar, 47 B.C., and the library of the Ptolemies, con- taining 400,000 valuable works in MS., was accidentally burnt by a fire which c 2 ALE 20 ALG occuiTed during Caesar's attack. Conquered by the Saracens, when the second library, consisting of 700,000 volumes, was totally destroyed by the victors, who heated the water for their baths for six months by burning books instead of wood, by command of the caliph Omar, a.d. 642. This was formerly a place of great trade, all the treasures of the east being deposited here before the discovery of the route by the Cape of Good Hope. Taken by the French under Bonaparte, when a massacre ensued, July 5, 1798; and from them by the British in the memorable battle men- tioned in next article, in 1801. Alexandria was again taken by the British, under General Fraser, March 21, 1807 ; but was evacuated, Sept. 23, same year. For later events here, see Syria and Turkey. ALEXANDRIA, BATTLE of. Between the French under Menou, who made the attack, and the British army, under sir Ralph Abei'crombie, amounting to about 15,000 men, which had but recently debarked, fought March 21, 1801. The British were victorious, but sir Ralph Abercrombie was mortally wounded ; and after the retreat of Menou, he was carried to the admiral's ship, and died on the 28th. The command devolved on major-general Hutchinson, who baffled all the schemes of Menou, and obliged him to surrender, Sept. 2 following, the victor guaranteeing the conveyance of the Fi-ench (whose number exceeded 10,000) to a French port in the Mediterranean. ALEXANDRINE VERSE. Verse of twelve syllables. They were first written by Alexander of Paris, and have since been. called, after him, Alexandriues, about a.d. 1164. — Nouv. Diet. Pope, in his Essay on Criticism, has the following well-known couplet, in which an Alexandrine is happily exemplified: — " A needless Alexandrine ends the song, That, like a wound-ed snake, drags its slow length a-long." The longest English poem wholly in Alexandrine verse is Drayton's Polyolbion, pub- lished in 1612. The last line of the Spenserian stanza is an Alexandrine. ALFORD, BATTLE of. General Baillie with a large body of Covenanters defeated by the marquess of Montrose, July 2, 1645. There was discovered some years since, in one of the mosses near this place, a man in armour on horseback, supposed to have been drowned in attempting to escape from this battle. ALGEBRA. Where Algebra was first used, and by whom, is not precisely known. Diophantus first wrote upon it, probably about a.d. 170; he is said to be the inventor. Brought into Spain by the Saracens, about 900 ; and into Italy by Leonardo of Pisa, in 1202. The first writer who used algebraical signs was Stifelius of Nuremberg, in 1544. The introduction of symbols for quantities was by Francis Vieta, in 1590, when algebra came into general use. — Moreri. The binomial theorem of Newton, the basis of the doctrine of fluxions, and the new analysis, 1668. ALGESIRAS, or OLD GIBRALTAR. By this city, the Moors entered Spain in a.d. 713, and it was not recovered from them until 1344. Engagement here between a British squadron, under sir James Saumarez (afterwards lord de Saumarez), and several French and Spanish ships of war, which closed in the destruction of two Spanish ships, each of 112 guns, and the capture of the St. Antonio, of 74 guns, July 12, 1801. ALGIERS. The ancient kingdom of Numidia, reduced to a Roman Province, 44 B.C. It afterwards became independent, till, dreading the power of the Spaniards, the nation invited Barbarossa, the pirate, to assist it, and he seized the government, a.d. 1516; but it afterwards became subject to Turkey. — Priestley. The Algerines for ages braved the resentment of the most powerful states in Christendom, and the emperor Charles V. lost a fine fleet and army in an unsuccessful expedition against them, in 1541, Algiers was reduced by admiral Blake in 1653, and terrified into pacific measures with England ; but it repulsed the vigorous attacks of other European powers, particularly those of France, in 1688, and 1761 ; and of Spain, in 1775, 1783, and 1784. Bombarded by the British fleet, under admiral lord Exmouth, Aug. 27, 1816, when a new treaty followed, and Christian slavery was abolished. See next article. Algiers surrendered to a French armament, under Bourmont and Duperr^ after some severe conflicts, July 5, 1830, when the dey was deposed, and the barbarian government wholly overthrown. The French ministry announced their intention to retain Algiers, permanently. May 20, 1834. Marshal Clausel defeated the Arabs in two battles, and entered Mascara, Dec. 8, 1836. General Damremont attacked Constantina (which see), Oct. 13, 1837; and afterwards various engagements between the French and the natives took place. Abd-el-Kader, the heroic chieftain of Algiers, surrendered Dec. 22, 1847, and after a contest of seventeen years, his country became ALG 21 ALL a colony of France. He, with his suite, was embarked at Oran, and lauded at Toulon on Dec. 28 following. He was removed to the castle of Amboi.se, near Tours, Nov. 2, 1848, and released from his confinement by Louis Napoleon, Oct. 16, 1852, after swearing on the Koran never to disturb Africa again ; he was to reside hence- forward at Broussa, in Asia Minor ; but in consequence of the earthquake at that place, Feb. 28, 1855, he removed to Constantinople. ALGIERS, BATTLE of. The British fleet, under lord Exmouth, anchoring off Algiers, bombarded the town, which returned the fire ; but all the fortifications and houses towai-ds the sea were soon reduced to ashes, and the fleet in the harbour entirely destroyed, Aug. 27, 1816. The dey was compelled to conclude a treaty by which he ' set the Christian slaves at liberty, and engaged to cease in future from reducing Christian captives to that ignominious condition ; a stipulation which, however, he did not afterwards strictly observe. In the end, this breach of faith led to his final overthrow. See preceding article. ALI, SECT OF. Founded by the famous Mahometan chief, son-in-law of Mahomet, (who married his daughter Fatima,) about a.D. 632. Ali was called by the prophet. " the lion of God, always victorious ; " and the Persians follow the interpretation of the Koran according to Ali, while other Mahometans adhere to that of Abubeker and Omar. It is worthy of remark, that the first four successors of Mahomet — Abubeker, Omar, Othman and Ali, whom he had employed as his chief agents in establishing his religion, and extirpating unbelievers, and whom on that account he styled the " cutting swords of God," all died violent deaths ; and that this bloody impostor's family was wholly extirpated within thirty years after his own decease. Ali was assassinated in 660. ALIENS. In England, aliens were grievously coerced up to a.d. 1 377. When they were to be tried criminally, the juries were to be half foreigners, if they so desired, 1430. Tliey were restrained from exercising any trade or handicraft by retail, 1483. The celebrated Alien Bill passed, January, 1793. Act to register Aliens, 1795. Bill to abolish their naturalisation by the holding of stock in the banks of Scotland, June, 1820. New Registration act, 7 Geo. IV., 1826. This last act was repealed and another statute passed, 6 Will. IV., 1836. The celebrated baron Geramb, a conspicuous and fashionable foreigner, known at court, was ordered out of England, April 6, 1812. ALIWAL, BATTLE of, India. Between the Sikh army, under sirdar Runjoor Singh Majeethea, 24,000 strong, supported by 68 pieces of cannon, and the British under sir H. Smith, 12,000 men, with 32 guns; the contest was obstinate, but ended in the defeat of the Sikhs, who lost nearly 6000 killed, or drowned in attempting to recross the Sutlej, Jan. 28,"1846. This battle was named after the village of Aliwal, in the Indian language, ULleeivul, near which it was fought. See SiUlcj. ALL SAINTS' DAY. The festival instituted, a.d. 625. All-Saints', or All-Hallows', in the Protestant Church, is a day of general commemoration of all those saints and martyrs in houour of whom, individually, no particular day is assigned. The Church of Rome and the Greek Church have saints for every day in the year. The reformers of the English Church provided offices only for very remarkable commemorations, and struck out of their calendar altogether a great number of anniversaries, leaving only those which at their time were connected with popular feeling or tradition. " Our reformers," says Nicholls, in his Paraphrase on the Common Prayer, " having laid aside the celebration of a great many martyrs' daj's, which had grown too numerous and cumbersome to tlie Church, thought fit to retain this day (All Saints') wherein, by a general commemoration, our Church gives thanks for them all." " ALL THE TALENTS" ADMINISTRATION. On the death of Mr. Pitt (Jan. 23, 1806), lord Grenville succeeded to the ministry, and uuited with Mr. Fox, and his friends. This administration consisted of lord Grenville, first lord of the treasury; lord Henry Petty, chancellor of the exchequer; earl Fitzwilliam, lord president; viscount Sidmouth (late Mr. Addington), privy seal; Charles James Fox, foreign, carl Spencer, home, and William Windham, colonial, secretaries; lord Erskine, lord chancellor ; sir Charles Grey (afterwards viscount Howick and earl Grey), admiralty ; lord Minto, board of control ; lord Auckland, board of trade ; lord Moira, master- general of the ordnance ; Mr. Sheridan, treasurer of the navy ; right hon. Richard Fitzpatrick, &c. Lord Ellen- borough (lord chief justice) had a seat in the cabinet. The friends of this ministry gave it the appellation of "All the Talents," which, being echoed in derision by the opposition, became fixed upon it ever after, Feb. 5, 1806. The death of Mr. Fox, Sept. (13, 1806) led to various changes, and this ministry was finally dissolved, March, 1807. ALL 22 ALM ALLEGIANCE. The oath of allegiance, as administered in England for 600 years contained a promise " to be true and faithful to the king and his heirs, and truth and faith to bear of life and limb and terrene honour ; and not to know or hear of any ill or damage intended him, without defending him therefrom." A new oath of allegiance was administered in 1605. Altered by the convention parliament, 1688. ALLEGORY. Of very ancient composition. The Bible abounds in the finest instances, of which Blair gives Psalm Ixxx. ver. 8 — 16, as a specimen. Spenser's FaeHe Queene is an allegory throughout ; Addison, in his Spectator, abounds in allegories : and the Pilgrims Progress of Bunyan, 1663, is perfect in this way. Milton, among other English poets, is rich in allegory. 4 ALLIANCE, TREATIES of, between the high European powers. The following are the principal treaties distinguished by this name, and which are most commonly referred to. See Coalitions, Conventions, Treaties, &c. Alliance of Leipsic . Alliance of Vienna Alliance, the Triple . Alliance of Warsaw Alliance, the Grand Alliance, the Hague Alliance, the Quadruple Alliance of Vienna Alliance of Versailles Alliance, Germanic Alliance of Pai-is Alliance of Petersburg Austrian Alliance April 9, 1631 May 27, 1657 Jan. 2S, 1608 March 31, 1683 May 12, 1089 Jan. 4, 1717 Aug. 2, 1718 March 16, 1731 Mayl. 1756 July 23, 1785 May 16, 1795 April 8, 1805 March 14, 1812 Alliance of Sweden . . . Alliance of Toplitz Alliance, the Holy . . . In nomine Dd : — Alliance of England, France, and Turkey (signed at Constantinople) . . Alliance of England and France ratified . . . Alliance of Sardinia with the Western Powers (signed at Turin) .... March 24, Sept. 9, Sept. 26, 1812 1813 1815 March 12, 1854 April 3, 1S54 Jan. 26, 1855 ALMA, BATTLE of the. The English and French armies moved out of their first encampment in the Crimea on Sept. 19, 1854, and bivouacked for the night on the left bank of the Bulganac. The Russians (commanded by Prince Menschikoif ) muster- ing 40,000 infantry, had 180 field pieces on the heights, and on the morning of the 20th, were joined by 6000 cavalry from Theodosia (or KafFa). The English forces, under lord Raglan, consisted of 25,000 men ; the French, under marshal St. Arnaud, of 23,000. At 12 o'clock the signal to advance was made, and the river Alma crossed, while prince Napoleon took possession of the village under fire of the Russian bat- teries. At 4, after a sanguinary fight, the allies were completely victorious. The enemy, utterly routed, threw away their arms and knapsacks in their flight, having lost about 5000 men, of whom 900 were made prisoners, mostly wounded. The loss of the British was 26 officers and 327 men killed, and 73 officers and 1539 men wounded (chiefly from the 23rd, 7th, and 33rd regiments) ; that of the French, 3 officers and 233 men killed, and 54 officers and 1033 men wounded. See Crimea and Russo-Turkish War. ALMANACS. The Egyptians computed time by instruments. Log calendars were anciently in use. Al-mon-aght, is of Saxon origin. In the British Museum and universities are curious specimens of early almanacs. Michael Nostradamus, the celebrated astrologer, wrote an almanack in the style of Merlin, 1566. — Dufresnoy. Among the earlier and more remarkable almanacs were : John Somer's Calendar, written in Oxford 1380 One in Lambeth palace, written in . . 1460 First printed one, published at Buda . 1472 First printed in England, by Richard Pynson 1497 Tybalt's Prognostications . . . . 1533 Lilly's Ephemeris 1644 Poor Robin's Almanack . . . . 1652 Lady's Diary .:.... 1705 Moore's Almanack 1713 Season on the Seasons .... 1735 Gentleman's Diary 1741 Mautical Almanack (materially improved in 1834) 1767 British Imperial Kalendar . . . 1809 British Almanac and Companion . . 1828 Of Moore's, at one period (under the management of the late Mr. Andrews, who was for more than forty years the able computer of the Nautical Ephemeris), upwards of 430,000 copies were annually sold. The stationers' company claimed the exclusive right of publishing almanacs, in virtue of letters patent from James L, granting the privilege to this company, and the two universities, but the monopoly was broken up by a decision of the Court of Common Pleas in 1775. A bill to renew the privilege was lost in 1779. Of foreign almanacs, the principal are the " Almanach de France," first published in 1699, and the "Almanach de Gotha," 1764. The stamp duty on almanacs was abolished in August, 1834 ; since when almanacs are numberless. ALMANZA, BATTLE of. Between the confederate forces under the earl of Galway, and the French and Spanish commanded by James Fitzjames, duke of Berwick (the ALM 23 ALT illegitimate son of James II.), when most of tlie English were killed or made prisoners of war, having been abandoned by the Portuguese at the first charge, April 14, 1707. ALMEIDA. An important position as a frontier town of Portugal, in the peninsular war. Massena laid siege to it, Aug. 15, 1810, and the governor capitulated, Aug. 27 following. The French crossed into Spain, leaving a garrison at Almeida, blockaded by the English, April, 6, 1811. Almeida was evacuated by the French, May 11. In the end, Wellington compelled Massena to retii-e from Portugal, but the route of the enemy was tracked by horrid desolation. .ALMONER. The precise date of this office is not certain ; but we read of a lord almoner in various reigns, and in various countries. The rank was anciently allotted to a dignified clergyman, who had the privilege of giving the first dish from the roj^al table to the poor; or instead thereof, an alms in money. By the ancient canon.s, all monasteries were to spend at least a tenth part of their income in alms to the poor. By an ancient canon all bishops were required to keep almoners. The grand almoner of France {le grand aumonier) was the highest ecclesiastical dignity in that kingdom before the revolution, 1789. ALNEY, BATTLE of, or rather single combat between Edmund Ironside and Canute the Great, in sight of their armies ; the latter was wounded, when he proposed a division of the kingdom, the south part falling to Edmund, a.d. 1016; but this prince having been murdered at Oxford, shortly after the treaty, according to some, by the treachery of .^dric Streon, Canute was left in the peaceable possession of the whole kingdom in 1017. — Goldsmith. ALPHABET. Athotes, son of Menes, was the author of hieroglyphics, and wrote thus the history of the Egyptians, 2122 B.C. — Blair. But Josephus affirms that he had seen inscriptions by Seth, the son of Adam ; though this is doubted, and deemed a mistake, or fabulous. The first letter of the Phoenician and Hebrew alphabet was aleph, called by the Greeks alpha, and abbreviated by the moderns to A. The Hebrew is supposed to be derived from the Phoenician. Cadmus, the founder of Cadmea, 1493 B.C., brought the Phoenician letters (fifteen in number) into Greece; they were the following : — A, B, r. A, I, K, A, M, N, O, n, P, 2, T, T. These letters were originally either Hebrew, Phoenician, or Assyrian characters, and changed gradually in form till they became the ground of the Roman letters, now used all over Europe. Palamedes of Argos invented the double chai'acters, 0, X, *, H about 1224 B.C.; and Simonides added Z, y, H, Cl, about 489 B.C. — Arundelian Marbles. When the E was introduced is not precisely known. The Greek alphabet consisted of sixteen letters till 399 B.C., when the Ionic, of 24 characters, was intro- duced. The small letters arc of later invention, for the convenience of writing. The alphabets of the difi'erent nations contain the following number of letters : — English . 26 German . 2G Greek . . 24 Turkish . 33 Freucli . . . 2;s Slavonic . 27 Hebrew . . . 22 Sanscrit . . . 50 Italian . 20 Russian . . . 41 Arabic . . 2S and Spanish . . . 27 Latin . 22 Persian . . . 32 Chinese . 214 ALPHONSINE TABLES. Celebrated astronomical tables, composed by command, and under the direction of Alphonsus X. of Castile, surnamed the Wise. This learned jirince is said to have expended upwards of 400,000 crowns in completing the work, whose value was enhanced by a preface, written by his own hand ; he commenced his reign in 1252. ALT-RANSTADT, PEACE of. The celebrated treaty of peace between Charles XII. of Sweden, and Frederick Augustus of Poland, was signed Sept. 24, 170G. Frederick Augustus, who was deposed in 1704, was afterwards retored to his throne. ALTARS. They were first raised to Jupiter, in Greece, by Cecrops, who also instituted and regulated marriages, 1556 B.C. He introduced among the Greeks the worship of those deities which were held in adoration in Egypt. — Herodotus. The term "altar" was applied to the Lord's table for the first three centuries after Christ. Christian altars in churches were instituted by pope Sixtus I. in 135 ; and they were first consecrated by pope Sylvester. — The first Christian altar in Britain was in 634. — Stow. The Cluirch of England still retains the name, applying it to the table on which the elements arc placed. Since the time of Elizabeth there lias been much controversy on the subject, and the Puritans iu the civil war destroyed many of the ancient stone altars, substituting wooden tables. ALU 24 AMB ALUM. Is said to have been first discovered at Rocha, ia Syria, about a.d. 1300; it was found in Tuscany, in 1460; was brought to pei'fection in England, in 1608: was discovered in Ireland in 1757; and in Anglesey, in 1790. Alum is a salt used as a mordant in tanning ; it is used also to harden tallow, and to whiten bread. It may be made of pure clay exposed to vapours of sulphuric acid, and sulphate of potash added to the ley ; but it is usually obtained by means of ore called alum slate. AMAZON, West India mail steam-ship, left Southampton Friday, Jan. 2, 1852, and on Sunday morning, Jan. 4, was destroyed by fire at sea (supposed by the spontaneous ignition of combustible matter placed near the engine-room). Out of 161 persons on board (crew and passengers, women and children), 102 persons must have perished by fire or drowning. 21 persons were saved by the life-boat of the ship ; 25 more were carried into Brest harbour by a Dutch vessel passing by ; and 13 others were picked up in the bay of Biscay, also by a Dutch galliot. Eliot Warburton, a distinguished writer in general literature, was among those lost. AMAZOXIA. Discovered by Francisco Orellana, in 1580. Coming from Peru, Orellana sailed down the river Amazon to the Atlantic, and observing companies of women in arms on its banks, he called the country Amazonia, and gave the name of Amazon to the river, which had previously been called Maranon. AMAZONS. Their origin is fabulous. They are said to have been the descendants of Scythians inhabiting Cappadocia, where their husbands, having made incursions, were all slain, being surprised in ambuscades by their enemies. Their widows, reflecting on the alarms or sorrows they underwent, on account of the fate of their husbands, resolved to form a female state, and having firmly established themselves, they decreed that matrimony was a shameful servitude ; but, to perpetuate their race, they, at stated times, admitted the embraces of their male neighbours. — Quintus Curtius. They were said to have been conquered by Theseus, about 1231 B.C. The Amazons were constantly employed in wars ; and that they might throw the javelin Avith more force, their right breasts were burned off, whence their name from the Greek, a no and fJ-a^os, a breast. Their queen, Thalestris, visited Alexander the Great, while he was pursuing his conquests in Asia, and cohabited with him, in the hope of having issue by so illustrious a warrior ; three hundred females were in her train. — Herodotm. AMBASSADORS. Accredited agents and representatives from one court to another, are referred to early ages, and to almost all nations. In most countries they have great and peculiar pi'ivileges ; and in England, among others, they and their servants are secured against ai-rest. The Portuguese ambassador was imprisoned for debt, in 1653; and the Russian, by a lace-merchant, in 1709, when a law, the statute of 8 Anne, passed for their protection. Two men were convicted of arresting the servant of an ambassador : they were sentenced to be conducted to the house of the ambassador, with a label on their breasts, to ask his pardon, and then one of them to be imprisoned three months, and the other fined. May 12, 1780. — Phillips. AMBASSADORS, Interchange of. England usually has twenty-five ambassadors or envoys extraordinary and about thirty-six chief consuls, resident at foreign courts, exclusive of inferior agents : the ambassadors and other agents from abroad at the court of London exceed those numbers. Amoig the more memorable instances of interchange may be recorded, that the first ambassador from the United States of America to England was John Adams, presented to the king, June 2, 1785; and the first from Gi'eat Britain to America was Mr. Hammond, in 1791. AMBER. A carbonaceous mineral, principally found in the northern parts of Europe, of great repute in the world from the earliest time ; esteemed as a medicine before the Christian era: Theophrastus wrote upon it, 300 B.C. Upwards of 150 tons of amber have been found in one year on the sands of the shore near Pillau. — Phillips. Much diversity of opinion still prevails among naturalists and chemists, respecting the origin of amber, some referring it to the vegetable, others to the mineral, and some to the animal kingdom ; its natural history and its chemical analysis aflfording something in favour of each opinion. It is considered by Berzelius to have been a resin dissolved in volatile oil. It often contains delicately formed insects. Su-D. Brewster concludes it to be an indurated vegetable juice. When rubbed it becomes electrical, and from its Greek name ijKeKTpov, the term Electricity is derived. AMBOYNA. Memoi-able massacre of the English factors at this settlement by the AME 25 AME Dutch : they were cruelly tortured and put to death on an accusation of a conspiracy to expel the Dutch from the island, where the two nations resided and jointly shared in the pepper trade of Java, Feb. 17, 1623. Amboyna was seized by the English, Feb. 16, 1796, but was restored by the treaty of Amiens, in 1802. It was again seized by the British, Feb. 17, 1810 ; and was restored at the peace of 1814. AMEN". The word is as old as the Hebrew language itself. In that language it meana true, faithful, certain. Employed in devotions, at the end of a prayer, it implies, so be it ; at the termination of a creed, so it is. It has been generally used, both in the Jewish and Christian Churches, at the conclusion of prayer. AMENDE Honorable, originated in France in the ninth century. It was first an infamous punishment inflicted on traitors and sacrilegious persons : the offender was delivered into the hands of the hangman ; bis shirt was stripped off, a rope put about his neck, and a taper in his hand ; he was then led into court, and was obliged to beg pardon of God, the king, and the country. Death or banishment sometimes followed. Amende honorable is now a term used for making recantation in open court, or in the presence of the injured party. AMERCEMENT, in LAW. A fine assessed for an offence done, or pecuniary punishment at the mercy of the court : thus differing from a fine directed and fixed by a statute. By M;igua Charta a freeman cannot be amerced for a small fault, but in proportion to the offence he has committed, 9 Henry III., 1224. AMERICA : See United States. Discovered by Cristoforo Colombo, a Genoese, better known as Christopher Columbus, a.d. 1492, on the 11th of October, on which day he came in sight of St. Salvador. See Bahama Islands. The continent of America was discovered by Columbus in 1497, and the eastern coasts by Amerigo Vespucci (Ame- ricas Vespucius) in 1498 ; from this latter the whole of Amei'ica is named. Newfoundland, the first British colony in tliis quarter of the world, discovered by Cabot, and by liim called Prima VUta 1497 Virginia, tlie first English settlement on the main laud, by lord de la Warr . 1609 New England, the second, by the Ply- moutli company 1614 New York settled by the Dutch . . 1614 A large body of dissenters, who fled from church tyranny in England, built New Plymouth 1620 Nova Scotia settled, imder sir William Alexander, by the Scotch . . . 1622 Delaware, by the Swedes and Dutch . l(i"27 Massachusetts, by sir H. Roswell . . 16'27 •Maryland, by lord Baltimore . . . 1632 Connecticut granted to lord Warwick in 1630 ; but no English settlement was made licre till .... 1635 Rhode Island settled by Roger Williams and his brethren 163.5 New Jersey, grant to lord Berkeley . 1644 New York settled, first by the Dutch, but the English dispossessed them and the Swedes ...... 1664 Carolina, by the English . ■ «, • • 1669 Peiuisylvania settled by William renn, the celebrated quaker .... 16S2 Georgia settled by general Oglethorpe, in 1732 Kentucky, by c olonel Boon . . . 1754 Canada attempted to be settled by the French in 15.34 ; tliey built Quebec in 1608 ; but the whole country was con- quered by the English . . . 1759 Louisiana discovered by Ferdinand de Soto, in 1541 ; settled by tlie French in 1718 ; but eastward of the Mississippi was ceded to England in . . . 1763 Florida discovered by Sebastian Cabot in 1497 ; re-discovered by Ponce de Leon in 1512 ; it belonged alternately to France anil Spain ; coded by the lat- ter to the English in ... . 1763 The memorable American Stamp Act passed .... March 22, 1765 The obnoxious duty on tea, paper, paint- ed glass, &c. . . . June, 1767 The populace destroy the tea from ships newly arrived from England, at Boston, and become boldly discontented, Nov. 1773 The Boston Port Bill, by which that port was to be shut up until satisfaction should be made to the East India Company for the tea destroyed, passed .... March 25, 1774 The first general congress met at Phila- delphia .... Sept. 5, 1774 The revolution commenced ; first action between the Americans and king's troops (see Lexington) . . April 19, 1775 The colonies agi-ee on articles of confede- ration and perpetual union . May 20, 1775 General George Washington appointed commander-in-chief of the American armies .... June 16, 1775 Thirteen colonies declare themselves independent . . . . July 4, 1776 [For tiie several actions fought dm-ing the war, see them severally.] The independence of tlie colonies is acknowledged by France, and Franklin and others are received there as am- bassadors . . . March 21, 1778 American independence is recognised by Holland .... April 19, 1782 And by England, in provisional articles of peace, signed at Paris . Nov. 30, 1782 Definitive treaty signed at Paris, Sept. 3, 1783 And ratified by congress . Jan. 4, 1784 John Adams was received as ambassador from America by George III. June 2, 1785 And Mr. Hammond was first ambas- sador from Great Britain to the United Stiitcs in 1791 [For tlie later occurrences of the Union, see United States of Amirka.} AMERICA, SOUTH. The Spaniards, as being the first discoverers of this vast portion of the Western World, had the largest and richest share of it. When they lauded iu Peru, A.D. 1530, they found it governed by sovereigns called Incas, who were revei-ed AME 26 AMP by their subjects as divinities, but they were soon subdued by their invaders under the command of Francis Pizarro. The cruelties practised by the new adventurers, wherever they appeared, will be a reproach to Spain for ever.* Spanish America has successfully asserted its freedom within the present century : it first declared its independence in 1810 ; and the provinces assembled, and proclaimed the sovereignty of the people in July, 1814 ; since when, although the wars of rival and contending chiefs have been afflicting the country, it has released itself from the yoke of Spain for ever. Its independence was recognised by England, in sending consuls to the several new states, Oct. 30, 1823, et scq.; and by France, Sept. 30, 1830. See Brazil, Buenos Ayres, Colombia, Lima, Peru, &c. AMETHYSTS. When the amethyst was first discovered, or first prized, is not known ; it was the ninth in place upon the breastplate of the Jewish high priests ; and the name Issachar was engraved upon it. It is of a rich violet colour, and, according to Plutarch, takes its name from its hue, resembling wine mixed with water. One worth 200 rix-dollars having been rendered colourless, equalled a diamond in lustre, valued at 18,000 gold crowns. — Be Boot, Hist. Gemmarum. Amethysts were discovered at Kerry, in Ireland, in 1755. — Burns. AMIENS, PEACE op. Between Great Britain, Holland, France, and Spain. The preliminary articles of this memorable peace, fifteen in number, were signed iu London by lord Hawkesbury and M. Otto, on the part of England and France, Oct. 1, 1801 ; and the definitive treaty was subscribed at Amiens, on March 27, 1802, by the marquess Cornwallis for England, Joseph Bonaparte for France, Azara for Spain, and Schimmelpenninck for Holland. AMMONITES. Descended from Ammon, the son of Lot : they invaded the land of Canaan and made the Israelites tributaries, but they were defeated by Jcphthah, 1188, B.C. They again invaded Canaan in the reign of Saul, with an intention to put out the right eye of all those they subdued; but Saul overthrew them, 1093 B.C. They were afterwards many times vanquished : and Antiochus the Great took Eabboath their capital, and destroyed all the walls, 198 B.C. — Josephus. AMNESTY. Oblivion and pardon as applied to enemies and nations : first acted on in Greece by Thrasybulus, the Athenian general and patriot, who commenced the expulsion of the thirty tyrants with the assistance of only thirty of his friends : having succeeded, the only reward he would accept was a crown made with two branches of olive, 409, B.C. — Hume's Essays. AMPHICTYONIC COUNCIL. Established at Thermopyla? by Amphictyon, for the management of all aSairs relative to Greece. The celebrated council, which was composed of the wisest and most virtuous men of various cities of Greece, consisted of twelve delegates, 1498 B.C. Other cities in process of time sent also some of their citizens to the council of the Amphictyons, and in the age of Antoninus Pius, they were increased to the number of thirty. — Siiidas. AMPHION. British fi-igate, of 38 guns, blown up while riding at anchor in Plymouth Sound, and the whole of her crew then on board, consisting of more than two hundred and fifty persons, officers and men, perished, Sept. 22, 1796. — Butler. AMPHITHEATRES. They may be said to be the invention of Julius Cajsar and Curio. In the Roman amphitheatres, which were vast round and oval buildings, the people assembled to see the combats of gladiaWrs, of wild beasts, and other exhi- bitions ; they were generally built of wood, but Statilius Taurus made one of stone, under Augustus Csesar. The amphitheatre of Vespasian was built a.D. 79; and is said to have been a regular fortress in 1312. The amphitheatre of Verona was next in size, and then that of Nismes, AMPHITRITE, the SHIP. This vessel, conveying convicts to New South "Wales, and having on board 103 female convicts, with twelve children, and a crew of sixteen men, was driven on the Boulogne sands in a heavy gale. Those on board might probably have been saved before the return of the tide, but, apparently through the captain's doubt as to his authority to allow the convicts to escape to the shore, and the uncom- promising dignity of a lady passenger, all, except three of the crew were drowned, Aug. 30, 1833. * Las Casas, in describing the barbarity of the Spaniards wliile pursuing their conquests, records many instances of it that fill the mind with horror. In Jamaica, he says, they hanged the luiresisting natives by thirteen at a time, in honour of the thirteen apostles ! and' he has beheld them throw the Indian infants to their dogs for food ! " I have heard them," says Las Casas, "borrow the limb of a human being to feed their dogs, and have seen them the next day return a quarter of another victim to the lender ! " AMS 27 ANA AMSTERDAM. It was the castle of Amstel in a.d. 1100; and its building as a city, was commenced in 1203. The famous exchange was built in 1634; and the stadt- house, one of the noblest palaces in the world, in 1648 ; the latter cost three millions of guilders, a prodigious sum at that time. It is built upon 13,659 piles, and the magnificence of the structure is, for its size, both in external and internal grandeur, perhaps without a parallel in Europe. Amsterdam surrendered to the king of Pnissia, when that prince invaded Holland in favour of the stadtholder, in 1787. The Freuch were admitted without resistance, Jan. 18, 1795. The ancient government was restored in November, 1813. See Holland. AMULETS, OR CHARMS. All nations have been fond of amulets. The Egyptians had a great variety; so had the Jews, Chaldeans, and Persians. Among the Greeks, they were much used in exciting or conquering the passion of love. They were also in estimation among the Romans. Fliny. Ovid. Among the Christians of early ages, amulets were made of the wood of the true cross, about a.d. 328. They have been sanctioned by religion and astrology, and even in modern times by medical and other sciences — witness the anodyne necklace, &c. The pope and Roman Catholic clergy make and sell amulets and charms even to this day. — Ashe. ANABAPTISTS. The sect arose about a.d. 1525, and was known in England before 1549. John of Leyden, Muncer, Storck. and other German enthusiasts, about the time of the reformation spread its doctrines. The anabaptists of Munster (who are, of course, properly distinguished from the mild sect of this name existing in England) taught that infant baptism was a contrivance of the devil, that there is no original sin, that men have a free will in spiritual things, and other doctrines still more wild and absurd. Munster they called Mount Zion, and one Mathias, a baker, was declared to be the king of Zion. Their enthusiasm led them to the maddest practices, and they, at length, rose in arms under pretence of gospel liberty. Mimster was taken about fifteen months afterwards, and they were all put to death. — The Anabaptists of England differ from other Protestants in little more than the not baptizing children, as appears by a confession of faith, published by the representatives of above one hundred of their congregations, in 1689. — Pardon. ANACREONTIC VERSE. Commonly of the jovial or Bacchanalian strain, named after Anacreon, of Teos, the Greek lyric poet, about 510 B.C. The odes of Anacreon are much prized ; their author lived in a constant round of drunkenness and debauchery, and was choked by a grape-stone in his eighty-fifth year. — Stanley's Lives of the Poets. ANAGRAM. A transposition of the letters of a name or sentence ; as from Mary, the name of the Virgin, is made army. On the question put by Pilate to Our Saviour, " Quid est Veritas ? " we have this admirable anagram, " Est vir qui adest." The Freuch are said to have introduced the art as now practised, in the reign of Charles IX., about the year 1560. — Hcnault. ANATHEMAS. The word had four significations among the Jews : the anathema, or curse, was the devoting some person or thing to desti-uction. We have a remarkable instance of it in the city of Jericho (see Joshua vi. 17). Anathemas were used by the primitive churches, a.d. 387. Such ecclesiastical denunciations caused great terror in England up to the close of Elizabeth's reign. — Rapin. The church anathema or curse, with excommunication and other severities of the Romish religion, arc still practised in Roman Catholic countries to this day. — Ashe. ANATOMY. The structure of the human body was made part of the philosophical investigations of Plato and Xcnophon ; and it became a branch of medical art under Hippocrates, about 420 B.C. But Erasistratus and Herophilus may be regarded as being the fathers of anatomy : they wore the first to dissect the human form, as anatomical research had been previously confined to brutes: it is mentioned that they firactised upon the bodies of living criminals, about 300 and 293 B.C. In England, the schools were supplied with subjects unlawfully exhumed from graves ; and, until lately, the bodies of executed criminals were ordered for dissection. See next article. The first anatomical plates were designed by Vesalius, about a.d. 1538. The discoveries of Harvey were made in 1616. The anatomy of plants was disco- vered in 1680. — Freind's history of Phi/sic. ANATOMY LAWS. The first law regulating the science was enacted in 1540 ; and laws relating to it, and encouraging schools, have been framed, altered, and amended in almost every reign to the present time. A new statute was enacted, regulating schools of anatomy, 3 Will. IV., 1832. This act repealed .so much of the 9th of Geo. IV., as still empowered the judges to dii-ect the body of a murderer, after ANC 28 ANG execution, to be dissected ; " but the court may direct that such crimiaal be buried ■within the precincts of the yAil."— Statutes at large. ANCHORITES. Paul, Anthony, and Hilarion, were the first anchorites. Many of the early anchorites lived in caves and deserts, and practised great austerities. Some were analogous to the fokeers, who impose voluntary punishments upon themselves as atonement for their sins, and as being acceptable to God ; and their modes of torture were often extravagant and criminal. The order first arose in the fourth century. ANCHORS FOR SHIPS. Anchors are of ancient use, and the invention belongs to the Tuscans. — Pliny. The second tooth, or fluke, was added by Anacharsis, the Scythian. — Straho. Anchors were first forged in England a.D. 578. The anchors of a first-rate ship of war (of which such a ship has four) will weigh 90 cwt. each, and each of them will cost 450Z. — Phillips. ANCIENT HISTORY and ANCIENT MUSIC. Ancient history commenced in the obscurity of tradition, about 1800 B.C., and is considered as ending with the destruc- tion of the Roman empire in Italy, a.d. 476. Modern history began with Mahomet or Charlemagne, and has lasted about 1200 or 1000 years, commencing in almost as great obscurity as ancient history, owing to the ignorance of those times, a.d. 600 and 800. Ancient Music refers to such musical compositions as appeared from the time of Palestrini to that of Bach ; that is, from the year 1529 to 1684. See History. Music. ANDRfi, MAJOR, his EXECUTION. This gallant and lamented soldier was an adjutant-general in the British army, and was taken on his return from a secret expedition to the American general Arnold, in disguise, Sept. 23, 1780. He was sentenced to execution by a court of general Washington's officers at Tappan, New York, and suffered death, Oct. 2, following. His remains were removed to England in a sarcophagus, Aug. 10, 1821, and are now interred in Westminster abbey. ANDREW, ST. Martyred by crucifixion, Nov. 30, a.d. 69, at Patrse, in Achaia. The festival was instituted about 359. Andrew is the titular saint of Scotland, owing to Hungus, the Pictish prince, having dreamed that the saint was to be his friend in a pending battle with the Northumbrians ; and accordingly a St. Andrew's cross ( x ) appeared in the air during the fight, and Hungus conquered. The collar of an order of knighthood, founded on this legend, is formed of thistles (not to be touched), and of rue (an antidote against poison) ; the motto is Nemo me impune lacessit. It was instituted by Achaius in the year 809, and was revived by king James V. in 1540. See Thistle. ANEMOMETER. To measure the strength and velocity of the wind, was invented by Wolfius, in 1709. The extreme velocity was found by Dr. Lind to be 93 miles per hour. See Winds. ANEROID, see Baroraeler. ANGELIC KNIGHTS op ST. GEORGE. Instituted in Greece, a.d. 456. The Angelici were instituted by Angelus Comnenus, emperor of Constantinople, 1191. The Angelica, an order of nuns, was founded at Milan by Louisa Torelli, a.d. 1534. There existed several communities in Italy under these or somewhat similar names. — Ashe. ANGELS. Authors are divided as to the time of the creation of angels. Some will have it to have been at the same time with our world ; others, before all ages, that is, from all eternity. This latter is Origen's opinion. — Cave's Hist. Literal. The Jews had ten orders of angels ; and the popes have recognised nine choirs and three hierarchies. ANGELS, in COMMERCE. An angel was an ancient gold coin, weighing four penny- weights, and was valued at 6s. M. in the reign of Henry VI., and at 10s. in the reign of Elizabeth, 1562. The angelot was an ancient gold coin, value half an angel, struck at Paris when that capital was in the hands of the English, in the reiffn of Henrv VI 1431.— TFoocZ. ^ '' ANGERSTEIN GALLERY. The foundation of the National Gallery in London, was a small collection of about forty pictures, the most exquisite of the art, purchased by the British government for the public service for 60,000?., of the executors of Mr. John Julius Angerstein, in Jan. 1822. The exhibition of these pictures was opened to the public, in Pall Alall, in May, 1824. See National Gallery. ANGLESEY, or ISLAND of the ANGLES {ey, in Saxon, signifying island). This celebrated seat of the Druids, was subdued by the Romans (who called it Mona), ANG 29 ANI A.D. 78 ; and by the English in 1282. The fortress of Beaumaris was built by Edward I. to overawe the Welsh, 1295. The spot in Anglesey where Suetonius Paulinus and his barbarous legions butchered the unoffending Druids, in a.d. 59, is still shown at a feny called Porthammel, across the Menai Straits. — Phillips. ANGLING. The origin of the art (the rod and line), is involved in obscurity ; allusion is made to it by the Greeks and Romans, and in the most ancient books of the Bible, as Amos. It came into general repute in England about the period of tlie Reforma- tion. Wynkin de Worde's Treati/se of Fysshinge, the first book printed on angling, appeared in 1496. Izaak Walton's book was printed in 1653. ANGLO-SAXONS, or ANGLES. The name of England is derived from a village near Sleswick, called Anglen, whose population (called Angli by Tacitus), joined the first Saxon freebooters. Egbert called his kingdom, Anglesland. East Anglia was a kingdom of the heptarchy, founded by the Angles, one of whose chiefs, UfFa, assumed the title of king, a.d. 575 ; the kingdom ceased in 792. See Britain. ANGRIA. This famous pirate's fort, on the coast of Malabar, was invested by admiral Watson, and destroyed. The pirate, his wife, and family, were made prisoners; and great quantities of stores which were found in the fort, and several ships in the harboui", which he had taken from the East India Company, were seized, 1756. ANHALT, HOUSE of, in Germany. A very ancient and distinguished royal house the best genealogists deduce its origin from Berenthobaldus, who made war upon the Thuringians in the sixth century. In 1586, the principality was divided among the five sons of Joachim Ernest, and hence the five branches of this family, of which Anhalt-Dessau and Anhalt-Bernbourg are the principal. — Beatson. ANHOLT, ISLAND of. Owing to the injury done by the Danish cruizers to British commerce, this island was taken possession of by England, in the last war. The Danes made an attempt to regain it with a force which exceeded 4000 men, but were gallantly repulsed. The British force opposed to them did not amount to more than 150, yet triumphed in a close and desperate engagement, March 14, 1811. ANIMALCULJE. Leeuwenhoek's researches in 1677 produced the most astonishing revelations of nature. In the milt of the cod-fish are contained, he says, more living animalcules than there are people on the whole earth. A mite was anciently thought the limit of littleness; but there are animals 27,000,000 of times smaller than a mite. A thousand millions of animalcule, discovered in common water, are not altogether larger than a grain of sand. Yet their multitude sometimes gives the water, in the summer months, a pale red, or a yellow tinge. Leeuwenhoek's A^xana Naturce was published at Leyden in 1696. ANIMAL LIFE. The body of man was designed for ninety years, but the average duration of human life falls infinitely short of that patriarclial ago. " The days of our years are tliree-score years and ten ; and if by reason of strength they be four- score years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow ; for it is soon cut oS", and we fly away." — Psalm xc. ver. 10. Without referring to ante- or post-diluvians, or to the authority of the Scriptures, many extraordinary instances of length of human life will be found under the article Longevity. The following is the duration of life in some of the lower animals, taken from a table jjublished by sir Richard Phillips : — YEARS. YEARS. YEARS. YEARS. The Horse 8 to 32 Mule . 18 Swine . 25 Goose . . 28 Ox . . . 20 Sheep . . . 10 Goat . . . 8 Parrots 30 to 100 Cow . 23 Ram . 15 Cat . . 10 Ravens . . 100 Asa . . . 33 Dog . . 14 to 25 Pigeou . . 8 Turtles 50 to 200 Ashe mentions many other animals whose ages, however, are too well known to be noticed here; he also mentions several, the duration of which he himself deems extreme and uncertain. ANIMAL MAGNETISM. This deception was introduced by fiither Hehl, at Vienna, about 1774 : and had wonderful success in France, about 1788. It had its dupes in England also, in 1789 ; but it exploded a few years afterwards. It was a pretended mode of curing all manner of diseases by means of sympathetic affection between the sick person and the operator. The effect on the patient was supposed to depend on certain motions of the fingers and features of the operator, he placing himself imme- diately before the patient, whose eyes were to be fixed on his. After playing in this maimer on the imagination and enfeebled mind of the sick, and performing a number of distortions and gi-imaces, the cure was said to be completed. See Galvanism, Mesmerism, &c. ANI 30 ANT ANIMALS, CRUELTY to. The late Mr. Martin, M.P., zealously laboured as a senator to repress this odious offence ; and a society in London, which was established in 1824, effects much good in this way. See Cruelty to Animals' Society. Mr. Martin's act passed 3 Geo. IV. (1822.) See 7 & 8 Geo. IV. (1827) ; 5 & 6 Will. IV. c. 59, (1835); for Ireland, 1 Vict. c. 66, (1837.) Dogs were forbidden to be used for draught by 2 & 3 Vict. c. 47, (1839) ; see also, 12 & 13 Vict. c. 92, (1849), and 17 & 18 Vict. c. 60, (1854). AN JOLT, OR BEAUGfi, BATTLE of. Fought between the English and French armies; the latter commanded by the dauphin of Fi'ance, who defeated the English, on whose side tile duke of Clarence and 1500 men perished on the field : the duke was slain by sir Allan Swinton, a Scotch knight, who commanded a company of men at arms ; and the earls of Somerset, Dorset, and Huntingdon, were taken prisoners. Beaug(5 was the first battle that turned the tide of success against the English, April 3, 1421. The university of Anjou, so celebrated for learning, was founded in 1349. ANNATES, OR FIRST FRUITS. They were first exacted by Antonius, bishop of Ephesus ; but the exaction was condemned by the council of Ephesus, a.d. 400. Clement V. was the first pope who imposed annates on England, 1306. See First Fruits. ANNIHILATION. The doctrine of annihilation was unknown to the Hebrews, Greeks, and Latins. The ancient philosophers denied annihilation ; the first notions of which are said to have arisen from the Christian theology. — Dr. Burnet. ANNO DOMINI. The year of our Lord is used by the Chiistian world, and abbre- viated, A.D. It is the computation of time from the incarnation of Our Saviour, and is called the vulgar era ; first adopted in the year 525. See Era. Charles III of Germany was the first who added " in the year of our Lord " to his reign, in 879. ANNUITIES, or PENSIONS. They were first granted in 1512, when 20Z. were given to a lady of the court for services done ; and 6^. 13s. Ad. for the maintenance of a gentle- man, 1536. The sum of 13^. 6.s. ^d. was deemed competent to support a gentle- man in the study of the law, 1554. An act was passed empowering the government to borrow one million sterling upon an annuity of fourteen per cent., 4 & 6 William and Mary, 1691-3. This mode of borrowing soon afterwards became general among civilised governments. An annuity of 1^. 2s. llcZ. ]'jer annum, accumulating at IQ per cent, compound interest, amounts in 100 years to 20,000^. ANNUNCIATION op the VIRGIN MARY. This festival commemorates the Virgin's miraculous conception, denoting the tidings brought her by the angel Gabriel ; its origin is referred variously by ecclesiastical writers to the fourth and seventh century. The day, the 25th of March, is also called Lady-day, {which see). In England, before the alteration of the style, Sept. 3, 1752, our year began on the 25th of March, a reckoning which we still preserve in certain ecclesiastical computations. The religious order of the Annunciation was instituted in 1232; and the military order, in Savoy, by Amadeus, count of Savoy, in memory of Amadeus I,, who had bravely defended Rhodes against the Turks, 1355. ANOINTING. The ceremony observed at the inauguration of kings, bishops, and other eminent personages, and a veiy ancient custom. It was first used at coronations in England on Alfred the Great, in 872; and in Scotland, on Edgar, in 1098. The religious rite is referred to a very early date in the Christian chui'ch ; by some authors, to 550, when it was practised with consecrated oil, as extreme unction (one of the sacraments of the Roman Catholic Church) on dying persons, and persons in extreme danger of death, and is done so to the present day. ANONYMOUS LETTERS. The sending of letters denouncing persons, or demanding money, or using threats, made felony by the Black Act, 9 Geo. I., 1722. — Statutes at large. Several persons have been executed in England for sending anonymous letters, imputing crimes and making exposures ; and the present laws against these practices are still very severe, but not more so than just. ANTARCTIC. The south pole is so called, because itis opposite to the north or arctic pole. A continent of 1700 miles of coast from east to west, and 64 to 66 degrees south, was discovered in the Antarctic Ocean by French and American navigators on the same day, Jan. 9, 1840 ; a coincidence the more singular, as the discoverers were at a distance from each other of 720 miles. Mr. Biscoe, a merchant captain, fell in with land, which he coasted for 300 miles in lat. 67, long. 50, in the year 1830. See South Pole. ANTEDILUVIANS. According to the tables of Mr. Whiston, the number of people in the ancient world, or world as it existed previous to the Flood, I'eached to the enormous amount of 549,755 millions, in the year of the world 1482. Burnet has ANT 31 ANT supposed that the first human pair might have left, at the end of the first centuiy, ten married couples ; and from these, allowing them to multiply in the same decuple proportion as the first pair did, would rise, in 1500 years, a greater number of persons than the earth was capable of holding. Ho therefore suggests a quadruple multipli- cation only ; and then exhibits the following table of increase during the first sixteen centuries that preceded the Flood : — I. ir. ni. IV. 10 V. . 40 vr. ir,o VII. G-iO VIII. 2,560 10,240 40,9(;0 163,840 IX. . . 655,360 X. . . . 2,621,440 XI. . . 10,4S5,760 XII. . . 41,943,040 XIII. . 167,142,160 XIV. . 671,088,640 XV. . 2.684,354,460 XVI. . 10,737,418,240 This calculation, although the most moderate made, exceeds, it will be seen, by at least ten times, tlie present number of mankind, which, at the highest estimate, amounts to only a tliousaud millions. ANTHEMS, OR HYMNS. Hilary, bishop of Poitiers, and St. Ambrose were the first who composed them, about the middle of the fourth century. ^Ze?iiy/e<. They were introduced into the Church service in 386. — Balcer. Ignatius is said to have intro- duced them into the Greek, and St. Ambrose into the Western Church. They were introduced into the Reformed Churches in queen Elizabeth's reign, about 1565. ANTHESPHORIAN FESTIVALS. Celebrated by the ancient Greeks in honour of Proserpine. They adorned the temples of this goddess with all kinds of flowers, because when Proserpine was carried off by Pluto, she was employed in gathering flowers in the plains of Enua. The ancients believed that Proserpine presided over the death of mankind. ANTHROPOPHAGI. Eaters of human flesh have existed in all ages of the world. The Cyclops and Lestrygones are represented as man-eaters, by Homer ; and the Esse- donian Scythians were so, according to Herodotus. Diogenes asserted that we might as well cat the flesh of men, as that of other animals ; and the practice still exists in Africa, the South Sea Islands, &c. In order to make trial whether there was any repugnance in nature to the feeding of an animal on its own species, Leonardus Floroventius fed a hog with hog's flesh, and a dog with that of a dog, when he found the bristles of the hog to fall oS", and the dog to become full of ulcers. The annals of Milan furnish an extraordinary instance of anthropophagy : a Milanese woman, named Elizabeth, from a depraved appetite, had an invincible inclination to human flesh ; she enticed children to her liouse, and killed and salted them ; and on a discovery being made, she was broken on the wheel and bin-nt, in 1519. Various more recent instances of this kind have occurred. See Cannibalism. ANTICHRIST. Tne name given by way of eminence by St. John (1 Ep. ii. 18) to him whom St. Paul calls the Man of Sin (2 Thess. ii. 3), who, at the latter end of the world, is to appear very remarkably in opposition to Chri-stianity. His reign, it is supposed, will continue three years and a half, during whicli time there will be a persecution. This is the opinion of the Roman Catholics ; but the Protestants, as they differ from them, so they differ among themselves. Grotius and Dr. Hammond suppose the time past, and the characters to be finished in the persons of Caligula, Simon Magus, and the Gnostics. An opinion once prevailed, that the pope was the true anticlirist, and, at the council held at Gap, in 1603, they inserted in their confes- sion of faith an article whereby tlie pope was declared to be antichrist. — Brown. Pardon. ANTIMONY. Tliis mineral was very early known, and applied by the ancients to various purposes. It was used as paint to blacken both men's and women's eyes, as appears from 2 Kings ix. 30, and Jtremiah iv. 30, and in eastern countries is thus used to this day. When mixed witli lead, it makes types for printing ; and in physic its uses are so various that, according to its preparation, alone, or in company with one or two associates, it is sufficient to answer all a pliysician desires in an apothecary's shop. — Boyle. We are indebted to Basil Valentine for the earliest account of various processes, about 1410. — Priestley. ANTINOMIAN. The name first applied by Luther to John Agricola, in 1538. The Antinomians trust in the gospel, and not in their deeds: and hold that crimes are not crimes when committed by them ; that tlieir own good works are of no effect ; that no man should be troubled in conscience for sin ; that God does not love any man for his holiness ; and other doctrines equally absurd. ANTIOCH. Built by Seleucus, after the battle of Ipsus, 301 B.C. In one day, 100,000 of its people were slain by the Jews, 145 B.C. In this city, once the cai)ital of Syria, the disciples of the Redeemer were first called Christians. The Era of Antioch is ANT 32 APO much used by the early Christian writers attached to the churches of Antioch and Alexandria : it placed the creation 5492 years B.C. ANTIPODES. Plato is said to be the first who thought it possible that antipodes existed, about 368 B.C. Boniface, archbishop of Mentz, legate of pope Zachary, is said to have denounced a bishop as a heretic for maintaining this doctrine, a.d. 741. The antipodes of England lie to the south-east of New Zealand ; and near the spot is a small island, called Antipodes Island. — Brookes. ANTIQUARIES, and ANTIQUE. The term antique is applied to the productions of the arts from the age of Alexander to the time of the irruption of the Goths into Italy, in a.d. 400. A college of antiquaries is said to have existed in Ireland 700 years B.C.; but this has very little pretensions to credit. A society was founded by archbishop Parker, Camden, Stow, and others, in 1572. — Spelman. Application was made in 1589 to Elizabeth for a charter, but her death ensued, and her successor, James I., was far from favouring the design. In 1717 the Society of Antiquaries was revived, and in 1751 it received its charter of incorporation from George II. It began to publish its discoveries, &c., under the title of Archwologia, in 1770. The British Archceological Association was founded in December 1843, and in 1845 the Archceological Institute of Great Britain, was formed by a seceding part of the Asso- ciation : valuable journals are published by both societies. — The Society of Antiquaries of Edinburgh was founded in 1780. Within the last ten years many county Archaeo- logical societies have been formed in the United Kingdom. ANTI-TRINITARIANS. Theodotus of Byzantium is supposed to have been the first who advocated the simple humanity of Jesus, at the close of the second century. This doctrine spread widely after the Reformation, when it was adopted by Laelius and Faustus Socinus. — Bayle. See Arians, Socinians, and Unitarians. ANTOIGN, BATTLE of. Between the central army of the French and the allies, in which 4500 Austrians and Prussians were killed, 3500 taken prisoners, and 600 emigrants shut up in Longwy ; 900 French were killed in the action ; thirty pieces of battering-cannon and howitzers, with all the baggage of the combined army, were captured, August 13, 1792. ANTWERP. First mentioned in history, in a.d. 517. Its fine exchange built in 1531. Taken after a long and memoi'able siege by the prince of Parma, in 1585. It was then the chief mart of Flemish commerce, but the civil war caused by the tyranny of Philip II. drove the trade to Amsterdam. The remarkable crucifix of bronze, thirty- three feet high, in the principal street, was formed from the demolished statue of the cruel duke of Alva, which he had himself set up in the citadel. Antwerp was the seat of the civil war between the Belgians and the house of Orange, 1830-31. In the late revolution, the Belgian troops having entered Antwerp, were opposed by the Dutch garrison, which, after a dreadful confiict, being driven into the citadel, cannonaded the town with red-hot balls and shells, doing immense mischief, Oct. 27, 1830. General Chass^ surrendered the citadel to the French, after a destructive bombardment, Nov. 24, 1832. See Belgium. APOCALYPSE. The Revelation of St. John, written in the isle of Patmos, about a.d. 95. — Irenceus. Some ascribe the authorship to Cerinthus, the heretic, and others to John, the presbyter, of Ephesus. In the first centuries many churches disowned it, and in the fourth century it was excluded from the sacred canon by the council of Laodicea, but was again received by other councils, and confirmed by that of Trent, held in 1545, et seq. Although the book has been rejected by Luther, Michaelis, and others, and its authority questioned in all ages from the time of Justin Martyr (who wrote his first Apology for the Christians in a.d. 139), yet its canonical authority is still almost universally acknowledged. APOCRYPHA. In the preface to the Apocrypha it is said, " These books are neyther found in the Hebrue nor in the Chalde." — Bible, 1539. Thehistoi-y of the Apocrypha ends 135 b.c. The books were not in the Jewish canon, but were received as canon- ical by the Roman Catholic Church, at the council of Trent, in 1545. APOLLINARIANS. The followers of Apollinarius, bishop of Laodicea, who taught that the divinity of Christ was instead of a soul to him; that his flesh was pre existent to his appearance upon earth, and that it was sent down from heaven, and conveyed through the Virgin, as through a channel ; that there were two sons, one born of God, the other of the Virgin, &c. Apollinarius was deposed for his opinions in a.d. 378. APO 33 APP APOLLO FRIGATE. One of the finest of the British navy, with about forty sail of the outward-bound West India fleet, of which she was the convoy, lost in a heavy gale on the coast of Portugal, thi'ee leagues noi'th of Cape Mondego, and with her perished sixty-one of her crew, including captain Dixon, the commander, besides an immense amount of life and property in the merchant vessels, April 2, 1804. APOLLO, TEMPLES op. Apollo, the god of all the fine arts, of medicine, music, poetry, and eloquence, had temples and statues erected to him in almost every country, particularly Egypt, Greece, and Italy. His most splendid temple was at Delphi, built 1263 B.C. See Delphi. His temple at Daphne, built 434 B.C., during a period in which pestilence raged, was burnt in a.d. 362, and the Christians accused of the crime. — Lenglet. APOLLYON. The same in Greek ^LsAhaddon in Hebrew, both signifying "the destroyer." St. John, Rev. ix. 11, says, "And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Ahaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollton." a.d. 95. APOSTLES' CREED. The summary of belief of the Christian faith, called the Apostles ' Creed, is generally believed to have been composed a great while after their time. — Pardon. The repeating of this creed in public worship was ordained in the Greek Church at Antioch, and was instituted in the Roman Church in the eleventh century, whence it passed to the Church of England at the period of the Reformation, in 1534. APOSTOLICI. The first sect of Apostolici arose in the third century ; the second sect was founded by Sagarelli, who was bm-ned alive at Parma, a.d. 300. They wandered about, clothed in wliite, with long beards, dishevelled hair, and bare heads, accom- panied by women whom they called their spiritual sisters, preaching against the growing corruption of the Church of Rome, and predicting its downfall. APOTHECARY, the KING'S. The first mention of one attending the king's person in England, was on Edward III., 1344 ; when he settled a pension of three pence _pcr diem for life on Cour.sus de Gangeland, for taking care of him during his illness in Scotland.— i?i/?«e?^s Fcedera. Apothecaries were exempted from serving on juries or other civil offices, 10 Anne, 1712. The Apothecaries' Compaiij' was incorporated in London, 1617. The Botanical Garden at Chelsea was left by Sir Hans Sloane to the Company of Apothecaries, Jan., 1753, on condition of their introducing every year fifty new plants, until their number should amount to 2000. The Dublin guild was incorporated, 1745. APOTHEOSIS. A ceremony of the ancient nations of the world, by which they raised tlieir kings and heroes to the rank of deities. The nations of the East were the first who paid divine honours to their great men, and the Romans followed their example, and not only deified the most prudent and humane of their emperors, but also the most cruel and profligate. — Herodian. This honour of deifying the deceased emperor was begun at Rome by Augustus, in favour of Juhus Casar, B.C. 13. — Tdlemont. APPEAL OF MURDER. By the late law of England, a man in an appeal of murder might fight with the appellant, thereby to make proof of his guilt or innocence. In 1817, a young maid, Mary Asliford, was believed to have been violated and murdered by Abraham Thornton, who, in an appeal, claimed his right by his wager of battle, which the coiu-t allowed ; but the appellant (the brother of the maid) refused the challenge, and the accused escaped, April IC, 1818. This law was immediately afterwards struck from oiftlie statute-book, by 59 Geo. III., 1819. See Balld. APPEALS. In the time of Alfred, appeals lay from courts of justice to the king in council ; but being soon ovcnvhelmed with appeals from all parts of England, he framed the body of laws which long served as the basis of English jurisprudence. Hume. For ages previously to 1533, apjieals to the pope were frequent upon ecclesi- astical, judicial, and even j)rivate matters, but Uiey were thereafter forbidden. Appeals from English tribunals to the pope were first introduced, 19 Stephen, 1154, but abolished by act 24 Henry VIII. — Viners Statutes. Appeals in cases of murder treason, felony, &c., were abolished, June, 1819. See preceding article. Courts of appeal at the Exchequer Chamber, in error from the judgments of the Kino-'.s Bench, Common Pleas, and Excheijucr, were regulated by statutes 11 Geo. IV. and 1 Will. IV. 1830 and 1831. See Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. APPRAISERS. The rating and valuation of goods for another was an early business in D APP 34 ARE Eugland; and so early as 11 Edward I., 1282, it was a law, that if they valued the goods of parties too high, the appraiser should take them at the price ajjpraised. APPRENTICES. Those of London obliged to wear blue cloaks in summer, and blue gowns in winter, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, 1558. Ten pounds was then a great apprentice fee. From twenty to one hundi-ed pounds were given in the reigu of James I. — Stowes Survey. The apprentice tax enacted, 43 Geo. III., 1802. APPROPRIATIONS, in the CHURCH. Were introduced in the time of William I. ; the parochial clergy being then commonly Saxons, and the bishops and temporal clergy Normans. These made no scruple to impoverish the inferior clergy to enrich monasteries, which were generally possessed by the Conqueror's friends. Where the churches and tithes were so approi^riated, the vicar had only such a competency as the bishop or superior thought fit to allow. This humour prevailed so far, that pope Alexander IV. complained of it, as the bane of religion, the destmction of the Church, and as a poison that had infected the whole nation. — Pardon. APRICOTS. Prunus armeniaca. They were first planted in England in a.d. 1540, They originally came from Epirus : the gardener of Henry VIII. introduced them into this country, and some say they excel here their pristine flavour and other qualities. APRIL. The fourth month of the year according to the vulgar computation, but the second according to the ancient Romans : Numa Pompilius introduced Januarius and Februarius, 713 B.C. — Peacham. APRIL-FOOL. The origin of the jokes played under this name is conjectured to rest with the French, who term the object of their mockeiy w» poisson d'Avril, a name they also give to mackerel, a silly fish easily caught in great quantity at this season. The French antiquaries have vainly endeavoured to trace this custom to its source. It is said that we have borrowed the practice from our neighbours, changing the appellation from fish to fool ; but, in England, it is of no very great antiquity, as none of our old plays, nor any writer so old as the time of queen Elizabeth, have any allusion to it. In Scotland it is termed hunting the gowlc (cuckoo). — Butler. AQUARII. A sect in the primitive church, said to have been founded by Tatian in the second century, who forebore the use of wine even in the sacrament, and used nothing but water. During persecution, when the Christians met secretly and in the night, for fear of discovery they sometimes used water instead of wine, when they received the sacrament, for which certain of them were censured by Cyprian. AQUEDUCTS. Appius Claudius advised and constructed the first aqueduct, which was therefore called the Appian-way, about 453 B.C. Aqueducts of every kind were among the wonders of Rome. — Livy. There are now some i-emarkable aqueducts in Europe : that at Lisbon is of great extent and beauty; that at Segovia has 129 arches; and that at Versailles is three miles long, and of immense height, with 242 arches in three stoi-ies. The stupendous aqueduct on the EUesmere canal, in England, is 1007 feet in length, and 126 feet high; it was opened Dec. 26, 1805. AQUILEIA, BATTLES of. Constantine II., slain in a battle with Constans, fought at Aquileia towards the close of March, a.d. 340. Maximus defeated and slain by Theodosius near Aquileia, July 28, a.d. 388. Theodosius defeated Eugenius and Arbogastes, the Gaul, near Aquileia, and remained sole emperor, Sept. 6, a.d. 394. Eugenius was put to death, and Arbogastes died by his own hand, mortified by his overthrow. — Aspin. Rom. Hist. AQUITAINE. Formerly belonged (together with Normandy) to the kings of England, as descendants of William the Conqueror. It was erected into .a principality in 1362, and was annexed to France in 1370. The title of duke of Aquitaine was taken by the crown of England on the conquest of this duchy by Henry V. in 1418; but was lost in the reign of Henry VI. ARABIA. This country is said never to have been conquered. The Arabians made no figure in history till a.d. 622, when, under the new name of Saracens, they followed Mahomet (a native of Arabia) as their general and j^rophet, and made considerable conquests. — Pnestley. ARABICI. A sect which sprung up in Arabia, whose distinguishing tenet was, that the soul died with the body, and also rose again with it, A.D. 207. There have been some revivals of this sect, but they were confined to the middle ages, and have not been known in civilised Europe. — Bossuet. ARBELA, BATTLE of. The third and decisive battle between Alexander the Great and ARB 35 ARC Darius Codomanus, which decided the fate of Persia, 331 B.C. The army of Darius consisted of 1,000,000 of foot and 40,000 horse; the Macedonian army amounted to only 40,000 foot and 7000 horse. — Arnan. The gold and silver found in the cities of Susa, Persepolis, and Babylon, which fell to Alexander from this victory, amounted to thirty millions sterling ; and the jewels and other precious spoil, belonging to Darius, sufficed to load 20,000 mules and 5000 camels. — Plutarch. ARBITRATION. Submissions to arbitration may be a rule of any of the courts of record, and are equivalent in force to the decision of a jury, 9 & 13 AVill. III. Submissions to arbitration may be made rules of any coxu-t of law or equity, and arbitrators may compel the attendance of witnesses, 3 and 4 Will. IV. cap. 42, 1833. If an action at law be referred, the award must be in accordance with the law ; but in a suit or proceeding in equity, the award must be according to the equity and justice of the case. See Ouzel Galley. ARBUTUS. The Arbutus Andrachne, oriental strawberry-tree, was brought to England from the Levant, about 1724. Although this tree was not much known in London until 1770, yet the arbutus is found in great plenty and perfection in the islands which beautify the lakes of Killaruey in Ireland, where it was probably introduced by the monks who inhabited that part of the country at a very early period. ARCADES, OR WALKS ARCHED OVER. Some fine public marts of this kind have recently beeu built in these countries. The principal, in London, are tiie Bui'lington arcade, opened in March, 1819 ; and the Lowther arcade, Strand, opened at the period of the Strand improvements. See Strand. The Royal arcade, Dublin, opened June, 1820, was burnt to the ground, April 25, 1837. Exeter change, London, an old and very celebrated mart of this kind, was rebuilt by the marquess of Exeter, and opened in 1845. See Exeter Change. ARCADIA. The people of this country were very ancient, and reckoned themselves of longer standing than the moon ; they were more rude in their manners than any of the Greeks, from whom they were shut up in a valley surrounded with mountains. Pelasgus taught them to feed on acorns, as being more nutritious than herbs, their former food; and for this discovery they honoured him as a god, 1521 B.C. Pelasgus begins his reign . . B.C. 1521 Lycaon institutes the Lupercalia, in honour of Jupiter .... 1514 Reign of Nyctimus * * Of Areas, from whom the kingdom re- ceives the name of Arcadia . . . * * lie teaches his subjects agriculture and the art of spinning wool ; and after his death is made a constellation with his mother. — Pausanias . . . . * * Tlie Lyc;ean games instituted, in honour of Pan .... . . 1320 Keign of Aleus, celebrated for his skill in building temples. — Pausanias. . . * * Agapenor, grandson of Lycurgus, ap- pears at tne head of the Arcadians at the siege of Troy . . . . b.c. 1194 Reign of Epitus 1174 Orestes, king of Mycense, arrives at Troe- zene, to be purified of the murder of his mother and her paraniovu- . . 1160 The Lacedemonians invade Arcadia, and are beaten by the women of tlic couu- tiy, in the absence of their husbands . 1102 Aristocrates I. is put to death for otfer- iug violence to the priestess of Diana . 715 Aristocrates II. stoned to death, and Arcadia made a republic . . . 681 Arcadia had twenty-five kings, whose histoiy is altogether fabulous. The Ai'cadians were fond of military glory, although shepherds ; and frequently hired themselves to fight the battles of other states. — Eustathius. A colony of Arcadians was comlucted by (Enotrus into Italy, 1710 b.c, and the country in which it settled was afterwards called Magna Oreecta. A colony under Evander emigi-ated in 1244 B.C.- — Idem. ARCHANGEL. The passage to Archangel was discovered by the English in 1 553, and it was the only seaport of Russia till the formation of the docks at Cronstadt, and foundation of St. Petersburg, in 1703. The dreadful fire here, by which the cathedral and upwards of 3000 houses were destroyed, occurred in June, 1793. ARCHBISHOP. This dignity was known in the East about a.d. 320. Athauasius con- ferred it on his successor. In these realms the dignity is nearly coeval with the establishment of Christianity. Before the Saxons came into England there were three sees, London, York, and Caerleon-upon-Usk ; but soon after the arrival of St. Austin, he settled the metropolitan see at Canterbury, a.d. 596. York continued archi- episcopal ; but London and Caerleon lost the dignity. Caerlcon was found, previously, to be too near the dominions of the Saxons; and in the time of king Artluir, the archbishopric was transferred to St. David's, of which St. Sampson was the 2Gth and last Welsh archbishop. See St. David's. The bishoprics in Scotland were under the jurisdiction of the ArchbLshof) of York until the erection of the archiepiscopal sees of St. Andrew's and Glasgow, in 1470 and 1491 ; these last were discontinued at the Revolution. See Glasgow and St. A luireiv's, D 2 ARC 36 ARC ARCHBISHOPS op IRELAND. The rank of archbishop was of early institution in Ireland. See Ferns. Four archbishoprics were constituted in a.d. 1151, namely, Armagh, Cashel, Dublin, and Tuam ; until then the archbishop of Canterbury had jurisdiction over the Irish as well as English bishops, in like manner as the archbishop of York had jurisdiction over those of Scotland. See preceding article. Of the four archbishoprics of Ireland two were reduced to bishoprics, namely, Cashel and Tuam, conformably with the statute 3 and 4 Will. IV. 1833, by which also the number of sees in Ireland was to be reduced (as the incumbents of ten of them respectively died) from twenty-two to twelve, the present number. See Bishops, Cashel, Tuam,; Pallium, &c. ARCH-CHAMBERLAIN. An officer of the German empire, and the same with our great chamberlain of England. The elector of Bi-audenburg was appointed the hereditary arch-chamberlain of the epipire by the golden bull of Charles IV. in 1356, and in that quality he bore the sceptre before the emperor. ARCH-CHANCELLORS. They were appointed under the two first races of the kings of France ; and when their territories were divided, the archbishops of Mentz, Cologne, and Treves, became arch-chancellors of Germany, Italy, and Aries. ARCHDEACONS. There are sixty church officers of this rank in England, and thirty-four in Ireland. The name was given to the first or eldest deacon, who attended on the bishop, without any power : but since the council of Nice, his function is become a dignity, and set above that of priest, though anciently it was quite otherwise. The appointment in these countries is referred to a.d. 1075. The archdeacon's court is the lowest in ecclesiastical polity : an appeal lies from it to the consistorial court, stat. 24 Henry VIII. 1532. ARCHERY. It originated, according to the fanciful opinion of the poet Claudian, from the porcupine being observed to cast its quills whenever it was offended. Plato ascribes the invention to Apollo, by whom it was communicated to the Cretans. The eastern nations were expert in archery in the earliest ages, and the precision of the ancient archer is scarcely exceeded by our skill in modern arms. Aster of Amphipolis, upon being slighted by Philip, king of Macedonia, aimed an arrow at him. The arrow, on which was written "Aimed at Philip's right eye," struck it and put it out; and Philip threw back the arrow with these words : " If Philip take the town, Aster shall be hanged." The conqueror kept his word. ARCHERY IN ENGLAND. It was introduced previously to a.d. 440, and Harold and his two brothers were killed by arrows shot from the cross-bows of the Norman soldiers at the battle of Hastings, in 1066 ; that which killed the king pierced him in the brain. Richard I. revived archery in England in 1190, and was himself killed by an arrow in 1199. The victoiies of Crecy, Poitiers, and Agincourt, were won chiefly by archers. The usual i-ange of the long-bow, was from 300 to 400 yards. Robin Hood and Little John, it is said, shot twice that distance. Four thousand archers surrounded the houses of Parliament, ready to shoot the king and the members, 21 Richard II. 1397. — Stowe. The citizens of London were formed into companies of archers in the reign of Edward III. : they wez-e formed into a corporate body by the style of " The Fraternity of St. George," 29 Henry VIIL l5ZS.—Noorthouch's History of London. ARCHES. Arches are traced to the era of the Macedonian conquest by the best writers. The triumphal arches of the Romans formed a leading feature in then- architecture. Those of Trajan (erected a.d. 114) ^and Constantino were magnificent. The arches in our parks in London were erected about 1828. The Marble arch which formerly stood before Buckingham Palace, (whence it was I'emoved to Cumberland gate, Hyde Park, in 1851) was modelled from the arch of Constantine. See Hyde Park. ARCHES OF STONE. In bridge architecture they were not in use in England until the close of the eleventh century. The Chinese bridges, which are very ancient, are of great magnitude, and are built with stone arches similar to those that have been considered as a Roman invention. Bow bridge was built in 1087. One of the largest stone arches hitherto built in England, is that of the new bridge of Chester, whose span is 200 feet; it was commenced in 1829. The central arch of London bridge is 152 feet ; and the three cast-iron arches of Southwark bridge, which rest on massive stone piers and abutments, are, the two side ones 210 feet each, and the centre 240 feet; thus the centre arch is the largest in the world, as it exceeds the admired bridge of Sunderland by four feet in the span, and the long-famed Rialto at Venice, by 167 feet. ARCHES, COURT OF. Chiefly a court of appeal from the inferior jurisdictions within ARC 37 ARG the province of the archbishop of Canterbury ; it is the most ancient consistory court, and derives its name from the church of St. Mary-le-Bow, London (rfe Arcubus) where it was held ; and whose top is raised of stone pillars built archwise.- — Cowell. Appeals from this court lie to the judicial committee of the privy council, by statute 11 Geo. IV. and 1 Will. IV. 1830. ARCHITECTURE. It was cultivated by the Tyrians, about 1100 B.C. Their king, Hiram, supplied Solomon with cedar, gold, silver, and other materials for the Temple in the building of which he assisted, 1015 B.C. The art passed to Greece, and from Greece to Rome. The style called Gothic came into vogue in the ninth century. The Saracens of Spain, being engaged during peace to build mosques, introduced grotesque carvings, &c., and the ponderous sublimity of bad taste ; which species is known by elliptic arches and buttresses. The circular arch distinguishes the Norman-Gothic from the Saracenic, and came in with Henry I. The true Grecian style did not fully revive till about the reign of James I., 1603. The five great orders of architecture are, the Composite, Corinthian, Doric, Ionic, and Tuscan. See the Orders respectively. ARCHONS. When royalty was abolished at Athens, the executive government was vested in elective magistrates called archons, whose office continued for life. Medon, eldest son of Codrus, was the first who obtained the dignity of archon, 1070 B.C. ARCOLA, BATTLE of. Between the French under general Bonaparte, and the Austrians under field-marshal Alvinzy, fought November 19, 1796. The result of this bloody conflict, which was fought for eight successive days, was the loss on the part of the Austrians of 12,000 men in killed, wounded, and prisoners, four flags, and eighteen guns. ARCOT, East Indies. This city was established in 1716 ; it was taken by colonel Clive, in 1751 ; and retaken, but again surrendered to the British under colonel Coote, in 1760. Besieged by Hyder AH, when the British, under colonel Baillie, sufiered a severe defeat, Sept. 10 and Oct. 31, 1780. Arcot has been subject to Great Britain since 1801. See India. ARCTIC EXPEDITIONS. Several have been undertaken by England, and some by Russia and other countries. Sir Martin Frobisher was the first Englishman who attempted to find a north-west passage to China, a.d. 1576. Davis's expedition to the Arctic regions was undertaken in 1585. After a number of similar adventurous voyages, Baffin, an Englishman, attempted to find a north-west passage, in 1616. See Baffin's Bay. For the subsequent and later expeditious of this kind, including among the latter those of Buchan, Franklin, Ross, Parry, Liddon, Lyon, Back, &c., see North- West Pasnarje. Sir John Franklin's expedition, consisting of the ships Erebus and Terror, sailed from Greeuhithe, May 23, 1845. For the numerous expeditions which have been sent in search of him, see Franklin's Expedition, and North-West Passage. ARDAGH. An ancient prelacy in Ireland, founded by St. Patrick, who made his nephew the first bishop, previously to a.d. 454. This j^relacy was formerly held with Kilmore ; but since 1742 it has been held in commendam with Tuam (which see). ARDFERT and AGHADOE. Bishoprics in Ireland long united ; the former was called the bishopric of Kerry ; Ert presided in the fifth century. William Fuller, ajipointed in 1663, became bishop of Limerick in 1667, since when Ardfert and Aghadoe have been united to that prelacy. Near the cathedral, an anchorite tower, 120 feet high, the loftiest and finest in the kingdom, suddenly fell, 1770. AREOPAGIT/E. a famous council, said to have heard causes in the dark, because the judges were blind to all but facts, instituted at Athens, about 1507 B.C. — Arund. Marbles. The name is derived from the Greek Apeos Trayos, the J fill of Mars, because Mars was the first who was tried there for the murder of Halirrhotius, who had violated his daughter, Alcippe. Whatever causes were pleaded before them were to be divested of all oratory and fine speaking, lest eloqiience should charm their eai's, and corrvipt their judgment. Hence arose the most ju.st and impartial decisions. ARGENTARI A, BATTLE of. One of the most renowned of its times, fought in Alsace, between the Allemanni and the Romans, the former being defeated by the latter, with the loss of more than 35,000 out of 40,000 men, a.d. 378. — Dufrcsnoy. ARGONAUTIC EXPEDITION. Undertaken by Jason to avenge the death of Phryxus and recover his treasures seized by the king of Colchis. The ship in which Phryxus had sailed to Colchis having been adorned with the figure of a ram, it induced the poets to pretend that the journey of Ja.son was for the reco\i;ry of the golden fleece. This is the first naval expedition on record ; it made a great noise iu Greece, and ARG 38 AKK many kings and the first heroes of the age accompanied Jason, whose ship was called Argo, from its builder, 1263 B.C. — Bufre&noy. ARGOS. This kingdom was founded by Inachus, 1856 B.C., or 1080 years before the first Olympiad. — Blair. The nine kings from the founder were called Inachidce, of whom the fourth was Argus, and he gave his name to the country. When the Heraclidse took possession of Peloponnesus, B.C. 1102, Temenus seized Argos and its depen- dencies. Argos was afterwai'ds a republic, and distinguished itself in all the wars of Greece. — Euripides. Inachus founds the kingdom . . B.C. 1856 Phoroneus reigns sixty years . . . 1807 Apis reigns thirty-five years . . . 1747 The city of Argos built by Argus, son of Niobe 1711 Criasus, son of Argus, succeeds his father, aud reigns fifty-four years . 1641 Phorbas reigns thirty-five years . B.C. 1587 Eeign of Triopas ; Polycaon seizes part of the kingdom, and calls it after his wife, Messenia 1552 Reign of Crotopus 1506 Sthenelus reigns 14S5 Gelauor is deposed by Dauaus . . . 1474 Feast of the Flambeaux, in honour of Hypermnestra, who saved her hus- band, while her forty-nine sisters sa- crificed theirs (See Flambeaux) B.C. 1425 Lynceus, sou of Egyptus, whose life had been preserved by his wife, dethrones Dauaus 1425 Reign of Abas, son of Lynceus, and father of Proetus and Acrisius . . 1384 Reign of Prcetus, twin- brother of Acri- sius B.C. 1361 Bellerophon comes to Argos ; the passion for him of Sthenoboja .... 1361 Rebellion of Acrisius . . ... 1344 The brothers divide the kingdom . . 1340 Perseus leaves Argos, and founds Mycenaj (which see) 1313 Argos, in modern history, was taken from the Venetians, a.d. 1686. It was lost to the Turks in 1716, since which time it continued in their hands until 1826. Argos became united in the sovereignty of Greece under Otho, the present and first king, Jan. 25, 1833. See Greece. ARGYLL, BISHOPRIC of. Founded a.d. 1200, Evaldus being the first bishop ; the diocese was previously part of the see of Dunkeld ; but was disjoined by Pope Innocent III. ; and it ended, with the abolition of episcopacy in Scotland, 1688. Argyll is now one of the post-revolution bishoprics of Scotland. See Bishoprics. ARIANS. The followers of Arius, a numerous sect of Christians, who deny the divinity of Christ ; they arose about a.d. 315. The Arians were condemned by the coimcil of Nice, in 325 ; but their doctrine became for a time the reigning religion in the East. It was favoured by Constantine, 319. Carried into Africa under the Vandals in the fifth century, and into Asia under the Goths. Servetus (see Servetus) published his treatise against the Trinity, 1531, and hence arose the modern system of Aiianism in Geneva. Arius died in 336. Servetus (to the eternal disgrace of Calvin) was burnt 1553. Varillas, Hist, de VHerCsie. ARITHMETIC. Where first invented is not known, at least with certainty. It was brought from Egypt into Greece by Thales, about 600 B.C. The oldest treatise upon arithmetic is by Euclid (7th, 8th, and 9th books of his Elements), about 300 B.C. The sexigesimal arithmetic of Ptolemy was used a.d. 130. Diophantus, of Alexandria, was the author of thirteen books of arithmetical questions (of which six are now extant) about 156. Notation by nine digits and zero, known at least as early as the sixth century in Hindostan — introduced from thence into Arabia, about 900 — into Spain, 1050 — into England, 1253. The date in Caxton's Mirrour of the World, Arabic characters, is 1480. Arithmetic of Decimals invented, 1482. First work printed in England on arithmetic (de Arte Supputandi) was by Tonstall, bishop of Durham, 1522. The theory of decimal fractions was perfected by lord Napier in his Bahdologia, in 1617. ARK. Mount Ararat is venerated by the Armenians, from a belief of its being the place on which Noah's ark rested, after the universal Deluge, 2347 B.C. But Apamea, in Phrygia, claims to be the spot; and medals have been struck there with a chest on the waters, and the letters NOl^], and two doves : this place is 300 miles west of Ararat. The ark was 300 cubits in length, fifty in breadth, and thirty high ; but most interpreters suppose this cubit to be about a foot and a half, and not the geometrical one of six. There were, we are told, three floors — the first for beasts, the second for provisions, and the third for birds and Noah's family. It was not made like a ship, but came near the figure of a square, growing gradually narrower to the top. There was a door in the first floor, and a great window in the third. ARKLOW, BATTLE of. Between the insurgent Irish, amounting to 31,000, and a small regular force of British, which signally defeated them, June 10, 1798. The ARM 39 ARM town was nearly destroyed by the insurgents in May previous. — Native gold was discovered in Arklow in Sept. 1795. — Phil. Trans., vol. 86. ARMADA, THE INVINCIBLE. The famous Spanish armament, so called, consisted of 150 ships, 2650 great guns, 20,000 soldiers, 8000 sailors, and 2000 volunteers, under the duke of Medina Sidonia. It arrived in the Channel, July 19, 1588, and was defeated the next day by Drake and Howard. Ten fire-ships having been sent into the enemies' fleet, they cut their cables, put to sea and endeavoured to return to their rendezvous between Calais and Gravelines : the English fell upon them, took many ships, and admiral Howard maintained a running fight from the 21st July to the 27th, obliging the shattered fleet to bear away for Scotland and Ireland, where a storm dispersed them, and the remainder of the armament returned by the North Sea to Spain. The Spaniards lost fifteen capital ships in the engagement, and 5000 men : seventeen ships were lost or taken on the coast of Ireland, and upwards of 5000 men were droAvned, killed, or taken prisoners. The English lost but one ship. — Bapin, Carte, Hume. ARMAGH, BATTLE of. Fought against Edward Bruce, who was defeated, taken, and beheaded at Dundalk; and with him 6200 Scots lost their lives, a.d. 1318. — Buchanan. The city of Armagh is most ancient. See next article. It was destroyed by the Danes on Easter-day, a.d. 852. — Burns. ARMAGH, SEE of. The first ecclesiastical dignity in Ireland ; was founded by St. Patrick, its first bishop, in 444. One Daire, a man of great reputation among his own people, and of considerable wealth, granted the site whereon the church was erected, near the river Callan. The first name of this place was Bruim Saileg ; but from its situation on a rising ground, was afterwards called Arhmach or Ardmach ; that is, editus cainjms, a hi6 His son, Artavasdcs, reigns . . .54 Crassus biken prisoner, and beheaded . 63 Artavasdes assists Pompey against Julius Caisar 48 Artavivsdcs assists the Partliiaus against JIarc Antony 36 Antony subdues, and sends him loaded with silver chains to Egypt, to grace his triumph 34 The Ai-menian soldiers crown his son, Artaxias 33 Artaxias deposed 30 He is restored to his throne, and dies. — Blair B.C. 1 Reign of Venones . . . a.d. 16 He abdicates in favour of his son, Orodes — Germanicus Ciesar, grandson of Augus- tus, detlironcs him .... 18 Zenon reigns 18 Tigranes IV. reigns 36 He is cited to Hume, and deposed . . 37 Tiridates detlironcd, and Homan power paramount in Armenia . . . . 62 Armenia reduced to a Persian province under Sapor 365 Subdued by the Saracens . . . . 687 Irruption of tlie Turks .... 755 Again made a Pereian province, under Uffan Cassanes 1472 Subdued by Selim II 1522 Overrun by tlie Russians . . . . 1828 Surrender of Erzeroum . . . July 1829 (See Syria and Jiusso-Tiirkish War.) The sovereigns of Armenia seem to have been absolute in their authority over their subjects. The most known of them is Tigranes the Great, the second of that name. ARM 40 ARM The Armenians were numerous and brave, but rude. Of their peculiar customs very few vestiges remain ; though they had a practice of transmitting to their posterity the deeds of their ancestors in songs ; but these are all lost. ARMENIAN ERA. Commenced on the 9th of July, a.d. 552 ; the Ecclesiastical year on the 11th August. To reduce this last to our time, add 551 years and 221 days; and in leap years subtract one day from March 1 to August 10. The Armenians use the old Julian style and months in their correspondence with Europeans. ARMILLARY SPHERE. Commonly made of brass, and disposed in such a manner that the greater and lesser circles of the sphere are seen in their natural position and motion, the whole being comprised in a frame. It is said to have been invented by Eratosthenes, about 255 B.C. ARMINIANS. So called from James Arminius, a Protestant divine, of Holland. The Arminians chiefly contend for the doctrine of univei'sal redemption, and generally espouse the principles of the Church of England : especially asserting the subordination of the Christian Church to the civil powers. They also contend for the efficacy of good works, as well as their necessity, in securing man's salvation. James I. and Charles I. favoured the doctrines of the Arminians ; and the principles of the sect prevail generally in Holland and elsewhere, though condemned at the synod of Dort (see Dort) in 1618. Arminius, who was a divinity professor at Ley den, died in 1609.— Brandt. ARMORIAL BEARINGS. Became hereditary in families at the close of the twelfth century. They took their rise from the knights painting their banners with different figures, and were introduced by the Crusaders, in order at first to distinguish noblemen in battle, a.d. 1100. The lines to denote colours in arms, by their direction or intersection, were invented by Columbiere in 1639. Armorial bearings were taxed in 1798 — and again in 1803. ARMOUR. The warlike Europeans at first despised any other defence than the shield. Skins and padded h^des were first used ; and brass and kon armour, in plates or scales, followed. The first body armour of the Britons was skins of wild beasts, exchanged after the Roman conquest, for the well-tanned leathern cuirass. — Tacitus. This latter continued till the Anglo-Saxon era. Hengist is said to have had scale armour, a.d. 449. The Norman armour formed breeches and jacket, 1066. The hauberk had its hood of the same piece, 1100. John wore a surtout over a hauberk of rings set edgeways, 1199. The heavy cavalry were covered with a coat of mail, Henry III., 1216. Some horsemjen had visors, and scull caps, same reign. Armour became exceedingly splendid about 1350. Tlie armour of plate commenced 1407. Black armour, used not only for battle, but for mourning, Henry V., 1413. The armour of Henry VII. consisted of a cuirass of steel, in the form of a pair of stays, about 1500. Armour ceased to reach below the knees, Charles I., 1625. In the reign of Charles II. officers wore no other armour than a large gorget, which is commemorated in the diminutive ornament known at the present day. — Meyiick. ARMS. The club was the first ofiFensive weapon ; then followed the mace, battle-axe, pike, spear, javelin, sword, and dagger. Among ancient weapons were bows and arrows. Pliny ascribes the invention of the sling to the Phoenicians. See the various weapons through the volume. ARMS, IN HERALDRY. See Armorial Bearings and Heraldry. Those of England, at first simple, varied with the conquests which she made, and included the insignia of ^Yales, Ireland, Scotland, France, and Hanover, as these countries successively fell to her sovereignty. The arms of England and France were claimed and quartered by Edward HI., a.d. 1330. They were discontinued by the English kings on the union with Ireland, and a new imperial standard was hoisted, Jan. ], 1801. The escutcheon of Hanover was discontinued on the separation of the crowns of England and Hanover by the death of William IV. in 1837. ARMS' BILL, IRELAND. A celebrated bill, whose object was the repression of crime and insurrection, was passed Oct. 15, 1831. It was a revival of the expired statutes of George III. The guns registered under this act throughout the kingdom at the close of the first year scarcely amounted to 3000, and the number was equally small of all other kinds of arms, the new Arms' bill passed August 22, 1843 ; but though it has been since renewed, it has not been latterly very rigidly enforced. ARMY. Ninus and Semiramis had armies amounting to nearly two millions of fighting men, 2017 e.g. The first guards and regular troojjs as a standing army were formed by Saul, 1093 B.C. — Eusehius. One of the first standing armies of which we have any ARM 41 ARO account, is that of Philip of Maeedon. The first standing army, existing as such, in modem times, was maintained in France by Charles VII. in 1445. Standing armies were introduced by Charles I. in 1638; they were declared illegal in England, 31 Charles II., 1679. The chief European nations have had in their service the following armies: Spain, 150,000 men; Great Britain, 310,000; Prussia, 350,000; Turkey, 450,000; Austria, 500,000 ; Russia, 560,000 ; and France, 680,000. ARMY, BRITISH. The effective rank-and-file of the army actually serving in the pay of Great Britain on the 24th Dec. 1800, amounted to 168,082; and the estimates of the whole army in that year were 17,973,000^. The militia, volunteer, and other auxiliary forces were of immense amount at some periods of the war ending in 1815. The strength of the volunteer corps was greatest between the years 1798 and 1804, in which latter year this species of force amounted to 410,000 men, of whom 70,000 were Irish; and the militia had increased to 130,000 men, previously to the regular regiments being reciiiited from its ranks in 1809. The following are statements of the eff"ective military strength of the United Kingdom at the decennial periods respectively mentioned, and of the sums voted for military expenditure, drawn from parliamentary returns and other official records : 1780, Time of war : troops of the line . amount 110,000 men ; sum voted £7,847,000 1800, War . . . " ditto 168,000 men ditto 17,973,000 1810, War : army, including foreign troops, ditto 300,000 men ditto 26,748,000 1815, Last year of tiie war .... ditto 300,000 men ditto 39,150,000 1820, Time of peace ; war incumbrances . . ditto 88,100 men ditto 18,253,000 1830, Peace ditto 89,300 men ditto 6,991,000 1840, Peace ditto 93,471 men ditto 6,890,267 1850, Peace ditto 99,118 men ditto 6,763,488 1852, Peace (but Kaffir war) .... ditto 101,937 men ditto 7,018,164 1854, War with Russia ditto 112,977 men ditto 7,167,486 1855, War with Russia ditto 178,645 men* ditto 13,721,158 ARMY, NAVY, AND OTHER CHARGES OF THE WAR WITH RUSSIA. Original Estimate 1854-5 Army . 6,287,486 Navy . . 7,487,948 . Ordnance . 3,845,878 Transports (increase in Navy) Total 17^621^317 . Actual Charge 1854-5 7,167,486 . 10,417,309 5,986,662 . _3^582,474 27,153,931 . Estimate for 1855-6 13,721,158 10,716,.338 7,808,042 5,181 ,465 37,427,^03 BRITISH ARMY; NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS AND PRIVATES, IN 1840. English . Scotch . . . Irish Life Guards. Horse Guards. Foot guards. Cavalry. Infantry. 724 67 19 367 22 10 4,314 472 64 6,174 781 2,569 35,785 12,046 36,531 Total . . . 810 399 4,850 9,524 84,362 This is the last parliamentary return, of its kind, of the relative number of rank-and- file contributed by the three countries respectively, to the British standing army. The proportions, no doubt, more or less, continue, and may be inferred from it at the present time, 1855. The Army Service Acts are 12 & 13 Vict. c. 37 (June 21, 1847), and 18 Vict. c. 4 (Feb. 27, 1855). The Mutiny Act is passed annually; alterations were made in this Act and in the Articles of War in 1855. — See Militia and Volnnteerx. By a memorandum dated, " Horse Guards, 25th April, 1855," it was determined that officer.^ in the service of the East India Company should have the same rank and precedence as those in the i-egular army. The office of Master-General of the Ord- nance was abolished, and the civil administration of the Army and Ordnance vested in the hands of Loi-d Paumure, the Minister of War, on May 25, 1855. ARMY OF OCCUPATION. The army distinguished by this name was that of the allied powers of Austria, Russia, and Prussia, which occupied the northern frontier towns of France by the treaty which established the boundaries of France, and stipu- lated for the occupation of certain fortresses by foreign troops for three vears, — signed Nov. 20, 1815. AROMATICS. Acron, of Agrigentum, is said to have been the first who caused great * Besides this national army, already 14,950 forciprn troops have been voted for the service of the year 1855-6 ; and the Knglisli militia has been called out, and will be increased to the number of 120,000 men, thus forming a total of 313, 59.5, exclusive of 20,000 Turkish auxiliaries taken into British pay, Feb. 3, 1855. AKR 42 ART fires to be made, and aromatics to be thrown into them, to purify the air, by which means he put a stop to the plague at Athens, 473 B.C. — Notiv. Diet. ARRAIGNMENT consists in reading the indictment by the oiEcer of the court, and the calling upon the prisoner to say whether he is guilty or not guilty. Formerly, persons who refused to plead in cases of felony were pressed to death by large iron weights being placed upon the breast. A person standing mute is, by the existing law, convicted, 12 Geo. III., 1771. See article Mute. AERAS, TREATY of, between France and Burgundy, often quoted, was concluded, 1435. Another treaty was concluded by Maximilian of Austria with Louis XL of France, whereby tlie countries of Burgundy and Artois were given to the Dauphin as a marriage portion ; this latter was entered into in 14S2. — L'Ahbe Velly. ARREST FOR DEBT. The persons of peers, members of parliament, &c., protected. See remarkable case of Ferrers' Arrest. Clergyman performing divine service privileged from arrest, 50 Edw. III., 1375. Seamen privileged from debts under IQl., by act 30 Geo. II., 1756. Barristers are privileged from arrest while going to, attending upon, and returning from, court, on the business of their clients. By statute 29 Charles 11. no arrest can be made, nor process served, upon a Sunday. This law was extended by William III. Vexatious arrests prevented by act, May, 1733. Prohibited for less than 10^. on process, 1779 : and for less than 20Z., July, 1827. Arrests for less than 20Z. were prohibited on mesne process in Ireland, in June, 1829. Statute abolishing arrest for debt on mesne process, except in cases wherein there is ground to show that the defendant designs to leave the countiy, 2 Vict., Aug. 1838. ARSENIC. A mineral substance, caustic and corrosive to so great a degree, as to be a deadly poison. It is usually ranked in the class of sulphurs. There are divers kinds, yellow or native, red and crystalline. Native arsenic is of an orange or yellow colour, and it is called orpiment : it is commonly found in copper mines ; and the heinous ci'imes committed by means of this mineral obliged the legislature to enact regulations for its sale, 14 Vict., cap. 13, June 5, 1851. The sale of all colourless preparations of arsenic are regulated by this act. ARSON. This felony has always been deemed capital, and been punished with death ; it continued to be so punished, on a consolidation of the laws by statute 7 & 8 Geo. IV., 1827. If any house be fired, and persons be therein, or if any vessel be fired, with a view to murder or plunder, it shall be death, statute 1 Vict., July, 1837. ARTICLES OF RELIGION. Six were published by Henry VIIL, 1539; and forty-two were published without the consent of parliament, in 1552. These forty-two were reduced to thirty-nine in Jan. 1563 ; and they received the royal authority and the authority of parliament, in 1571 : one hundred and four were drawn up for Ireland by archbishop Usher, in 1614, and were established in 1634. On the union of the churches, the Irish adopted the English articles. ARTIFICERS and MANUFACTURERS. They were prohibited from leaving England, and those abroad were outlawed, if they did not return within six months after the notice given them ; and a fine of 100?., together with imprisonment for three months, made the penalties for seducing them from these realms, — 9 Geo. II., 1736. This and subsequent statutes have, however, failed in their object, as vast numbers of our scientific and experienced artificers are lured to foreign countries, and thus create rival manufactures to the prejudice of England. ARTILLERY. The first piece was a small one, contrived by Schwartz, a German cordelier, soon after the invention of gunpowder, in 1330. Artillery was used, it is said, by the Moors at Algesiras, in Spain, in the siege of 1341 ; it was used, according to our historians, at the battle of Crecy, in 1346, when Edward III. had four pieces of cannon, which gained him the battle. We had artillery at the siege of Calais, 1347. The Venetians first employed artillery against the Genoese at sea, 1377. — Voltaire. Cast in England, together with mortars for bomb-shells, by Flemish artists, in Sussex, 1543. — Ryiuers Ftedcra. Made of brass, 1635 ; improvements by Browne, 1728. See Iron. ARTILLERY COMPANY of LONDON. Instituted for weekly military exercises in the Artillery-Ground, Finsbury, in 1610. The ground was at first (in 1498) a spacious field for the use of the London archers. The Artillery Company consisted of about 300 men, and served as a nursery of officers for the City Militia. — Noorthouclcs Hist, of London. ARTS. See Literature. In the eighth century, the whole circle of sciences was com- AlilJ 43 ASP posed of these seven liberal arts, namely — grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy. — Hanis. The Royal Society of England {which see) obtained its charter April 2, 1663. The Society of Arts, to promote the polite arts, commerce, manufactures, and mechanics, was instituted in 1754 ; it originated in the patriotic zeal of Mr. Shipley, and of its first pi-esident, lord Folkestone. The first public exhibition by the artists of the British meti-ojiolis took place in 1760, at the rooms of this society, and was repeated there for several years, till, in process of time, the Royal Academy was founded. See lioyal Academy. The Society of British Artists was instituted May 21, 1823 ; and their first exhibition was opened April 19, 1824. Sec British Mioseiim; British Institution; National Gallery ; Royal and London Institutions, &c. ARUNDEL CASTLE. Built by the Saxons, about 800. The duke of Norfolk enjoys the earldom of Arundel, as a feudal honour, by inheritance and possession of the castle, without any other creation. Philip Howard, son of the attainted duke of Norfolk, was made earl of Arundel, by summons, as possessor of this castle, 1580. It was thoroughly repaired by the late duke at a vast expense. ARUNDELIAN MARBLES. Containing the chronology of ancient history from 1582 to 355 B.C., and said to have been sculptured 264 b.c. They consist of 37 statues, 128 busts, and 250 inscriptions, and were found in the isle of Paros, in the reign of James I., about 1610. They were purchased by lord Arundel and given to the university of Oxfoi'd, 1627. The characters are Greek, of which there are two translations: hj Seldeu, 1628; hj Prideaucc,1676. Hee Kidd's Tracts; and Parson's Treatise, 1789. AS. A Roman weight and coin : when considered as a weight, it was a pound ; when a coin, it had ditierent weights, but always the same value. In the reign of Servius, the as weighed a pound of brass ; in the first Punic war, it weighed two ounces, 264 B.C.; in the second Punic war, one ounce, 218 B.C.; and afterwards, half an ounce : its value was about three farthings sterling. ASBESTOS. A native fossil stone, which may be split into threads and filaments, and which is endued with the property of remaining unconsumed in the fire. — Chamh. Cloth was made of it by the Egyptians. — Herodotus. Napkins made of it in the time of Pliny, A.D. 74 ; paper made of it by the ancients; the spinning of asbestos known at Venice, about a.d. 1500. — Bai^tista Porta. ASCALON, BATTLE of, in which Richard I. of England, commanding the Christian forces, reduced to 30,000, defeated the sviltan Sal&din's army of 300,000 Saracens and other infidels, on Sept. 7, 1191. It is said that no less than 30,000 of the enemy were left dead on the field of battle. The victorious Richard marched to Jerusalem, A.D. 1192. ASCENSION DAY. This day, also called Holy Thursday, is that on which the Church celebrates the ascension of Our Saviour, the fortieth day after his resurrection from the dead. May 14, a.d. 33 ; first commemorated, a.d. 68. Some Christian writers affirm that Christ left the print of his feet on that part of Mount Olivet where he last stood ; and St. Jerome says that it was visible in his time. ASH-WEDNESDAY. The primitive Christians did not commence their Lent until the Sunday, now called the first in Lent. Pope Felix III., in a.d. 487, first added the four days preceding the old Lent Sunday, to complete the number of fasting days to forty; Gi-egory the Great introduced the sprinkling of ashes on the first of the four additional days, and hence the name of Dies Cinerum, or Ash- Wednesday : at the Reformation this practice was abolished, " as being a mere shadow, or vain show." ASHMOLE LIBR.ARY. His manuscripts, library, coins, and other rarities, were pre- sented by Elias Ashmole, the celebrated herald and antiquarj', to the University of Oxford about 1683. Mr. Ashmole died at Lambeth in 1692. ASIA. So called by the Greeks, from the nymph Asia, the daughter of Oceanus and Tethys, the wife of Japhet. Asia was the fii-st quarter of the world peopled ; here the law of God was first promulgated ; here many of the greatest monarchies of the earth had their rise ; and from hence most of the arts and sciences have been derived. — Pardon. ASPERNE, BATTLE of. Between the Austrian army under the archduke Charles, and the French, fought on the 21st May, 1809, and two following day.s. In this most sanguinary fight the loss of the former army exceeded 20,000 men, and the loss of the French was more than 30,000 : it ended in the defeat of Bonaparte, who com- ASS 44 ASS manded iu person, and was the severest check that he had yet received. The bridge of the Danube was destroyed, and his retreat endangered ; but the success of the Austriaus had no beneficial effect on the subsequent prosecution of the war. ASSAM AND ASSAM TEA. Assam came under British dominion in 1825; and the right to the principality was renounced by the king of Ava in 1826. The tea-plant was discovered here by Mr. Bruce in 1823. A superintendent of the tea-forests was appointed in 1836, the cultivation of the plant having been recommended by lord William Bcntinck. The Assam Tea committee was formed same year; and the Assam Tea Company established in 1839. The tea was much in use in England in 1841. — Accoxmt of Assam. ASSASSINATION PLOT. A conspiracy so called, formed by the earl of Aylesbury and others to assassinate king William III., near Richmond, Surrey, as he came from hunting. The object of the conspiracy was to have been consummated, Feb. 14, 1695-6, but for its timely discovery by Prendergast. — Hist. England. ASSASSINS, OR ASSASSINIANS. A tribe in Syria, a famous heretical sect among the Mahometans, settled in Persia, in a.d. 1090. In Syria they possessed a large tract of land among the mountains of Lebanon. They mvirdered the marquis of Montferrat in 1192 : they assassinated Lewis of Bavaria in 1213 ; and the khan of Tartary was murdered in 1254. They were conquered by the Tartars in 1257; and were extir- pated in 1272. The chief or king of the corps assumed the title of " Ancient of the Mountain," and " Old Man of the Mountain." They trained up young people to assassinate such persons as their chief had devoted to destruction.* — Henault. From this fraternity the word assassin has been adopted into the European languages, to denote a murderer.— .4 spm. See Old Man of the ^fountain. ASSAY OF GOLD and SILVER. Originated with the bishop of Salisbuiy, a royal treasurer in the reign of Henry I. — Du Cange. But certainly some species of assay was practised as early as the Roman conquest. Assay was formally established in England, 1354 ; regulated, 13 Will. III., 1700, and 4 Anne, 1705. Assay masters appointed at Sheffield and Birmingham, 1773. The alloy of gold is silver and copper, and the alloy of silver is copper. Standard gold is 2 carats of alloy to 22 of fine gold. Standard silver is 18 dwts. of copper to 11 ozs. 2 dwts. of fine silver. See Goldsmiths' Company. ASSAYE, BATTLE of. The British army, under general Arthur Wellesley (afterwards duke of Wellington) entered the Mahratta states on the south ; took the fort of Ahmednugger, Aug. 12 ; and defeated Scindiah and the rajah of Berar at Assays, Sept. 23, 1803. This was the gallant chieftain's first great battle, in which he opposed a force full ten times greater than his own. The enemy retired in great disorder, leaving behind the whole of their artillery, ammunition, and stores. ASSESSED TAXES. The date of their introduction has been as variously stated as the taxes coming under this head have been defined — all things having been assessed, from lands and houses to dogs and hair-powder. By some, the date is referred to the reign of Ethelbert, in 991 ; by others, to the reign of Henry VIII., 1522 ; and by more, to the reign of William III., 1689, when a land-tax was imposed. See Land Tax. The assessed taxes yielded, in 1815 (the last year of the war), exclusively of the land-tax, 6,524, 766L, their highest amount. These imposts have varied in their nature and amount, according to the exigencies of the state, and the contingencies of war and peace. They were considerably advanced in 1797; and again in 1801, et seq. Considerably reduced in 1816, and in subsequent years; and altogether abolished in Ireland. The last act for the repeal of certain assessed taxes, was passed 16 and 17 Vict. cap. 90, Aug. 20, 1853, which was explained and amended by 17 & 18 Vict. cap. 1, Feb. 17, 1854. — 17 & 18 Vict. cap. 85, was passed for the better securing and accounting for the Assessed and Income Taxes, Aug. 10, 1854. See Income Tax. ASSIENTO. A contract between the king of Spain and other powers, for furnishing the Spanish dominions in America with negro slaves. — Burke. It began in 1689, and was vested in the South Sea Company in 1713. By the treaty of Utrecht it was transferred to the English, who were to furnish 4800 negroes annually to Spanish America. This contract was given up to Spain at the peace in 1748. See Guinea. ASSIGNATS. Paper currency, to support the credit of the republic during the revolution, * The " O^d Man of the Mountain" sent his emissaries to assassinate Louis IX. of France, called St. Louis ; but being afterwards affected by the fame of this king's virtues, and he being at the time in liis minority, he gave the prince notice to take care of himself. The fact is mentioned by all our historians, yet, latterly, some doubt is thrown upon it.— Henault. ASS 45 ASS ordered by the National Assembly of France, April, 1790. At one period the enormous amount of eight milliards, or nearly 350 millions of pounds stei-ling, of this paper were in circulation in France and its dependencies. — Alison. ASSIZE OF BREAD. The first statute for it was in the third year of John, 1202, when the regulations thereof were ordered to be observed upon pain of the pillory. The chief justiciary, and a baker commissioned by tlie king, had the inspection of the assize. — Matthew Paris. The assize was abolished in England, and the sale of bread regulated as at present, in August, 1815. The sale in Ireland was regulated by statute, 2 Will. IV., May 1832; Bread act, 7 Will. IV., 1836; Bread act, Ireland, placing its sale on the same footing as in England, 1 Vict., 1838. See Bread. ASSIZE COURTS. They are of very ancient institution in England, and in ancient law books are defined to be an assembly of knights and other substantial men, with the justice, to meet at a certain time and place ; regulated by Magna Charta, a.d. 1215. The present justices of assize and Nisi Prius are derived from the statute of West- minster, 13 Edw. I., 1284. — Coke; Blachstone. "Tlie king doth will that no lord, or other of the country, shall sit upon the bench with the justices to take assize in their sessions in the counties of England, upon great forfeiture to the king," 20 Rich. II., 1396. — Statutes. Various regulations respecting assize courts have been made from time to time. Assizes are general or special : they are general when the judges go their circuits, and special when a commission is issued to take cognisance of one or more causes. ASSUMPTION, FEAST of the. This festival is observed by the Church of Rome in honour of the Virgin Maiy, who, as the Roman Catholics believe, was taken up to heaven in her corporeal form, body and spirit, on August 15, a.d. 45. She is suppoised to have been then in her 75th year. The festival was instituted a.d. 813. — Slillingfleet. ASSURANCE. See Insurance. The practice is of great antiquity. Suetonius ascribes the contrivance to Claudius Cresar, a.d. 43. It is certain that assurance of ships was practised in the year 45. The first regulations concerning it are in the Lex Oleron, by wliich it appears to have been known in Europe very generally in 1194. The custom of Lombard-street was made a precedent for all policies at Antwerp, and in the Low Countries ; but the first statute to prevent frauds from private assui-ers was made 43 Elizabeth, 1601. — Molineaiixs Lex Mercatoria. ASSYRIAN EMPIRE. This is the earliest recorded empire — that of Bacchus wanting records. It commenced under Niuus, who was the Jupiter of tlie Assyrians, and the Hercules of the Clialdeans, 2069, B.C.* It arose out of the union of two powerful kingdoms, Babylon and Assyria, or Nineveh, the latter founded by Ashur, and ending with Sardanapalus, 820, B.C. When this last-named prince was conquered by Arbaces, he shut himself up in liis palace, with his concubines and eunuchs, and causing it to be set on fire, they all pei-ished in the flames. On the ruins of the empire were formed the Assyrians of Babylon, Nineveh, and the Median kingdom. — Lenylct. The tower of Babel built. — Genesis x. 6; xi. 1— Blair B.C. 2247 The kingdom of Babylon begins under Belus, supposed to bo the Nimrod of holy writ — henylct . . ... 2245 Astronomical observations begun by the Chaldeans 2234 Belus reigns 55 years. — Ihher . . . 2124 Ninus, sou of Bolus, reigns in Assyria, and names his capital after himself, Nineveh. — Idem 2069 Babylon taken by Ninus, who having subdued the Armenians, Persians, Bactrians, and all Asia Minor, esta- blishes what is properly the Assyrian monarchy, of wliich Nineveh was the seat of empire. — Blair . . . . 2059 Ninyas, an infant, succeeds Ninus . . 2017 Scmiramis, mother of Ninyas, enlarges and embellishes Babylon, and makes it the seat of her dominion. — Lenglet . 2017 Semiramis invades Libya, Ethiopia, and India. — Leiight .... B.C. 1975 The Arabs seize Nineveh . . . . 1937 Semiramis is put to death by her son, for so long usurping his throne, which he recovers ...... 1970 Ninyas put to death, and Arius reigns . 1969 Reign of Aralius 1907 Bclochus, the last king of the race of Ninus.— TJ/ttir 1446 He makes his daughter Atossa, sur- named Scmiramis II., his associate ou the tlirone 1433 Atossa procures the death of her father, and marries Belatores .... 1421 Belatores, or Bellapares reigns . . . 1421 ***** The prophet Jonah aii]>cars in the streets of Nineveh, and tlireatens to destroy the city for its crimes. — Blair . . 840 Nineveh taken by Arbaces . . . . 820 The uncertainty with which the history of this country has been handed down to us leaves most of tlie particulars relative to its inhabitants rather to be imagined than ascertained : the population, if wc may judge from the great armies which the * Dr. Blair calculates this king's reign from the est.ablishment of the monarchy, 2059 ; but the AbbS Lenglet reckons it from his accession to the throne of Assyria ten years before ; the latter mode is here adopted. ASS 46 AST sovereigns brought into the field, must have been considerable : amount we have no means of information. but as to its precise ASSYRIA, PROPER. After the destruction of the first Assyrian monarchy, Phul, the last king's son, was raised to the throne by the Ninevitos, 777 B.C., and the kingdom continued until 621 B.C., when Sarac, or Sardanapalus II., being besieged by the Medes and Babylonians, put his wife and children to death, and burnt himself in his palace, a fate somewhat similar to that of Sardanapalus I. See preceding article. Nineveh was then razed to the ground, and the conquerors divided Assyria. — Blair. In modern history, it was finally conquered by the Turks in 1637 a.d. — Priestley. ral, Rabshakeh, besieges Jerusalem, when the augel of the Lord io one night destroys 180,000 of Ills army. — Isaiah, xxxvii. . . . .B.C. [Commentators suppose that this mes- senger of death was tlie fatal blast known in eastern countries by tlie name of Samirf.] Bsar-haddon invades Judea, and takes Babylon. — Blair He invades Judea. — Blair . . . . Holofernes is slain by J udith . Saosduchinus reigns. — Usher . . . Nineveh taken, and razed to the ground. 710 680 677 677 667 621 Assyrian monarchy was divided between the the late discoveries of Layard and others in Phul raised to the throne, about the year — \Blair] B.C. 777 He invades Israel, but departs without drawing a sword. — Blair; 2 Kings s.v. 19, -20 . . 770 Tiglath-Pileser invades Syria, takes Da- mascus, and makes great conquests . 740 Shalmaueser takes Samaria, transports the people, whom he replaces by a colony of Cutheans and othei's, and thus finishes the kingdom of Israel. — Blair. 721 He retires from before Tyre, after a siege of five years. — Blair . . . 713 Sennacherib invades Judea, and his gene- On the destruction of Nineveh, the Medes and Babylonians, — Blair. For Assyi'ia, see Nineveh. ASTROLOGY. Judicial astrology was invented by the Chaldeans, and hence was transmitted to the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. It was much in vogue in France in the time of Catherine de Medicis, 1533. — Hcnault. The early history of astrology in England is very little known : Bede was addicted to it, 700 ; and so was Roger Bacon, 1260. Cecil, Lord Burleigh, calculated the nativity of Elizabeth; and she, and all the European princes, were the humble servants of Dee, the astrologer and conjuror; but the period of the Stuarts was the acme of astrology amongst us. Sir Walter Scott has made ample use of Sir William Lilly, the noted astrologer, in his tales of this period ; and it is certain that Lilly was consulted by Charles I. respecting his projected escape from Carisbrook castle in 1647. — Ferguson. ASTRONOMY. The earliest accounts we have of this science are those of Babylon, about 2234 B.C. — Blair. The study of astronomy was much advanced in Chaldtea under Nabonassar; it was known to the Chinese about 1100 B.C. ; some say many centuries before. Lunar eclipses were observed at Babylon with exceeding accuracy, 720 B.C. Spherical form of the earth, and the true cause of lunar eclipses, taught by Thales, 640 B.C. Further discoveries by Pythagoras, who taught the doctrine of celestial motions, and believed in the plui'ality of habitable worlds, 500 B.C. Hipparchus began his observations at Rhodes, 167 B.C. — began his new cycle of the moon in 143, and made great advances in the science, 140 B.C. The precession of the equinoxes confirmed, and the places and distances of the planets discovered, by Ptolemy, a.d. 130. After the lapse of nearly seven centui'ies, during which time astronomy was neglected, it was resumed by the Arabs, about 800 : and was brought into Europe by the Moors of Barbary and Spain, but not sooner than 1201, when they also introduced geography. The Alphousine tables {which see) were composed a.d. 1284 Clocks first used in astronomy, about . 1500 True doctrine of the motions of the pla- netary bodies revived by Copernicus . The science greatly advanced by Tycho Bralie, about True laws of the planetary motions, by Kepler 1619 Telescopes and other instruments used in astronomy, about The discoveries of Galileo were made about The transit of Venus over the Sun's disk first discovered by Horrox . Nov. 24, Cassini draws his meridian line, after Dante. See Bologna .... The aberration of the light of the fixed stars discovered by Horrebow Discoveries of Picart . . Map of the moon constructed by Hevelius 1670 Motion of the sun round its own axis proved by Halley 1670 1530 1582 . 1627 1631 1639 1655 1659 1669 Discoveries of Huygens . . .a.d. 1686 Newton's Principia published, and the system as now taught incontrovertibly established 1687 Catalogue of the stars made by Flam- stead 1688 Satellites of Saturn, &c. discovered by Cassini 1701 Aberration of the stars clearly explained by Dr. Bradley 1737 Celestial inequalities found by La Grange 1780 Uranus and Satellites discovered by Herschel, March 13. See Georgium Sidus 1781 Mi'canique Celeste, published by La Place. 1796 Ceres discovered by Piazzi . . J.an. 1, 1801 Pallas, by Dr. Olbers . . March 28, 1802 Juno, by Harding . . . Sept. 1, 1S04 Vesta, by Olbers . . . March 29, 1807 Astronomical Society of London foimded 1820 [For the several planets recently dis- covered, see article Planets.] ASY 47 ATH The distance of the fixed stars is supposed to be 400,000 times greater from us than we ai'e from the sun, that is to say, 38 millions of millions of miles ; so that a cannon-ball would take near nine millions of years to reach one of them, supposing there were nothing to hinder it from pursuing its course thither. As light takes about eight minutes and a quarter to reach us from the sun, it would be about six years in coming from one of those stars : but the calculations of later astronomers prove some stars to be so distant, that their light must take centuries before it can reach us, and that every particle of light which enters our eyes left the star it comes from three or four hundred years ago. — Objects of Science. ASYLUMS, OR PRIVILEGED PLACES. At first they were places of refuge for those who, by accident or necessity, had done things that rendered them obnoxious to the law. God commanded the Jews to build certain cities for this purpose. The pos- terity of Hercules is said to have built one at Athens, to protect themselves against such as their father had irritated. Cadmus built one at Thebes, and Romulus one at Mount Palatine. A while after the coming of Christianity into England, super- stitious veneration ran so high, that churches, monasteries, church-yards, and bishops' houses became asylums to all that fled to them, let the crime be what it would ; of which very ill use was made, both by the clergy and laity. In London persons were secure from arrest in particular localities : these were the Minories, Salisbury-court, , Whitefriars, Fulwood's-rents, Mitre-court, Baldwin's-gardens, the Savoy, Clink, Deadman's-place, Montagiie-close, and the Mint. This security was abolished a.d. 1696; but the last was not wholly suppressed until the reign of George I. See Privileged Places and Sanctuaries. ATHAN ASIAN CREED and CONTROVERSY. The great controversy regarding the divinity of Christ arose and extended between a.d. 333 and 35L Athanasius, who was a native of Alexandria, encountered great persecution at the hands of the Arians for his religious doctrines, and was exiled for them again and again. The creed which goes by his name is supposed by most authorities to have been written about the year 340 ; but it is affirmed by other writers to be the comi^ilatiou of an African bishop in the fifth century. — Dv, Pin. ATHEISM. This absurd doctrine has had its votaries and its martyrs. Spinoza, a foreigner, was its noted defender in the 17th century. Lucilio Vanini publicly taught atheism in France, and was condemned to be burnt at Toulouse in 1619. Mathias Knutzen, of Holstein, openly professed atheism, and had upwards of a thousand disciples in Germany about 1674 ; he travelled to make proselytes, aud his followers were called Conscienciaries, because they held that there is no other deity than con- science. Many eminent men of various countries have been professors of atheism, and even in England wo have had writers tinctured with it. — Richardson. Ashe. "Though a small draught of philosophy may lead a man into atheism, a deep draught will certainly bring him back again to the belief of a God." — Loi-d Bacon. " Si Bleu n'cxistait pas, il f aud rait Vinventer—" " If a God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent one." — Voltaire. ATHEN.EA. These were great festivals celebrated at Athens in honour of Minerva. One of them was called Panathen.'ca, and the other Chalcea ; they were first insti- tuted by Erectheus or Orpheus, 1397 B.C. ; and Theseus afterwards renewed them, aud caused them to be observed by all the people of Athens, the first every fifth year, 1234 b.c. — Plutarch. ATHENAEUM. A place at Athens, sacred to Minerva, where the poets and philoso- phers declaimed and recited their compositions. The most celebrated Athenrea were at Athens, Rome, and Lyons : that of Rome was of great beauty in its building, and was erected by the emperor Adrian, a.d. 125. — Tlllcmont's Life of Adrian. The Athenscum Club of London was formed in 1824, for the association of persons of scientific and literary attainments, artists, and noblemen and gentlemen, patrons of learning, &c. ; the club-house was erected in 1829, on the site of the late Carltou- palace ; it is of Grecian architecture, and the frieze is an exact copy of the Pana- thenaiic procession which formed the frieze of the Parthenon. — The Liver2iool Athenwum was opened Jan. 1, 1799. — At Manchester, Bristol, and other places, build- ings under this name, and for a like purpose, have been founded. ATHENS. The once celebrated capital of ancient Attica, whose magnificent ruins yet attest its former grandeur — the seat of science and theatre of valour. The first sovereign of whom wc have any knowledge is Ogyges, who reigned in Bccotia, and was master of Attica, then called Ionia. In his reign a deluge took place (by some ATH 48 ATH supposed to be no other than the universal deluge, or Noah's flood) that laid waste the country, in which state it remained two hundred years, until the arrival of the Egyptian Cecrops and a colony, by whom the land was repeopled, and twelve cities founded, 1556 B.C. The first state of Athens was under seventeen kings, comprising a period of 487 years, but the history of its first twelve monarchs is mostly fabulous; in its second state it was governed by thirteen perpetual archons, a period of 316 years ; in its third state by seven decennial archons, whose rule extended over 70 years ; and, lastly, in its fourth state by annual archons, who ruled for 760 years. Under this democracy Athens became unrivalled, and her people signalised them- selves by their valour, munificence, and culture of the fine arts ; and perhaps not one other single city in the world can boast, in such a short space of time, of so great a number of illustrious citizens. The ancients, to distinguish Athens in a more peculiar mannei", called it Astu, the city, by eminence, and one of the eyes of Greece. — Pluta7-ch. Arrival of Cecrops .... B.C. 1556 The Areopagus established . . . 1507 Deucalion arrives in Attica . . . 1502 The Pauathenajan Games . . . . 1495 Erichthonius teaches husbandry . . 149-4 Ceres arrives in Attica . . . . 13S3 Eleusiniau mysteries introduced by Eu- molpus . . . . . .B.C. 1356 Erechtheus killed in battle with the Eleusinians 1347 iEgeus invades Attica, ascends the throne, and reigns 4S years .... 1283 He throws himself into the sea, and is di-o wned ; hence the name of the JEgean Sea. — Busebius . . . .B.C. 1235 Theseus, his son, succeeds and reigns 30 years 1235 He collects his subjects into one city and names it Athens . . . . 1 234 Seizure of Helen by Theseus . . . 1228 Reign of Mnestheus 1205 Reign of Demophoon .... 1182 Court of Ephetes established . . .1179 The Prianepsae instituted . . .1178 Oxynthos reigns 12 years . . . . 1149 He is succeeded by Aphidas . . . 1137 Aphidas assassinated 1136 Melanthus conquers Xuthus in single combat, and is chosen king . . 1128 Reign of Codrus, his son, the last king of Athens 1091 In a battle with the Heraclidse, Codrus rushes into the thickest of the fight, resolved to perish ; the oracle having declared that the victory should be with the side whose leader was killed. 1070 Royalty abolished 1070 Athens governed by archons . . . 1009 Alcmeon, last perpetual archon . . 754 Hippomeues deposed for his cruelty ; among other acts he exposes his own daughter to be devoured by horses, on account of an illicit amour . . . 713 Erixias, seventh and last decennial archon, dies 684 Draco, the twelfth annual archon, pub- lishes liis laws 623 Solon supersedes them by his code . 578 Pisistratus, the tyraut, seizes the su- preme power 560 Fh-st tragedy acted at Athens on a waggon, by Thespis . . . 535 Pisistratus dies 527 Hipparchus assassinated . . . 513 The law of Ostracism 510 The Laced.iemonian war .... 505 The isle of Lemnos taken by the Athe- nian general Miltiades . . . . 504 Memorable battle of Marathon, in Attica. See Marathon 490 Aristides, surnamed the Just, banished by ostracism 487 Athens taken by the Persians, during their invasion of Greece . . B.C. 480 Burnt to the gi-ound by Mardonius . . 479 Rebuilt and fortified the next year . 478 Cimon, son of Miltiades, overruns all Thrace, even to Macedon . . . 469 Cimon banished through the intrigues of Pericles 468 The Athenians defeat the Persians in a naval battle in Egypt . . . . 462 Athens begins to tyrannise over the rest of Greece 459 The first Sacred war, uhich see . . . 448 Tolmidas conducts an expedition into Bojotia, and is defeated and killed near Chaeronea. See C/ueronea . . .447 The thirty years' truce between the Athenians and Lacedaemonians . . 446 Herodotus reads his history in the coun- cil at Athens 445 Pericles subdues Samos ; the battering- ram is first used here . . . . 441 Comedies prohibited at Athens . . 440 The Peloponnesian war begins, and lasts 27 years 431 A dreadful pestilence, which had ravaged Ethiopia, Libya, Egypt, and Persia, extends to Athens, and continues for five years 430 Death of Pericles, who had governed Athens forty years . . . . 429 Second great pestilence ; owing to the depopulation, each man is permitted to have two wives .... 426 The Decelian war begins . . . . 414 Tlie battle of Cyzicum : ichich see . . 408 The inhabitants of Miletus put to the sword, and Lycia entered . . . 408 Alcibiades accused of aspiring to sove- reign power 407 Athenian fleet of ISO ships defeated by Lysander, in the Hellespont . . . 405 Lysander besieges Athens by land and sea ; its walls are destroyed, and it capitulates 404 The Peloponnesian war terminates . . 404 Rule of tlie thirty tyrants . . . 403 Socrates put to death 400 The Corinthian war begins . . . 395 The sea-fight at Naxus ; the Lacedaemo- nians defeated 377 Philip, king of Macedon, gains his first victory at Methon, over the Athe- nians. See Macedon .... 360 Second Sacred war commenced . . . 357 It terminates. See Sacred War . . 348 Battle of Chwronea; the Athenians and Thebans defeated by Philip and his son, Alexander. See Charonea . . 338 Athens submits to Alexander the Great, who enters Greece .... 335 Demosthenes. Hyperides, and Demades put to death 322 Demetrius restores liberty to Greece, and ATH 49 ATT ATHENS, continued. re-establishos the democracy at Athens. —Usher 307 Demetrius takes Athens . . . 296 The revolt from Demetrius . . . 287 A league formed between Athens, Sparta, and Egypt 277 Athens taken by Antigonus, king of Macedou, and held twelve years . . 268 Restored to liberty, by Ai-atus . . 256 The Athenians join the Acha;an league . 256 The original manuscripts of iEschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles, pledged to Ptolemy Euergetes, king of Egypt, for fifteen talents 233 The Athenians join the iEtolians and their allies against Macedon, and send for assistance to Rome . . . . 215 A Roman fleet arrives in the ports of Athens.— ^iaij- 211 Subjugation of Greece . . . . 145 The Athenians implore assist,ance against the Romans from Mithridates, king of Pontus .88 His general, Archelaus, makes himself master of Atliens 88 Athens besieged by Sylla, the Roman general : it surrenders the following year, being reduced V)y famine . . 87 The Athenians desert Pompey, to follow the interests of Caisar .... 47 They are subjected to Rome . . . 21 The Venetians got possession of Athens in a.d. 1204, and the Turks in 1687. — PricdJey. It became the capital of Livadia, a province of European Turkey ; and is now that of the new kingdom of Greece, and the seat of its legislature, established under King Otho I., Jan. 25, 1833. See Greece. ATHLONE. Once a place of great strength and beauty ; the castle was founded by king John. The town was destroyed by fire during the fury of the war in 1641. The English army under general Ginckel stormed Athlone, which was then a town of prodigious strength, crossing the Shannon in the face of the Irish army, yet not losing more than iifty men. This bold and successful enterprise procured for Ginckel the title of earl of Athlone, 1691. — Burn^s Annals. ATMOSPHERE. Posidonius first calculated the height of the atmosphere, stating it to be 800 stadia, nearly agreeing with our modern idea, about 79 B.o. Its weight was determined by Galileo and Torricellius, about 1630 ; its density and elasticity by Boyle; and its relation to light and sound by Hooke, Newton, and Derham. The composition of the atmosphere was ascertained by Hales, Black, Priestley, Scheele, Lavoisier, and Cavendish ; and its laws of refraction were investigated by Dr. Bradley, 1737. ATMOSPHERIC RAILWAY. Experiments were made on a line of rail, laid down between Shepherd's-bush and the Great Western railroad across Wormwood Scrubs, London, by which to test the efficacy of atmospheric tubes, the working of the air- pump, and speed of carriages upon this new principle of railroads in June, 1840. In Ireland the first atmospheric railway was commenced between Dalkey and Kil- liuey, in the vicinity of Dublin, in Sept. 1843. ATTAINDER, ACTS of, have been passed in numerous reigns ; two witnesses in cases of high treason are necessary where corruption of blood is incurred, unless the party accused shall confess, or stand mute, 7 and 8 Will. III., 1694-5. — Blackstone. The attainder of lord Russell, who was beheaded in Lincoln's-inn-Fields, July 21, 1683, was reversed under William, in 1689. The I'olls and records of the acts of attainder passed in the reign of king James II. wei'e cancelled and publicly burnt, Oct. 2, 1695. Several acts were reversed in subsequent reigns. Amongst the last acts 80 reversed, not the least interesting was the attaint of the children of lord Edward Fitzgerald (who was implicated in the rebellion in Ireland of 1798), July 1, 1819. ATTIC. Anything in relation to the city, manners, customs, or mode of speaking of the jjeople of Attica or Athenians, we call attic. We say attic or attic salt, for a delicate piquant style of wit or humour, after the Athenian maimer ; in this way an attic witness means one that cannot be corrupted. — Pardon. We call Plato, " words from whose tongue sweeter than honey flowed," the Athenian Bee ; and Xenophon, the Attic Muse ; on account of the grace, sweetness, and purity of their language : the first died 360, the secoud, 348 b.c. ATTILA. Surnamed the " Scourge of God," and thus distinguished for his conquests and his crimes, ravaged all Europe, a.d. 447. He invaded tlie Roman empire with an army of 500,000 Huns, and laid waste all the provinces. He died of an uncommon effusion of blood on the night of his nuptials with a beautiful virgin named Ildico, having retired late to bed, oppressed with wine, about a.d. 453. — Goldsmith. ATTORNEY-GENERAL. A great officer of the crown, appointed by letters patent. It is among his duties to exhibit iufiirmations and prosecute for the king in matters criminal ; and to file bills in Exchequer, for any claims coucoruiiig the crown in E ATT 50 AUG inheritance or profit ; and otliers may bring bills against the king's attorney, first attorney -general was William de Gisilham, 7 Edward I., 1278. — Beatson, ATTOENET-GENERALS SINCE THE RESTORATION. The Jeffery Palmer .... a.d. 1660 SirHeneage Fiuch, afterwardslord. Finch 1070 Sir Francis North, knt., afterwards lord Guildford ...... 1673 Sir William Jones 1674 Sir Cresvel Levinz, knt 1679 Sir Robert Sayer, knt 1680 Sir Thomas Powis, knt 1687 Henry PoUexfen, esq. . . . . 1088 Sir George Treby, knt . . . .1689 Edward Ward, esq. .... 1093 Sir Thomas Trevor, knt., afterwards lord Trevor 1695 Sir John Somers, knt., afterwards lord Somors 1697 Edward Northey, esq 1701 Sir Simon Harcourt, knt 1707 Sir James Montagu, knt. . . . 1708 Sir Simon Harcourt, again ; afterwards lord Harcourt 1710 Sir Edward Northey, knt., again . . 1710 Nicliolas Lechmere, esq., afterwards lord Lechmei'e. . . . . .1717 Sir Robert Raymond, knt., afterwards lord Raymond 1720 Sir Philip Yonke, knt., afterwards earl of Hardwicke 1723 Sir John Willes, knt 1733 Sir Dudley Ryder, knt 1736 Hon. William Murray, afterwards earl of Mansfield 1754 Sir Robert Henley, knt., afterwards earl of Northiugtou . . . . . 1756 Sir Charles Pratt, knt., afterwards lord Camden 1757 Hon. Charles Yorke .... 1762 Sir Fletcher Norton, knt., afterwardslord Grantley 1763 Hon. Charles Yorke, again ; afterwards lord Morden, and lord chancellor. See Chancdlors 1765 William de Grey, afterwards lord Wal- singham 1766 Edward Thurlow, esq., afterwards lord Thurlow 1771 Alexander Wedderburne, esq., afterwards lord Loughborough .... 1778 James Wallace, esq 1780 Lloyd Kenyon, esq. .... 17S2 James Wallace, esq 1783 Lloyd Kenyon, esq., again; afterwards lord Kenyon . . . . a. d. 1783 Sir Richard Pepper Arden, afterwards lord Alvanley ..... 1784 Sir Archibald Macdonald . . . . 1788 Sir John Scott, afterwards lord Eldon . 1793 Sir J. Mitford, aftei-wardslovd Redesdale 1799 Sir Edward Law, afterwards lord Ellen- borough .... Feb. 14, 1801 Hon. Spencer Perceval (murdered by Bel- lim/hani. May 11, 1812) . April 15, 1802 Sir Arthur Pigott . . . Feb. 12, 1806 Sir Yicary Gibbs, afterwards chief justice common pleas . . . April 7, 1807 Sir Thomas Plumer, afterwards first vice- chancellor of England . June 26, 1812 Sir Willi.am Garrow . . . May 4, 1813 Sir Samuel Shepherd . . May 7, 1817 Sir Robert Gilford, afterwards lord Gifford .... July 24, 1819 Sir John Singleton Copley, afterwards lord Lyndhurst . . . Jan. 9. 1824 Sir Charles WethereU . . Sept. 20, 1826 Sir James Scarlett . . . April 27, 1827 Sir Charles WethereU, again Feb. 19, 1828 Sir James Scarlett, again ; afterwards lord Abinger . . . June 29, 1829 Sir Thomas Denman, afterwards lord Denmau .... Nov. 26, 1830 Sir William Home . . Nov. 26, 1832 Sir John Campbell . . . March 1, 1834 Sir Frederick Pollock . Dec. 17, 1834 Sir John Campbell, again ; 7iow lord Campbell . . . . April 30, 1835 Sir Thomas Wilde . . . July 3, 1841 Sir Frederick Pollock, again ; afteru-ard.s chief baron . . . Sept. 6, 1841 Sir William W. FoUett . . April 17, 1844 Sir Frederick Thesiger . . July 4, 1845 Sir Thomas Wilde, again ; afterwards lord Truro, and lord chancellor, July 6, 1846 Sir John Jervis, aftericards chief justice common pleas . . . July 13, 1846 Sir John Romilly, afterwards master of the roUs .... July 11, 1850 Sir Alexander James Edmund Cock- burn March 28, 1851 Sir Frederick Thesiger, again March 2, 1852 Sir Alexander James Edmund Cock- burn, again ; the present (1855) attorney -general . . . Dec. 28, 1852 John Lee, esq 1783 ATTORNEYS. The number practising in Edward III.'s reign was under 400 for the whole kingdom. In the 32d of Henry VI., 1454, a law reduced the practitioners in Norfolk, Norwich, and Suffolk, from eighty to fourteen, and restricted their increase. The number of attorneys now practising in England, or registered, or retired, is about 13,000. The number sworn, and practising or retired in Ireland, is stated at 2000. An act for amending the several acts for the regulation of attorneys and solicitors, passed 14 and 15 Victoria, cap. 88, August 7, 1851. ATTRACTION. Copernicus described attraction as an appetence or appetite which the Creator impressed upon all parts of matter: about 1520. It was described by Kepler, to be a corporeal affection tending to union, 1605. In the Newtonian philosophy, it is an original power which restores lost motion; a principle whereby all bodies mutually tend to each other. — See Astronomy. AUBURN. The scene of Goldsmith's exquisite poem. The Deserted Village, now a decayed hamlet, about ten miles from Athlone, county Westmeath, Ireland. Hence Gold- smith is sometimes styled, " The Poet of Auburn." " There has not been so fine a poem since Pope's time." — Dr. Johnson. " It is one of those poems that take possession of the heart and imagination with irresistible sway, and cannot satiate by repeated perusal."— i>r. ^ifcm. Published in 1770. AUCTION. A kind of sale known to the Romans. The first in Britain was about 1700, AUE 51 AUL by Elisha Yale, a governor of Fort George, in the East Indies, of the goods he had brought home with him. Auction and sales' tax began, 1779. Various acts of parliament have regulated auctions and imposed duties, which had, in some cases, risen to five per cent. Among these acts were, 43, 45, 54, 55 George III. and 5 George IV. By the act 8 Vict., cap. 15 (passed May 8, 1845), the duties were repealed, and a charge imposed " on the licence to be taken out by all auctioneers in the United Kingdom, of 10^." Certain sales are now exempt from being conducted by a licensed auctioneer, such as goods and chattels under a distress for rent, and sales under the provisions of the Small-Debts' acts for Scotland and Ireland. — Statutes at large. AUERSTADT, BATTLE of. In this most sanguinary conflict between the French and Prussian armies, they wore commanded by their respective sovereigns, and Napoleon obtained a decisive victory. The Prussians were routed on every side, and lost 200 pieces of cannon, thirty standards, and 28,000 prisoners, leaving 30,000 slain upon the field, Oct. 14, 1806. The French Emperor immediately afterwards entered Berlin, from whence he issued his memorable Berlin decree. See Berlin Decree. AUGHRIM, BATTLE op, near Athlone in Ireland. Between the Irish, headed by the French general, St. Ruth, and the English under general Ginckcl, when the former lost 7000 men, the latter only 600 killed, and 960 wounded. St. Ruth was slain. This engagement proved decisively fatal to the interests of James II. in Ireland. Ginckel was immediately after created earl of Athlone ; fought July 12, 1691. The ball by which St. Ruth was killed is still preserved, suspended in the choir of St. Patrick's cathedral, Dublin. AUGMENTATION op POOR LIVINGS' OFFICE. This office was established 3 Anne, 1704. As many as 5597 poor clerical livings of under 10^. aud not exceeding bQl.per annum, were found by the commissioners under the act of Anne capable of augmenta- tion, by means of the bounty then established by parliament for the benefit of the poorer clergy. — Chalmers. AUGMENTATION COURT. At the suppression of the monastic institutions of England, Henry VIII. erected this court, whose business it was to increase the royal revenues by adding those of the various monasteries thereto, 1534. —Pardon. AUGSBURG, BATTLE of. Between the Imperialists and the French army, the latter commanded by Moreau, who obtained a victory so decisive in its consequences, that Augsburg and Munich were opened to him ; fought August 24, 1796. Moreau, Sept. 2, following, again defeated the Austrians on the Inn ; and again, Sept. 7, at Mainburg. AUGSBURG CONFESSION of FAITH. The confession or articles of faith drawn up at Augsburg by Melanchthon,and by him and Luther'presented to the emperor Cliarles V. in 1530. It was divided into two parts, the first consisting of twenty-one articles, and the second of seven, directly opposed to the abuses that had crept into the church of Rome. The elector of Saxony, his son, and several other princes of Germany, signed this confession, which was delivered to the emperor in the palace of the bishop of Augsburg, and hence is called the confession of Augsburg. AUCiSBURG, LEAGUE of. A memorable treaty concluded between Holland and other European powers which had for its object the causing the treaties of Munster and Nimeguen to be respected, 1686. See Munster and Nimcguen. Many of the important diets of the empire have been held in Augsburg. So early as a.d. 952, a council here confirmed the order for the celibacy of the priesthood ; and in 1555, here was signed the celebrated treaty, by which i-eligious liberty was secured to Germany. AUGURY. Husbandry was in part regulated by the coming or going of birds, long before the time of Hcsiod. Augurs instituted at Rome, with vestals and several orders of the priesthood, by Numa, 710 B.C. There was a connnunity of them, appointed to foretell events by tlio flight of birds, and other circumstances. The king Car, from whom Caria in Asia Minor is named, was the inventor of augury by birds.— Vossius. The augurs of Rome drew omens from the phenomena of the heavens, and chirping and flight of birds, and various strange casualties. AUGUST. The eighth month of the year. It was dedicated to tlie honour of Augustus Cajsar, from whom it was named in the year 8 B.C., because in this month he was born, was created consul, or chief magistrate, thrice triumphed in Rome, subdued Egypt to the Roman empire, and made an end of the civil wars. It was previously called Sextilis, or the sixth from March. AULIC COUNCIL. A sovereign court in Germany, established by the emperor E 2 AUR 52 AUS Maximilian I., in 1506, being one of two courts, the first called the Imperial Chamber, formerly held at Spires, and afterwards at Wetzlar, and the other the Aulic Council, at Vienna. These courts, having concurrent jurisdiction, were instituted for appeals in particular cases from the courts of the Germanic states. AURIFLAMMA, or ORIFLAMME. The holy and golden national banner so often mentioned in French history ; it was a costly standard that belonged to the abbey of St. Denis, and was suspended over the tomb of that saint, a.d. 1140. Louis le Gros was the first king who took this standard from the abbey, to battle. — Henaidt. At the battle of Agincourt, 1415, the oriflamme appeai'ed for the last time. — Tillet. It is said, however, that Louis XI. also took the oriflamme to battle in 1465. — MS. Chronology of France. See Banner. AURORA BOREALIS, or NORTHERN LIGHTS. This sublime phenomenon, though rarely seen in the middle of Europe, is almost constant in the arctic and antarctic regions, covering the whole heavens, and eclipsing by its splendour the stars and planets. There was a memorable appearance of the aurora borealis, when it extended from the west of Ireland to the confines of Russia, in March, 1716. It overspread the whole horizon in the lat. of 57° N. in one continued fixed haze of a dismal red during the whole night, by which many people were much tei-rified, Nov. 1765. The electri- city of the aurora borealis was discovered at Jena in 1769. Mr. Forster, the com- panion of Captain Cook, saw the aurora borealis in 5S° S. lat. ; it had been previously matter of doubt whether it ever appeared in the southei'n hemisphere. — Butler. AURORA FRIGATE. On board of this ship there sailed a number of persons, many of them of great consideration and wealth, proceeding from England and Ireland to the East Indies ; but after leaving the British shore they were never heard of, 1771. AUSTERLITZ, BATTLE op. Between the French and Austrian armies, gained by the former. Three emperors commanded at this battle, Alexander of Russia, Francis of Austria, and Napoleon of France. The killed and wounded exceeded 40,000 on the side of the allies, who lost besides, forty standards, 150 pieces of cannon, and many thousands of prisoners. This decisive victory of the French led to the treaty of Presburg, which was signed Dec. 26, same year. The battle was fought Dec. 2, 1805. See Presburg. AUSTRALASIA. The fifth great division of the world. This name was originally given it by De Brosses, but it is now generally called Australia. It includes New Holland, Van Diemen's Land, New Guinea, New Britain, New Zealand, &c., mostly discovered within two centuries. Some accidental discoveries were made by the Spaniai'ds as early as 1526 ; but the first accurate knowledge of these south lands was made by the Dutch in 1605, they having, in that year, explored a part of the coasts of New Guinea. Torres, a Spaniard, passed through the straits which now bear his name, between that island and continental Australia, and gave the first correct report of the latter mass of land, 1606. The Dutch appear to have been the chief discoverers dui'ing the next forty years ; and between 1642 and 1644, Tasman completed the discovery of a great part of the Australian coast, together with the island of Van Diemen's Land, now pretty generally called Tasmania. It was late before the English entered on the career of discovery : Dampier, between 1684 and 1690, explored a part of the west and north-west coasts. Between 1763 and 1766, Wallis and Carteret followed in the track of Dampier, and added to his discoveries ; and in 1770 Cook first made known the east coast of Australia. Furneaux pursued the circuit in 1773; and Bligh in 1789, Edwards in 1791, Bligh (a second time) in 1792, Portlock same year, Bampton and Alt in 1793, and towards the close of the 18th century, Bass and Flinders explored various portions of the coasts and the islands. Grant in 1800, and Flinders, again, in the five succeeding years, completed the survey. — M'CuUoch. AUSTRALIA, the smallest continent, or largest island, in the world; about six times smaller than America, and ten times larger than Borneo or Papua ; its area being estimated at about three million square miles. Its colonisation by convicts was first proposed after the separation of the American colonies from this countiy. It is now divided into four provinces — New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria (or Port Phillip), and Western Australia (or Swan River), all situated on the sea coast. Captaiu Cook, Sir Joseph Banks, &c. land at Botany Bay . . April 2S, l/VC Governor Phillip founds the future city of Sydney near Tort Jackson, with 103U persons . . . Jan. 26, 1788 Great distress, in consequence of the loss of the ship "Guardian," Captain Riou 1790 First church erected . . . Aug. 1793 Government gazette first printed . 1795 Bass's Straits discovered by Bass and Flinders ...... 1798-9 AUS 63 AUS AUSTRALIA, continued. First brick church built .... 1802 Flinders surveys the coast of South Au-stralia 1802 Insurrection of Irish convicts quelled . 180-1 Governor Bligh deposed by an insurrec- tion for his tyranny .... 1808 Superseded by Governor Macquario . . 1800 Expeditions into the interior by Went- worth, Lawson, Bloxland, and Oxley, &.C. . . . 1813, 1817, and 1823 Population 29,783 (three -fourths con- victs) 1821 Legislative council established . . . 1829 Sturt's expedition into South Australia 1834 Sir T. Mitchell's expedition . . . 1835 First R. C Bishop(PolduigJ arrives Sept. 1835 Port Phillip colonised . . . Nov. 1835 First Church of England Bishop of Australia (Broughton) arrives, June 1836 Colony of South Australia founded, Dec. 1836 Melbourne founded . . . Nov. 1837 Suspension of transportation . . . 1839 Great exertions of Airs. Chisholm, esta- blishment of "Home for Female Emi- grants" 1841-0 Census— 87, 200 males; 43,500 females . 1841 Very numerous insolvencies . . 1841-2 Incorporation of city of Sydney . . 1842 Census (including Port Phillip) 114.700 males; 74,800 females . ... 1840 Great agitation against transportation revived by Earl Grey .... 1849 Port Phillip erected into a separate pro- vince as Victoria 1850 Gold discovered by Mr. Hargraves, and others 1851 Census— males, 106,000 ; females, 81,000 (exclusive of Victoria, 80,000) . .1851 Mints established . . March, 1853 Transportation ceased .... 1853 GOVERNORS. Captain Arthur Phillip . . . . Captain Hunter Captain Philip G. King . . . . Captain William Bligh .... Colonel Lachlan Macquario (able and successful administration) . . . General Sir Thomas Brisbane Sir Richard Bourke Sir George Gipps Sir Charles Fitzroy, now(1855)govemor- gcneral of all the Australian colonies, with a certain jurisdiction over the lieutenant-governors of Van Diemen's Land, Victoria, and South and Western Australia See New South Walea, South A asiralia, Victoria, and West Australia. 1788 1795 1800 1806 1809 1S21 1831 1838 1846 Act for the government of Western Australia, 10 George IV. cap. 22, May 14, 1829. South Australia erected into a British province, 4 and 5 William IV. cap. 95, Aug. 15, 1834. Act to continue the first-mentioned act, 5 and 6 William IV. cap. 14, July 3, 1835. Act with similar purpose, 6 and 7 William IV. cap. 68, Aug. 13, 1836. Act for regulating tlie sale of waste lands in the Australian colonies, 5 and 6 Victoria, caj). 36, June 22, 1842. And act for the better government of the Austi'aliau colonies, 13 and 14 Victoria, cap. 59, Aug. 5, 1850. AUSTRALIA, GOLD REGIONS of. The first discovery of gold in Australia was made by Mr. Edward Hargraves, who, having a farm near Bathurst, went to California iu search of gold, and was struck with the similarity between the rocks and strata of Califoi^nia and those of his own district of Couobolas, some thirty miles west of Bathurst. On his return home, he accordingly examined the soil, and after one or two months digging, found a quantity of gold, Feb. 12, 1851. He at once applied to the colonial government for a reward, which he readily obtained, with an appointment as com- missioner of crown lands. The excitement soon becoming intense throughout the colony of New South Wales, rapidly spread to that of Victoria and other places ; and in tiic first week of July, 1851, an aboriginal inhabitant, formerly attached to the Wellington mission, and then in the service of Dr. Kerr, of Wallawa, discovered, while tending his sheep, a mass of gold among a heap of quartz. Three blocks of quartz from two to three hundred weight, contained 1121b. of pure gold, valued at 40001. These blocks were found on the Murroo Creek, fifty miles to the north of Bathurst. The gold fever now became general, and the gold since found in numerous other places, and often in large blocks, has been of enormous amount, vast quantities (many tons' weight at a time) being shipped to England, the continent of Europe, and to America. The " Victoria nugget," a magnificent mass of virgin gold, weighing 340 ounces, was brought to England from the Bendigo diggings ; and a piece of pure gold of lot) lb. weight was also found. From the gold-fields of Mount Alexander and Ballarat, in the district of Victoria, up to October 1852, there were found 2,532,422 ounces, or 105 tons, 10 cwt. of gold; and the gold exported up to the same date represented 8.863,477/. sterling. The arrivals of gold in England have been ever since of constant occin-reuce, and the vastncss of a precious freight ceases to be longer a matter of wonder. In all probability neither all the gold mines, nor the richest laud which Australia contains, have yet been discovered, and the results of further search, when, aided by science and skill, and by concerted and systematic action, are likely to astoni.sh the whole world. See Gold Regions. AUSTRIA. Anciently the Belgic Gaul of the Romans. It was taken from Hungary and annexed to Germany, when it received its present name, about ad. 1040. This was after Charlemagne had re-established the Western Empire, Austria being a pai't of AUT 54 AUT •what was called Eastern France, its name in the German language CEsteireich, imply- ing, Eastern Kingdom. The sovereigns of the house of Austria (see Hapsburg) have been emperors of Germany for more than five hundred years: in 1804 they x'elin- quished the title, and became hereditary emperors of Austria only. For the succes- sion of the emperors, see Germany. 1438 1477 Bodolph, count of Hapsburg, seizes Aus- tria from Bohemia, and makes himself arch-duke a.d. 1273 Revolt of Switzerland from the house of Austria, in the reign of Albert I. 1307 Albert 11., duke of Austria, succeeds to three crowns, — the imperial, and those of Hungary and Bohemia ; his family (of which the male line was extinct in 1740,) still possess the empire Burgundy accrues to Austria by the marriage of Maximilian with the heir- ess of that province Also Spain, by the marriage of Philip I. of Avistria, with the heiress of Arragon and Castile 1496 Charles v., reigning over Germany, Aus- tria, Bohemia, Hungary, Spain, the Netherlands, and their dependencies, abdicates, and retires from the world, leaving his German dominions to his brother Ferdinand, and Spain and the Netherlands to his son, Philip II. — See Spain 1557 The Protestant princes of Germany, being opposed by the house of Austria, call in the aid of Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, and this leads to the treaty ofWestphaUa 1648 Leopold I. reigns, — (See Germany) . 1658 Death of Charles VI., the last sovereign, in the male line, ot the house of Haps- burg 1740 Accession of Francis, duke of Lorraine, who marries the celebrated queen of Hungary, Maria Theresa, daughter of the deceased emperor, Charles VI 1745 Reign of Jcseph II 1705 Religious toleration granted . . . 1776 The emperor controls the pope . . 1782 Reign of Leopold II a.d. 1790 Reign of Francis II 1792 Austria beconies a distinct empire, and Francis II. of Germany takes the title of I. of Austria . . . Aug. 9, 1804 The emperor issues his declaration against Franco . . . Aug. 5, 1805 Napoleon, after many victories, enters Vienna Nov. 14, 1805 Vienna evacuated by the French, Jan. 12, 1806 The formal renouncement of the empire Aug. 6. 1806 The French again take Vienna . May 13, 1809 But restore it at the peace . Oct. 24, 1809 Napoleon marries the arch-duchess Ma- ria Louisa, the daughter of the em- peror April 1, 1810 Cougi-ess at Vienna . . Oct. 2, 1814 Treaty of Vienna . . . Feb. 25, 1815 Death of Francis I., and accession of Ferdinand .... March 2, 1835 New treaty of commerce with England signed July 3, 1838 Ferdinand is crowned with gi-eat splen- dour at Milan . . . Sept. 6. 1 838 He abdicates in favour of his nephew, Francis-Joseph, the present emperor, Dec. 2, 1848 Attempted assassination of the em- peror by Libenyi . . . Feb. 18, 1853 CommercialTreatywithPrussia, Feb.l9. 1853 Marriage of the emperor to Elizabeth, daughter of Maximilian, Duke in Bavaria .... April 24, 1854 Austrians enter Principalities . Sept. 1854 Treaty of Alliance with England and France relative to Eastern question, Dec. 2, 1854 (See also Germany, Vienna, &c.) Ferdinand, his son, March 2 ; resigned in favom- of his nephew, Dec. 2, 1848. Francis-Joseph, Dec. 2, 1848, the pre- sent (1855) emperor of Austria. The affairs of Austria being so interwoven with those of the empire of Germany, it has been deemed better to continue the annals of Austria, under the general head of Germany, where they will be found. The emperor of Germany surrendered the dignity of the empire on Aug. 11, 1804; and again renounced the title by a formal and public declaration, in which he assumed the rank of emperor of Austria only, Aug. 6, 1806; and the German princes, seceding from the Germanic empire, placed themselves under the protection of Napoleon I. of France. Emperors of Austria. 1835. \_From the year 1804, u-hen the Emperor of Germany became Emx>eror of AvJitria only.] 1804. Francis I. (late Francis il. of Germany), 1848. emperor of Austria, only, Aug. 11, 1804 ; died March 2, 18.?5. Before the establishment of the Confederation of the Rhine in 180G, Franci.s ceased to be emperor of Germany, as mentioned above, and became hereditary emperor of Austria, under the title of Francis I. Upon the formation of the Germanic Confederation in 1815, the emperor of Austria was again declared hereditary head of that body. See Germany. AUTHORS. For the laws securing copyright, see Copyright and Literary property. AUTO^ DA FE. See Inquisition. The punishment, often by burning alive, of a heretic. This is called an act of faith, and is coeval with the Inquisition ; and since its first practice in a.d. 1203, more than 100,000 victims have been sacrificed by the sentence of the inquisitions of Roman Catholic countries on the burning pile. One of the last executions of this kind was at Goa, where twenty sufferers perished in the flames, 1717. These horrible sacrifices have ceased in Spain. — Ashe. AUTOMATON FIGURES, or ANDROIDES. They are made to perform human actions, and are of early invention. Archytas' flying dove was formed about 400 B.C. Friar AVE 55 BAB Bacon made a brazen head that was said to speak, a.d. 1264. Albertus Magnus spent thirty years in making another. A coach and two horses, with a footman, a page, a lady inside, were made by Camus, for Louis XIV. when a child ; the horses and figures moved naturally, variously, and perfectly, 1649. Vaucanson made an artificial duck, which performed every function of a real one, even an imperfect digestion, eating, drinking, and quacking. Vaucanson also made a flate-player, 1738. The writing automaton, exhibited in 1769, was a pentagraph worked by a confedei-ate out of sight ; so were also the automaton chess-player, exhibited the same year, and " the invisible girl," exhibited in 1800. " A VE MA El A I " The salutation of the angel Gabriel to the Virgin.— Zm^t i. 26, 27, 28. A formu.la of devotion in the lioman Church, ordered by pope John XXII. in the fourteenth century. — Butler. This prayer to the Virgin is repeated in Koman Catholic countries daily at the ringing of the matin and the vesper bell. — Ashe. Although of universal use in the Roman Catholic Church, it can be traced no higher than the beginning of the fifteenth century, when Vicentius Feri-ei'ius used it before his discourses. — Bingham. AVIGNON. Ceded by Philip III. of France to the pope in 1273. The papal seat was removed for seventy years to Avignon, in 1308. It was seized several times by the French, by whom it was taken from the pope in 1769, but was restored on the sup- pression of the Jesuits, 1773. Declared to belong to France by the National Assembly, 1791. Horrible massacres in October of that year. Continued to France by the Congress of sovereigns, in 1815. AXE, WEDGE, WIMBLE, &c. These instruments, with the lever, and various others of a coarse construction, and still in common use, are said to have been invented by Dasdalus, an artificer of Athens, to whom also is ascribed the invention of masts and sails for ships, 1240 B.C. AYDE, OR AIDE. The tax paid by the vassal to the chief lord upon urgent occasions. In France and England an aide was due for knighting the king's eldest son, and was demanded by Philip the Fair, in 1313. This aide being due upon the birth of a prince, it was ordained by the statute of Westminster, in the reign of Edward I., that, for the ease of the subject, it should not be levied until he was fifteen years of age. In England, Normandy, and elsewhere, an aide was exacted for the marriage of the king's eldest daughter ; but by the above statute it could not be demanded, in this country, until her seventh year. In feudal tenures, there was an aide for ransoming the chief lord; so when our Richard I. was kept a prisoner by the emperor of Germany, an aide was enforced of 20s. upon every knight's fee, to redeem him. AZOFF, SEA. OF, the Palus Mreotis of the ancients, communicates by the strait of Yeni- kald (the Bosphorus Cimmerius) with the Black Sea, and is entirely 'surrounded by Russian territory ; Taganrog and Kertch being the principal places. An expe- dition composed of British, French, and Turkish troops, commanded by Sir G. Brown, landed at Kertch, May 24, 1855, when the Russians retired, after blowing up the fortifications. On the 25th the allies marched upon Yenikale, which also offered no resistance. On the same evening the allied fleet entered the Sea of Azoff", and in a few days completed their occupation of it, after capturing a large number of merchant vessels, &c. An immense amount of stores were destroyed by the Russians, to pre- vent them falling into the hands of the Allies. AZORES, OR WESTERN ISLES. Supposed to be the site of the ancient Atlantis. They were discovered by John Vanderberg, a.d. 1439 ; and were settled by the Portuguese, in 1448. Martin Behem found one of them covered with beech-trees, and lie called it therefore Pai/al ; another abounding in sweet flowers, and he therefore called it Flores; and all full of hawks, and he therefore named them the Azores. A violent concussion of the cartli took jilace here for twelve days, in 1591. A devastating earthcpiake, in 1757. Hei-e arc fountains of boiling water. A volcano at St. George's destroyed the town of Ursuliua, Ma}% 1S08; and iu 1811, a volcano appeared near St. Michael's, in the sea, where the water was eighty fathoms deep. An island called Sabrina gradually disappeared, Dec. 1812. B. BABEL, THE TOWER of. Built by Noah's posterity, 2247 B.C. The temple of Belus, originally this celebrated tower, was the most magnificent in the world ; it had lofty BAB 56 BAC spires, and was enriched with many statues of gold, one of them forty feet high. In the upper part of this temple was the tomb of the founder, Belus (the Nimrod of the Sacred Scriptures), who was deified after death. — Blair. BABINGTON'S CONSPIRACY. Formed in the cause of Mary against Elizabeth, for which the chief conspirator, with thirteen others, suffered death. Babington was a gentleman of Derbyshire, and he associated with persons of his own persuasion (the Roman Catholic), with a design to assassinate the queen, and deliver Mary. He seems to have been principally induced to this rash conspiracy by a romantic hope that Mary, in gratitude, would accept of him as a husband, 1586. BABYLOlSr, EMPIRE of. Founded by Belus, supposed to be the Nimrod of Holy Writ, the son of Chus, and grandson of Ham, 2245 B.C. — Lenglet. Ninus of Assyria seized on Babylon, and established what was properly the Assyrian Empire, by uniting the two sovereignties, 2059 B.C. According to Eusebius this empire existed 1240 years; according to Justin, 1300 years ; according to Herodotus 500 or 600 years. Of these opinions Blair has adopted the first, which calculates from the foundation of the empire by Ninus, B.C. 2059, to the close of the reign of Sardanapalus, who was dethroned by his generals, and his kingdom divided into the Assyrian, Babylonian, and Median kingdoms, 820 B.C. See Assyria. The tower of Babel built . . B.C. 2247 The kingdom of Babylon begins . . 2245 Ashur builds a city, afterwards called Nineveh 2245 The astronomical observations are begun at Babylon by the Chaldeans. — Blair ; Lmglet 2234 Belus, king of Assyria, extends his em- pire over the neighbouring states, defeats the Babylonians, and makes them tributary. — Usher . . . . Ninus, son of Belus, reigns in Assyria, and names his capital after himself, Nineveh — Lenglet Babylon taken by Ninus . The Assyrian Empire ends Belesis governs in Babylon . . . Babylon taken by Esar-haddon Nabopolasser assumes the title of king . [This is the Nebuchodouosor of Tobit.] Nebuchadnezzar makes his iirst expedi- tion into Syria He invades Judea. — Blair He returns to Babylon with the spoils 2124 2069 2059 820 Tee 680 625 606 605 604 602 587 of Jerusalem. — Blair; Lenglet B.C. Daniel interprets the king's dream of the golden-headed image. — Daniel ii. Nebuchadnezzar goes a third time against Jerusalem, takes it, and de- stroys the temple. — Blair ; Usher. 589 to The golden image set up, and Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego thrown into the furnace for refusing to worship it. — Demiel iii 570 Daniel interprets the king's second di-eam, and Nebuchadnezzar is driven from among men. — Daniel iv. . . 569 Nebuohadnezzarreeovers his reason and his throne 562 He dies about a year after . . . . 561 Babylon taken by the Medes and Per- sians, under Cyrus .... Daniel thrown into the lions' den. — Daniel, vi. [The history of Susannah, as recorded in the Apocrypha, may also be placed about this time.] 538 537 The city of Babylon was, anciently, the most magnificent in the world ; and in later times famous for the empire established under the Seleucidae. Its greatness was so reduced in succeeding ages, that Pliny says, in his time it was but a desolate wilderness. — The laborious researches of Mr. Layard, Col. Rawlinson, M. Botta, and others, and the interesting relics excavated and brought to this country within the last seven years, have caused very much attention to be given to tlie history of Babylon. Many of the inscriptions in the cuneiform or wedge-like character have been translated principally by Col. Rawlinson, and published in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. In the spring of 1855 the Colonel returned once more to England, bringing with him many valuable relics, drawings, &c., which are now in the British Museum. He gave discourses on the subject at the Royal Institution, May 30, 1S51, and June 15, 1855. — The Hanging Gardens are described as having been of a square form, and in terraces one above another until they rose as high as the walls of the city, the ascent being from terrace to terrace by steps. The whole pile was sustained by vast arches raised on other nrches; and on the top were flat stones closely cemented together with plaster of bitumen, and that covered with sheets of lead, upon which lay the mould of the garden, where there were large trees, shrubs, and flowers, with various sorts of vegetables. Thei-e were five of these gardens, each containing about four EngUsh acres, and disposed in the form of an amphi- theatre.— S<)-a6o; Biodorus. BACCHANALIA. Games celebrated in honour of Bacchus. They arose in Egypt, and were brought into Greece by Melampos, and were there called Dionysia, about 1415 B.C. — Diodorus. They were celebrated in Rome \iuder the name of Bacchanalia. The priests of the drunken revelries and feasts of Bacchus were called Bacchanals, BAG 57 BAI and were crowned with ivy and sprigs of vine, and carried in their hands staffs wreathed with the same emblems. BACHELORS. The Roman censors frequently imposed fines on unmarried men ,• and men of full age were obliged to marry. The Spartan women at certain games laid hold of old bachelors, dragged them round their altars, and inflicted on them various marks of infamy and disgrace. — Vossius. After twenty-five years of age, a tax was laid upon bachelors in England, 121. 10s. for a duke, and for a common person, one shilling, 7 Will. III., 1695. Bachelors were subjected to a double tax on their male and female servants, in 1785. BACKGAMMON. Palamedes of Greece is the reputed inventor of this game (decidedly one of the oldest known to our times) about 1224 B.C. It is stated by some to have been invented in Wales in tlie period preceding the Conquest. — Henry. BADAJOS, SIEGE of. This important barrier fortress had surrendered to the French, March 11, 1811, and was invested by the British under lord Wellington on March 16, 1812, and stormed and taken on April 6, following. This victory was not only a glorious military achievement in itself, but it obliged the French, who had entered Portugal for the purpose of plunder, to commence a precipitate retreat from that kingdom. BADEN, HOUSE of. The house of Baden descended from Herman, son of Berthold I., duke of Zahringen, who died a.d. 1074. From Christopher, who united the branches of Hochberg and Baden, and died in 1527, proceed the branches of Baden-Baden, and Badcn-Dourlach. This family makes a most conspicuous figure in the annals of Germany, and is allied to all the principal families in the empire. BADEN, TREATY of. Between France and the emperor, when Landau was ceded to the former, Sept. 7, 1714. Baden, formerly a margi'avate, was erected into a grand duchy, as a member of the Rhenish Confederation, August 1.3, 1806. Its terri- torial acquisitions by its alliances with France were guaranteed by the congress at Vienna, in 1815. BAFFIN'S-BAY. Discovered by William Baffin, an Englishman, in 1616. The nature and extent of this discovery were much doubted until the expeditions of Ross and Parry proved that Baffin was substantially accurate in his statement. Parry entered Lancaster Sound, and discovered the islands known by his name. These voyagers returned home in 1818. See article North West Passage. BAGDAD. Built by Almansor, and made the seat of the Saracen empire, a.d. 762. — Taken by the Tartars, and a period put to the Saracen rule, 1258. It has since been often taken by the Persians, and from them again by the Turks. — Blair. BAGPIPE. This instrument is supposed by some to be peculiar to Ireland and Scotland ; but it must have been known to the Greeks, as, on a piece of Grecian sculpture of the highest antiquity, now in Rome, is represented a bagpiper dressed like a modern highlauder. Nero is said to have played upon a bagpipe, a.d. 51. BAHAMA ISLES. These were the first points of discovery by Columbus. San Salvador was seen by this great navigator on the night of the 11th of October, 1492. — The Bahamas were not known to the English till 1667, when captain Seyle was driven among them on his voyage to Carolina. Seized for the crown of England, 1718, when the pirates who inhabited them surrendered to Captain Rogers. BAIL. By ancient common law, before and since the Conquest, all felonies were bailable, till murder was excepted by statute ; and by the 3 Edwnrd I. the power of bailing in treason, and in divers instances of felony, was taken away, 1274. Bail was further regulated, 23 Henry VI., 2 Pliilip and Mary, and in later reigns. Bail is now accepted in all cases, those of felony excepted; and in cases wherein a magistrate refuses bail, it may be granted by a judge. BAILIFFS, OR SHERIFFS. Said to be of Saxon origin. London had its shire-reve prior to the Conquest, and this officer was generally appointed for counties in England in 1079. Sheriffs were appointed in Dublin under the name of bailifls, in 1308; and the name was changed to sheriff, 1548. There arc still some places where the chief magistrate is called bailiff, as the high bailiff of Westminster. The term Bum- Bailiff is a corruption of bound-bailiff, every bailiff being obliged to enter into bonds of security for his good behaviour. — Blaclstone. EAI/E. This species of coarse woollen manufacture was brought into England by some Fleming or Dutch emigrants who settled at Colchester, in Essex, in the reign of Charles II., about the year 1660. It has flourished in this quarter ever since. These BAL 58 BAL emigrants had peculiar privileges granted them by act of parliament, 12 Charles II. The trade is under the control of a coi'poration called the governors of the Dutch Baize-hall, who examine the cloth previous to sale. — Anderson. BALAKLAVA, a small town in the Crimea, with a fine harbour, 10 miles S. E. from Sebastopol. After the battle of the Alma, the Allies advanced upon this place, Sept. 26, 1854. On Oct. 25, following, about 12,000 Russians, commanded by Gen. Liprandi, attacked and took some redoubts in the vicinity, which had been entrusted to about 250 Turks. They next assaulted the English, by whom they were compelled to retire, mainly through the charge of the heavy cavalry, led by Brigadier Scarlett, under the orders of Lord Lucan. After this, from an unfortunate misconception of Lord Eaglan's order, Lord Lucan ordered Lord Cardigan with the light cavalry, to charge the Russian army, which had re-formed on its own ground with its artillery in front. This order was most gallantly obeyed. Great havoc was made on the enemy, but of 607 British horsemen, only 1 93 returned.* The British had altogether 9 ofi&cers killed, 21 wounded, and 620 men put hors de combat. The Russians had 550 men killed, and 6 officers (among whom was one general), and 190 men wounded. — A sortie from the garrison of Sebastopol on the night of March 22, 1855, led to a desperate engagement here, in which the Russians were vigorously repulsed, with the loss of 2000 men killed and wounded, the Allies losing about 600 — The Electric Tele- graph between London and Balaklava was completed in April, 1855, and communica- tions were then received by the British Government. — A Railway between Balaklava and the trenches is also completed, (June 1855.) BALANCE OF POWER : to assure the independency and integrity of states, and control ambition; the principle is said to be a discovery of the Italian politicians of the fifteenth century, on the invasion of Charles VIII. of France. — Robertson. By the treaty of Munster, the principle of a balance of power was first recognised by treaty, Oct. 24, 1648. BALEARIC ISLANDS, in the Mediterranean. Called by the Greeks Balearides, and by the Romans Baleares, from the dexterity of the inhabitants at slinging : they include Majorca and Minorca, with the small isle of Cabrera. These islands have been severally taken and retaken at vai-ious times, as particularly detailed under the head Minorca, ivhich see. BALKAN, PASSAGE of the. This adventurous experiment was deemed impracticable by a hostile army, until effected by the Russian army under Diebitsch, whose march through the Balkan mountains is a memorable achievement of the late great Russian and Turkish war; the passage was completed July 26, 1829. An armistice was the consequence ; and a treaty of peace was signed at Adrianople, Sept. 14 following. BALLADS. They may be traced in British history to the Anglo-Saxons. — Tui-ner. Andhelme, who died a.D. 709, is mentioned as the first who introduced ballads into England. "The harp was sent round, and those might sing who could." — Bede. Alfred sung ballads. — Malmsbury. Canute composed one.— Twrner. Minstrels were protected by a charter of Edward IV. ; but by a statute of Elizabeth they were made punishable among rogues, vagabonds, and sturdy beggars. — Viner. BALLADS, NATIONAL. " Give me the writing of the ballads, and you may make the laws." — Fletcher of Saltoun. A British statesman has said, " Give me the writing of the ballads of the country, and while I place at your command every other species of composition, I will fix public opinion, and rule public feeling, and sway the popular sentiment more powerfully than all your writers, political and moral, can do by any other agency or influence." The beautiful and frequently touching ballads of Dibdin, particularly those of the sea, inspired many a brave defender of his country in the late war ; Dibdin died Jan. 20, 1833. BALLETS. They arose in the meretricious taste of the Italian courts. One performed at the interview between our Henry VIII. and Francis I. of France, in the Field of the Cloth of Gold, 1520. — Guicciardini. In the next century they reached the summit of their glory, in the splendid pomps at the courts of Tuscany and Loiraine ; and their most zealous patron, Louis XIV., bore a part in one, 1664. BALLOON. Galien of Avignon wrote on aerostation, in 1755. Dr. Black gave the hint as to hydrogen in 1767. A balloon was constructed in France by MM. Montgolfier, in 1783, when Rozier and the marquis d'Arlandes ascended at Paris. Pilatre Desrozier * On his return to England, Lord Lucan brought the subject before the House of Lords, March, 1S55, but without obtaining any important result. BAL 59 BAL and M. Romain perished in an attempted voyage from Boulogne to England, the balloon having taken fire, June 14, 1785. At the battle of Fleurus, the French made use of a balloon to reconnoitre the enemy's army, and convey the observations by telegraph, June 17, 1794. Garnerin ascended in a balloon to the height of 4000 feet, and descended by a parachute, Sept. 21, 1802. Gay-Lussac ascended at Paris to the height of 23,000 feet, Sept. 6, 1804. Madame Blanchard ascended from Tivoli at night, and the balloon, being surrounded by fireworks, took fire, and she was preci- pitated to the ground and killed, July 6, 1819. An Italian aeronaut ascended from Co^icuhagen, in Denmark, Sept. 14, 1851 ; his corpse was subsequently found on the sea-shore in a contiguous island, dashed to pieces. BALLOONS IN ENGLAND, &c. The first attempt to navigate the atmosphere in England in a balloon was by signer Lunardi, who ascended from Moorfields, Sept. 15, 1784. Bliinchard and Jeffries passed from Dover to Calais, in 1785. Mr. Arnold went up from St. George's-fields, and fell into the Thames ; and major Money ascended from Nonvich, and fell into the North Sea, but was saved by a revenue cutter. The first ascent from Ireland was from Ranelagh gardens, Dublin, in 1785. Sadler, who made many previous expeditions in England, fell into the sea near Holyhead, but was taken up, Oct. 9, 1812. Sadler, jun., was killed, falling from a.balloon, in 1825. Mr. Cocking ascended from Vauxhall ; the parachute, in its descent from the balloon, collapsed, and he was thrown out and killed, July 24, 1837. Green and others made many ascents in the vicinity of London, in 1852. — The great Nassau balloon, of immense dimen- sions, and which had for some time previously been exhibited to the inhabitants of London in repeated ascents from Vauxhall gardens, started from that place on an expe- rimental voyage, having three individuals in the car, and, after having been eighteen liours in the air, descended at Wielburg, in the duchy of Nassau, Nov. 7, 1836. BALLOONS. EQUESTRIAN ASCENTS. Mr. Green affirms that he ascended from London, on a horse attached to a balloon, in May, 1828 ; though few persons seem to be aware that the experiment was made. He performed a feat of this kind, however, from Vauxhall-gardens, in July 1850; his "steed" being a very diminutive pony. To M. Poitevin, of Paris, appears to belong the " honour " of this species of aerosta- tion : he ascended on a horse, in the vicinity of that capital, about the time just mentioned. Lieut. Gale, an Englishman, made an ascent from the Hippodrome of Vincenues, near Bordeaux, Sept. 8, 1850. On descending, and detaching the animal from the balloon, the people who held its ropes, from some misconception, prema- turely let them go, and the unfortunate aeronaut was rapidly borne in the air before he was quite ready to resume his voyage. He was discovered next morning dashed to pieces in a field a mile from where the balloon was found. The ascent of Madame Poitevin from Cremorne gardens, near London, as " Europa on a bull " (a feat she had often performed in France), and several ascents on horses, broiight the parties concerned before the police courts on a charge of cruelty to animals, and put an end to experiments that outraged public feeling, Aug. 1852. BALLINAHINCH, BATTLE of. A sanguinary engagement on the estate of the earl of Moira, afterwards marquess of Hastings, between a large body of the insurgent Irish and tlie British troops, June 13, 1798. In this battle a large part of the town was destroyed, and the royal army suffered very severely. BALTIC EXPEDITION against DENMARK. This was also called the Copenhagen expedition, the Danish expedition, &c. There were two : in the first expedition under lord Nelson and admiral Parker, Copenhagen was bombarded, and twenty-eight sail of the Danish fleet were taken or destroyed, April 2, 1801. See Armed Neutrality. In the second expedition under ralmiral Gambicr and lord Cathcart, eighteen sail of the line, fifteen frigates, and thirty-one brigs and gun-boats surren- dered to the British, July 26, 1807. BALTIC EXPEDITION against RUSSIA. The British fleet sailed from Spithcad in presence of the Queen, who led it out to sea in her yacht, the Fairy, March 11, 1854. It consisted of a crowd of steam-ships of the line, of which, five were each of 120 guns and upwards, the whole under the command of vice-admiral sir Chai'les Napier, whose flag floated on board the Duke of Wellington, of 131 guns. The fleet arrived in Wingo Sound, March 15, and in the Baltic, March 20, following. 10,000 French troops embarked at Calais for the Baltic in English ships of war, in presence of the emperor, Julj' 15. The capture of Bomai-sund, one of the Aland islands, and surrender of the garrison, took place Aug. 16. Sec Bomarsund. The BAL 60 BAN English and French fleets, the latter having joined June 14, commenced their return homeward to winter, Oct. 15, 1854. — The second expedition (of which the advanced or flying squadron sailed March 20), left the Downs, April 9, 1855, and consisted of (all steam vessels) twelve sail of the line, several exceeding 100 gun.'^, with mortar vessels, gun boats, floating batteries, &c., together nearly a hundred pennants, and formed the most powerful and magnificent fleet tliat ever left the shores of England. This fleet, under command of rear-admiral the hou. Richard Sanders Dundas, was further strengthened by a large French fleet, and by reinforcements from England (1855 )— See Russo-TuTlcish War. BALTIMORE, a maritime city in Maryland, United States, founded in 1729. On Sept. 12, 1814, the British army under Gen. Ross, advanced against this place, who was killed, in a skirmish. The command was assumed by Col. Brooke, who attacked and routed the American army, which lost 600 killed and wounded and 300 prisoners. The pro- jected attack on the town was, however, abandoned. — Alison. BAND OP GENTLEMEN PENSIONERS. A court retinue instituted by Henry VIII., 1509. The earl of Essex was appointed their first captain. — Salmon. This retinue now bears the more suitable name of the " Hon. Corps of Gentlemen-at-arms," by an order of his majesty William IV., dated March 17, 1834. — Capi. Curling. BANGALORE, SIEGE of. Commenced by the British under lord Corwallis, March 6, and the town taken by storm, March 21, 1791. Bangalore was restored to Tippoo in 1792, when he destroyed the strong fort, deemed the bulwark of Mysore. BANGOR. Here was one of the earliest monastic institutions in Britain, and its monks were mercilessly murdered by the Danes; its bishopric is of great antiquity, but its founder is unknown ; the church is dedicated to St. Daniel, who was a bishop, anno 516. Owen Glendower greatly defaced the cathedral; but a more cruel ravager than he, the bisliop Bulkely, alienated many of the lands, and even sold the bells of tlie church, 1553. The see is valued in the king's books at 131Z. 16s. 4d. An order in council directing that the sees of Bangor and St. Asaph be united on the next vacancy in either, was issued, Oct. 1838; but this order was rescinded bv the act 10 Vict., 1846. See St. Asajyh. BANGORIAN CONTROVERSY. Dr. Hoadly, bishop of Winchester, preached a sermon before George I., March 31, 1717, from tlie text, " 3fy kingdom is not of this world," in which he descanted on the spiritual nature of the kingdom of Christ. He thereby drew upon himself the indignation of almost all the clergy, and occasioned the famous Bangorian controversy. BANK. The first established was in Italy, a.d. 808, by the Lombard Jews, of whom some settled in Lombard-street, Loudon, where many bankers still reside. The name bank is derived from banco, a bench, which was erected in the market-place for the exchange of money. The mint in the Tower of London was anciently the deposi- tary for merchants' cash, until Chaj-les I. laid his hands upon tlie money and destroyed the credit of the mint in 1640. The traders wei'e thus driven to some [ other place of security for their gold, which, when kept at home, their apprentices frequently absconded with to the army. In 1645, therefore, they consented to lodge it with the goldsmiths in Lombard-street, who were provided with strong chests for their own valuable wares ; and this became the origin of banking in England. Bank of Venice formed . . .a.d. 1157 Bank of Geneva 1345 Bank of Barcelona 1401 Bank of Genoa 1407 Bank of Amsterdam .... 1607 Bank of Hamburg ..... 1619 Bank of Rotterdam 1635 Bunk of Stockholm 1688 Bank of England 1694 BANK or ENGLAND. (See preceding article.) Originally projected by a merchant named Patterson. It was incorporated by William III. in 1694, in consideration of l,200,0O0Z., the then amount of its capital, being lent to government. The capital has gone on increasing from one period to another up to the present time, as the discretion of parliament allowed ; and the same authority has also at different intervals prolonged the privileges of the bank, and renewed its charter. When first established, the notes of the bank were at 20 per cent, discount; and so late as Bank of Scotland . A.D. 1695 Bank of Copenhagen . 1736 Bank of Berlin . . . 1765 Caisse d'Escompte, Franco . 1776 Bank of Ireland . . . 1783 Bank of St. Petersburg . . 1786 In the East Indies . . 1787 And one in America . 1791 Branch Banks in these realms . . 1828 BAN 61 BAN 1745, they were under par. Bank bills were paid in silver, 1745. The first bauk post-bills were issued 1754 ; small notes were issued 1759; cash payments were dis- continued February 25, 1797, when notes of one and tioo pounds were put into circu- lation. Silver tokens appeared in January, 1798; and afterwards Spanish dollars, with the head of George III. stamped on the neck of Charles IV., were made cur- rent. Cash payments were resumed partially, September 22, 1817, and the restriction had altogether ceased in 1821. For a number of years, the financial measures of the crown have been largely aided by loans from this great reservoir of wealth. The average amount of the Bank of England notes ia circvilation is as follows : — In 1718 (earliest account) . . £1, 820,930 1778 7,030,(580 1790 10,217,000 1800 15,450,000 1810 2,'i 904,000 1815 2(1,'803,520 1820 £27,174,000 In 1830 20,020,000 1835 18,215,220 1S40 17,231,000 1845, Jan. 1 . . . . 19,262,327 1851), Jan. 1 19,776,814 1855, Jan. 1 .... 19,616,627 At some periods the note circulation has largely exceeded these amounts. The amount of gold and silver coin and bullion in the bauk fluctuates considerably, and was of late years as low as twelve, and as high as seventeen millions, until 1852, when the increase of gold, consequent chiefly on the discovery of the gold fields of Australia, almost suddenly became immense, and the gold bullion in the bank amounted, on July 10, in that year, to 21,845,390/. On Jan. 1, 1853, the amount was 20,527,662/. The returns of the bank are now (pursuant to the act 7 and 8 Vict., cap. 32) made weekly. To secure the credit of the bank it was enacted, " that no other banking company should consist of more than six persons," 6 Anne, 1707. There are branch banks of the Bank of England in the chief towns of the kingdom : as Birmingham, Bristol, Exeter, Gloucester, Hull, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Norwich, Swansea, &c., all formed since 1828. See Funds. BANK OF IRELAND. Established by act of parliament and opened at Mary's-abbey, Dublin, June 25, 1783. The business was removed to the late houses of parliament, in College-green, in May, 1808. Branch banks of this establishment have been formed in most of the provincial towns in Ireland ; as Armagh, Belfast, Clonmel, Cork, Gal way, Limerick, Newry, Sligo, Waterford, Westport, Wexford, &c., all since 1828. BANK OF SCOTLAND. The old bank was set up in 1695, the year after the estab- lishment of the Bank of England, and was the second institution of the kind in these kingdoms. The Royal bank was instituted in 1727. The Commercial bank in 1810. National bank, 1825. The first stone of the present Bank of Scotland was laid June 3, 1801. BANK OF SAVINGS. Jeremy Bentham suggested a Frugality bank in 11^1.— Young's Annals of Af/rlculture. The first bank actually instituted for the benefit of the poor, was established at Tottenham by Mrs. Elizabeth Wakefield, in 1804. The first bank for savings in Edinburgh was founded in 1814. Several were established in Euglaml in 1816, having been brought under pai'liamentary regulation by the ettbrts of the right hon. George Rose, since which period, savings' banks have been very generally ojiened throughout the United Kingdom. See ^avimjs' Banks. BANKS, JOINT STOCK. A vast number of banks under this denomination have been established in England since the act of the 7 Geo. IV., 1826; they have been instituted in almost every large town in the kingdom. In 1840, the amount of paper currency issued by joint-stock banks amounted to 4,138,618/.; the amount in circulation by private banks, same year, was 6,973,613/. — the total amount exceeding eleven millions. In Ireland many similar banks have been instituted, the first being the Hibernian bank, established by a special act in 1825. The note-circulation of joint- stock banks, on Oct. 1, 1855, was, in England, 3,990,800/. ; in Scotland, 4,280,000/. ; and in Ireland, 6,785.000/.; total, with English private banks, about 19,000,000/.; and with the Bank of England, above 39,000,000/. BANKRUBTS in ENGLAND. The first law enacted regarding them was 35 Henry VIII. 1543; again, 3 Eliz. 15(50 ; 1 James I., 1602; again, 1706; and more i-ecently. It was determined by the King's Bench that a bankrupt may be arrested, except in going to, or coming from any examination before the commissioners. May 13, 1780. The lord chancellor (Thurlow) refu.scd a bankrupt his certificate, because he had lost five pounds at one time in gaming, July 17, 1788. In 1812 it was BAN 62 BAN enacted that members of the House of Commons becoming bankrupt, and not pay- ing their debts in full, should vacate their seats. — See next article. NUMBER OF BANKRUPTS IN GREAT BRITAIN AT DIFFERENT PERIODS. iroo 1725 1750 1775 38 1800 416 1810 432 1820 520 1825 1339 2000 1358 2683 1830 . 1840 . 1845 England 1850 Ditto . 1467 1308 1028 1298 According to a return to parliament made at the close of Febinzary, 1826, there had become bankrupt in the four months preceding, 59 banking-houses, comprising 144 partners ; and 20 other banking establishments had been declared insolvent. Every succeeding week continued to add from seventy to a hundred merchants, traders, and manufacturers to the bankrupt list. This was, however, the pei'iod of bubble speculation, and of unprecedented commercial embarrassment and ruin. BANKRUPTCY COURT. Act empowei-ing his majesty to erect and establish a court of judicature to be called the Court of Bankruptcy, and to appoint a judge thereto, 2 Will. IV., cap. 56, passed Oct. 20, 1831. Bankruptcy act, Ireland, consolidating all the statutes relating to bankruptcy, and founding a complete system of administering banki'upts' estates, 6 Will. IV., cap. 14, passed May 20, 1836. An important act in relation to the Bankrupt court for England and Wales, was passed (12 & 13 Vict., cap. 106) Aug. 1, 1849; it repeals several previous acts; defines the jurisdiction of the court ; prescribes the duties of the official assignee, accountant, and master ; makes various provisions ; regulates fees ; and enumerates the traders and others that shall be deemed bankrupts and liable to become so. The laws relating to Bankrupts were further amended by 17 & 18 Vict. c. 119, passed August 11, 1854. — Statutes at Large. BANNER. Almost every nation had its banner to distinguish it in battle, and under which it fought, inspired with superstitious confidence of success. The standard of Constantine bore the inscription In hoc signo vinces — "In this sign thou shalt conquer," under the figure of the cross. — See Cross. The banner was early in use in England ; the famous magical banner of the Danes was taken by Alfred, a.d. 879. — Spelman. St. Martin's cap, and afterwards the celebrated aiiriflamma, or oriflamme, were the standards of France, about 1100. See Aurijlamma, Standards, &c. BANNERET. Some trace the origin of bannerets to France, others to Britanny, and more to England. These last attribute the institution of this order to Conan, lieutenant of Masimus, who commanded the Roman legions in England, a.d. 383. Banneret is an almost obsolete title of nobility, conferred by the king himself, under the royal standard. The knights led their vassals to battle under their own banner, but knights-bachelors were commanded by a superior. The dignity lies between baron and knight. — Beatson. Created in England, 1360 ; renewed by Henry VII., 1485. It was disused from the reign of Charles I., but was revived by George III. in the person of Sir William Erskine in 1764. BANNOCKBURN, BATTLE of. Between king Robert Bruce, of Scotland, and Edward II. of England ; the army of Bruce consisted of 30,000 Scots, and that of Edward of 100,000 English, of whom 52,000 were archers. The English crossed a rivulet to the attack, and Bruce having dug pits, which he had covered, they fell into them, and were thrown into confusion. The rout was complete, the king narrowly escaping, and 50,000 English were killed or taken prisoners, Jime 25, 1314. BANNS. In the feudal law, banns were a solemn proclamation of anything, and hence arose the custom of asking banns, or giving notice before marriage. Matrimonial banns are said to have been introduced into the Galilean Church, about a.d. 1210; and banns of marriage are proclaimed in the Church of England to this day. BANTAM. The celebrated rich British factory here was first established by captain Lancaster in 1603. The English and Danes were driven from their factories by the Dutch in 1683. Bantam surrendered to the British in 1811, but was restored to the Dutch at the peace in 1814. It was not, in fact, worth retaining; the harbour is now choked up and inaccessible to vessels of burden. BANTRY BAY. A French fleet, with succours of arms, ammunition, and money, to the adherents of James II., attacked in this bay by admiral Herbert, May 1689. A French squadron of seven sail of the line and two frigates, armed enjlute, and seventeen transports, anchored here for a few days, Dec. 1 796. Mutiny of the Bantry Bay squadron under admiral Mitchell was in Dec. 1801. and Jan. 1802. Twenty-two of the mutineers were tried on board the Gladiator, at Portsmouth, when seventeen were BAP 63 BAR condemned to death, of whom eleven were executed; the others were sentenced to receive each 200 lashes : the executions took place on board the Majestic, Centaur Foj-midablc, Temeraire, and L'Achille, Jan. 8 to 18, 1802. BAPTISM. The sacrament of admission instituted by Christ, and practised by all sects professing Christianity, except Quakers. St. John, the forerunner of Our Saviour, is eminently called the Baptist, as being the first that publicly baptised with a spiritual intention. Christ came from Galilee to Jordan, and was baptised by John, a.d. 30. Originally the people were baptised in rivers ; but in the reign of Coustantine, A.D. 319, in great cities they built chapels, or places specially to baptise in, which in the eastern countries was done by dipping the person all over. In the western and colder parts, they use sprinkling ; at first every church had not a baptistery belonging to it ; our fonts answer the same end.- — Pardon. BAPTISTS, OR ANABAPTISTS. A sect distinguished from other Christians by their opinions respecting baptism, began their doctrine about a.d. 1525, but much earlier dates are mentioned. They sufiered much persecution in England in the sixteenth century. Rhode Island, America, was settled by Baptists iu 1635. Of Baptist missions, it may be said, that the Moravian brethren led the way to their benevolent enterprises, about 1732. See Anabaptists. BARBADOES. The first English settlement in the West Indies. This mother plantation gave rise to the sugar trade in England about ] 605 ; and was, with other Carribee islands, settled by charter granted to James, earl of Marlborough, 2 Charles I., 1627. Barbadoes has suffered severely from elemental visitations ; iu a dreadful hurricane in 1780, more than 4000 of the inhabitants lost their lives. A large plantation with all its buildings was destroyed, by the land removing from its original site to another, and covering overy thing in its peregrination, Oct. 1784. An inundation, Nov. 1795; and two great fires. May and Dec. 1796. Awful devastation, with the loss of thousands of lives, and of immense property, by a hurricane, Aug. 10, 1831. Nearly 17,000 persons died of cholei'a here in 1854. BARBER. This trade was practised at Rome in the third century B.C. In England, from the earliest time. " No person using any shaving or barbery in London shall occupy any surgery, letting of blood, or other matter, except only drawing of teeth," 32 Henry VIII., 1540. Barbers formerly exhibited a head, or pole, at their doors ; and the barber's pole afterwards used by them was a burlesque imitation of the former sign. The pole is now confined to humbler barbers' shops. BARBER-SURGEONS. Anciently the business of a surgeon was united to that of barber, and he was denominated a barber-surgeon. A company was formed under this name in 1308, and the Loudon company was incorporated, 1 Edw. IV., 1461. This union of professions was dissolved by a statute of Henry VIII. BARCLAY, CAPTAIN. His celebrated walking wager, to walk 1000 miles in 1000 suc- cessive hours, each mile within each hour, an.d upon which hundreds of thousands of pounds depended, was accomplished July 10, 1809. This feat occupied, without intermission, every hour (less eight) of forty-two days and nights. — A wager was won by a young lady, at Newmarket, who had undei'taken to ride 1000 miles in 1000 hours, which she performed in little more than two-thirds of the time. May 3, 1758. — Butler. See Walking. BARDS. The profession of bard appeared with great lustre in Gaul, Britain, and Ireland. Demodocus is mentioned as a bard by Homer ; Alexander the Great had a bard named Chcrylus ; and wo find bards, according to Strabo, among the Romans before the age of Augustus. The Druids among the English w-ere philosophers and priests, and the bards were their poets. They were the recorders of heroic actions in Ireland and Scotland, alii:ost down to our own times. Ossian flourished in the third century, Merlin in tlie fifth. The former speaks of a prince who kept a hundred bards. Irish ballads are the chief foundations of the ancient history of Ireland. See Ballads. BAREBONES' PARLIAMENT. Cromwell having the power of the three kingdoms in his hands, and not yet thiuking it a proper time to usurp the whole authority of the state, summoned about 1"20 persons, such as he thought he could manage, who, with six from Scotland, and five from Ireland, met, and assumed the name of parliament. One of them, a leather-seller, who, according to these fanatical times, was called " Praise-God Barebone.s," as being a great haranguer and frequent in prayer, gave to the assembly the derisive name of the " Barcbones' Parliament." But soon finding the weight of government too great for their shoulders, they resigned their power. BAR 64 BAR upon which Cromwell became invested with the supreme management of public affairs, 1653. — diaries Home. BARFLEUR. At this port William the Conqueror equipped the fleet by which he conquered England, 1066. Near it, prince William, son of Henry I., in his passage from Normandy^ was shipwi'ecked, 1120.* Barfieur was taken and destroyed by the English in the same campaign in which they fought and won the battle of Crecy, a.d. 13i6. Destruction of the French navy near this cape by admiral Russell, after the victory of La Hogue, in 1692. BARING ISLAND, discovered by captain Penny in 1850-51, and so named by him after Sir Francis Baring, first lord of the admiralty in 1849. BARK, The JESUITS'. Its medicinal virtues first discovered in Peru, by the Indians about 1535. Brought into Europe by some Jesuits, from whom it took its common name, 1649. Introduced into general medical practice in France about 1680, and in England by Sir Hans Sloane, about 1700. See Jesuits. BARM, OR YEAST. Said to have been first used by the Celtse in the composition of bread. Eggs, milk, and honey, were the ingredients used in making bread till the knowledge of brewing acquainted the Celtse with this mode to render it lighter. BARNET, BATTLE of, between the houses of York and Lancaster, when Edward IV. gained a decisive and memorable victory over the Earl of Warwick, Easter-day, April 14, 1471. The earl of Warwick, liis brother the marquis of Montacute, and ten thousand of his army were slain. At the moment Warwick fell, he was leading a chosen body of troops into the thickest of the slaughter, and his body was covered with wounds. — Goldsmith. A column commemorative of this battle has been erected at the meeting of the St. Alban's and Hatfield roads. — Brooks. BAROMETERS. Tomcelli, a Florentine, having discovered that no principle of suction existed, and that water did not rise in a pump, owing to nature's abhorrence of a vacuum, imitated the action of a pump with mercury, and made tlie first barometer, in 1643, and Descartes explained the phenomena. Wheel barometers were contrived in 1668; pendant barometei'S in 1695; marine in 1700. — The Aneroid barometer, from a, no, and vripos, wateiy, no liquid being employed in its construction; the atmospheric pressure being exerted on a metallic spring. Its invention is variously attributed to Cont^, in 1798, and Vidi, about 1844. It excited much attention in 1848-9. BARONS. The dignity of baron is extremely ancient : its original name in England was Vavasour, which, by the Saxons, was changed into Tliane, and by the Normans into Baron. Many of this rank are named in the history of England, and undoubtedly had assisted in, or had been summoned to parliament; but such is the deficiency of public records, that the first precept to be found is of no higher date than the 49 Henry III., 1265. The first who was raised to this dignity by patent was John de Beauchamp, created bai'on of Kidderminstei', by Richard II., 1387. Barons first summoned to parliament, 1205. Took arms against king John, and compelled him to sign the great charter of our liberties, and the charter of our forests, at Runny- mede, near Windsor, June 1215. Charles II. granted a coronet to barons on his restoration : they attended parliament in complete armour in the reign of Henry III. — Beatson. BARONETS. The first among the gentry, and the only knighthood that is hereditary, instituted by James I., 1611. Tlie baronets of Ireland were created in 1619. The rebellion in Ulster seems to have given rise to this order, it having been required of a baronet, on his creation, to pay into the exchequer as much as would maintain " thirty soldiers three years at eightpence a day, in the province of Ulster in Ireland." It was further required that a baronet should be a gentleman born, and have a clear estsite oi lOOOl. per annum. The first baronet was sir Nicholas Bacon (whose suc- cessor is therefore styled Primus Baronettorum Anglice), May 22, 1611. The first Irish baronet was Sir Francis Blundell. Baronets of Nova Scotia were created, 1 625. Sir Robert Gordon was the first baronet. All baronets created since the Irish union in 1801, are of the United Kingdom. BARRACKS. This word is not to be found in our early lexicographers ; it comes to us * In this shipwreck perished his legitimate son, William, duke of Normandy ; the prince's newly- married bride, Matilda, daughter of Fulke, earl of Anjou ; the king's natural son, Richard; his niece, Lucia ; the earl of Chester, and the flower of the nobility, with one hundred and forty officers and soldiers, and fifty sailors, most of whom were in liquor, which was the occasion of their running upon the rocks near Barfieur. This lamentable catastrophe had such an effect upon Henry, that he wus never seen afterwards to smile. — Menault : Hunie. BAR 65 BAR from the French, and in the Diet, de I'Acad. is thus defined : " Baraque — HuUe qui font les soldats en campngne pour se meltre a convert." — Barracks were not numerous in these countries until about 1789. A superintendent-general board was appointed in 1793, since when commodious barracks have been built in the various garrison towns and central points of the empire. See Aldershott. BARRIER TREATY. By this celebrated treaty, the Low Countries were ceded to the emperor Charles VI. It was signed by the British, Imperial, and Dutch ministers, ou the part of their respective sovereigns, Nov. 15, 1715. BARRISTERS. They are said to have been first appointed by Edward I., about 1291 ; but there is earlier mention of professional advocates in England. There are various ranks of barristers, as King's Counsel, Serjeants, &c., which see. Students for the bar must keep a certain number of terms at the Inns of Court, previously to being called ; and Irish studeuts also must keep eight terms in England. The original intention of the statute, as respected Ireland, was the cultivation of English habits and associations, and attention to the working of the courts at Westminster. BARROSA, OR BAROSSA, BATTLE of, between the British army, commanded by major-genei-al Graham, afterwards lord Lynedoch, and the French under marshal Victor. After a long conflict, the British achieved one of the most glorious triumphs of the Peninsular war. Although they fought to great disadvantage, they compelled the enemy to retreat, leaving nearly three thousand dead, sis pieces of cannon, and an eagle, the first that the British had taken ; the loss of the British was 1169 men killed and wounded, March 5, 1811. BARROWS. The circular mounds found in Britain and other countries to record a burial on the spot. They were the most ancient sepulchres ; but lest the relics of the dead should be violated by enemies, the custom of burning the dead was commenced by Sylla, and it was not in disuse until the time of Macrobius. Sir Richard Hoare caused several barrows near Stonehenge to be opened ; in them were found a number of curious remains of Celtic ornaments, such as beads, buckles, and brooches, in amber, wood, and gold, — Nov. 1808. BARROW'S STRAITS. Discovered by Parry, who penetrated as far as Melville Island, in lat. 74° 26' N, and long. 113° 47' VV. The strait was entered on August 2, 1819. The lowest state of the thermometer was 55° below zero of Fahrenheit. These straits were so named by him, in honour of sir John Barrow, bart. BARROW, JOHN, ISLAND. Discovered by captain Penny in 1850-51, and so named by him in honour of John Barrow, esq., keeper of the records of the admiralty, and son of the late sir John Barrow, bart. BARTHOLOMEW, ST. Martyred, August 24. a.d. 71. The festival was instituted in 1130. Monastery of St. Bartholomew (Austin Friars) founded in the reign of Henry I. by Rahere, 1102. On its dissolution the hospital of this name in London was enlarged, 1539, and was incorporated in the last year of the reign of Henry VIII., 1546-7. It was rebuilt by subscription in 1729. — The charter for the fair was granted by Henry II. ; and was held on the ground wiiich was the former scene of tournaments and martyrdoms. The spot where the latter took place is situated in the centre of the pens, where the gas-lamp now stands (1855). Here Wat Tyler was killed by the lord mayor Walworth in 1381, in consequence of which the dagger was added to the city arms. The fair has latterly been discontinued. See Smithfield. BARTHOLOMEW, MASSACRE of ST. This dreadful massacre in Franco, commenced at Paris on the night of the festival of St. Bartholomew, August 24, 1572. According to Sully, 70,000 Huguenots, or French Protestants, were murdered throughout the kingdom, by secret orders from Charles IX., at the instigation of the queen dowager, Catherine de' Medici, his mother. The missacre was attended with circumstances of demoniacal cruelty, even a-s regarded the female and the infant. The number of the victims is differently stated by various authors. La Popdlionero calculates the whole at 20,000; Adriani, De Serres, and De Thou, say 30,000; Davila states them at 40,000 ; Sully (whose account is the received one) at 70.000 ; and Pdrdfixe makes the number 100,000. Above 500 persons of rank, and 10,000 of inferior condition, perished in Paris alone, besides those slaughtered in the provinces. — Davila. B.\RTHOLOMITES. A religious order founded, a.d. 1307, at Genoa, where is preserved in the Bartholomite church, the image which it is said Christ sent to king Abgarus. The order suppressed by pope Innocent X., 1650. F BAS 66 BAT BASILIANS. The order of St. Basil, of which, in the saint's time, there were ninety thousand monks ; it was reformed by pope Gregory, in 1569. — A sect founded by Basil, a physician of Bulgaria, on the most extravagant notions : they rejected the books of Moses, and also the eucharist and baptism, and had everything, even their wives, in common, 1110. Basil was burnt alive in 1118. BASKET-MAKING. The art was vei-y early known in Britain, and it is recorded that our ancestors made baskets which were celebrated for their workmanship at Rome. " Failing in that new pursuit, I returned to my old trade of basket-making," is a well-known common-place in England. — Rogers. BASQUE ROADS. Heroic achievement in these roads by the British, Four French ships of the line, while riding at anchor, were attacked by lord Gambler and lord Cochrane (the latter commanding the fire-ships), and all, with a great number of merchant and other vessels, were destroyed, April 12, 1809. But a serious difference between these officers on this occasion led to a court-martial on charges preferred by lord Cochrane, against lord Gambler, who was honourably acquitted. BASS'S STRAITS. Mr. Bass, surgeon of the Reliance, penetrated in 1797 as far as Western Port, in an open boat from Port Jackson, and affirmed that a strait existed between New South Wales and Van Diemeu's Land. Lieutenant Flinders circum- navigated Van Die men's Land, and named the strait after Mr. Bass, 1799. BASSET, OR BASSETTE, or Pour et Centre. A game at cards, invented by a noble Venetian, for which he was banished ; introduced into France, 1674. BASTARD CHILDREN. An attempt was made in England in 1272, to make bastard children legitimate by the subsequent marriage of the parents, but it failed, and led to the memorable answer of the barons assembled in the parliament of Merton, Nolumus leges Angliw mutari — We will not the laws of England to be changed. Women concealing their children's birth, deemed guilty of murder, 21 James I. 1624. — Viner's Statutes. In Scotland, bastard children had not the power of dis- posing of their moveable estates by will, until the 6 Will. IV. 1836. A new act, facilitating the claims of mothers, and making several provisions for proceeding iu bastardy cases, was passed 8 Vict. cap. 10, in 1845. BASTILE OF PARIS. A royal castle, built by Charles V. king of France, in 1369 et seq., for the defence of Paris against the English, completed in 1383. It was afterwards used as a state prison, like the Tower of London, and became the scene of the most deplorable suffering and frightful crimes. It was of such strength that Henry IV. and his veteran army assailed it in vain in the siege of Paris, during the intestine war that desolated France between the years 1587 and 1594 ; yet it was pulled down by the infuriated populace, July 14, 1 789, and thus was commenced the French revolution. On the capture of this great monument of slavery, the governor and other officers were seized, and conducted to the Place de Greve, and having had their hands cut off, they were then beheaded. The furious citizens having fixed their heads on pikes carried them in triumph through the streets. " The man with the iron mask," the most mysterious prisoner ever known, died here, Nov. 19, 1703. See Iron Mask. BATAVIA. The capital of Java, and of all the Dutch settlements in the East Indies, fortified by that people, 1618. Twelve thousand Chinese were massacred here in one day, 1740. Taken by the English, January, 1782. Again, by the British, under general sir Samuel Auchmuty, to whom the garrison surrendered, Aug. 8, 1811. BATH. This city was very early a favourite station of the Romans, and was 'remark- able even in their time for its springs. Coel, a British king, is said to have given this city a charter, and the Saxon king Edgar was crowned here, a.D. 973. Bath was plundered and burnt in the reign of William Rufus, and again in 1137. The Abbey church was commenced in 1495, and was finished in 1532 : the Assembly-rooms were built in 1791 ; the Pump-room, in 1797 ; the Theatre, Beaufort-square, was opened in 1805. The Bath Philosophical Society was formed in 1817. BATH, EARL op; HIS ADMINISTRATION. Mr. Pelham and his friends having tendered their resignation to the king (George II.), the formation of a new ministry was undertaken by William Pultoney, earl of Bath ; but it expired within two days while yet incomplete, and received the name of the " Short-lived " administration. The members of it actually appointed, were : the earl of Bath, first lord of the treasury ; lord Carlisle, lord privy-seal ; lord Winchilsea, first lord of the admiralty ; and lord Granville, one of the secretaries of state, with the seals of the other in his BAT 67 BAT pocket, "to be given to whom he might choose." Feb. 10, 1746. Mr. Pelham and his colleagues returned to power, Feb. 12. — Coxe's Life of Pelham. BATH AND WELLS, BISHOPRIC of. An ancient see, whose cathedral church was built by lua, king of the West Saxons, in 704 ; it was erected into a bishopric, 6 Edward the Elder, 905. John de Villula, the sixteenth bishop, having purchased the city of Bath for 500 marks of Henry I., transferred his seat to Bath from Wells, in 1088 ; and from this, disputes arose between the monks of Bath and the canons of Wells about the election of a bishop ; but they were compromised in 1136, when it was decreed, that from henceforward the bishop should be styled from both places, and that the precedency should be given to Bath. This see is valued in the king's books at 53H. Is. Zd. per annum. BATH, ORDER of the. The origin of this order is ascribed to the ancients Franks, with whom it is probable the Saxons who invaded England had the same common descent, and who, with other customs, upon their settling here, introduced the same method of knighthood. These ancient Franks, when they conferred knighthood, bathed before they performed their vigils, and from this ablution came the title of knights of the Bath. Henry IV. instituted a degree of knighthood of the Bath, and on his coronation in the Tower he conferred the order upon forty-six esquires, who had watched the night before, and had bathed. After the coronation of Charles II. the order was neglected until 1725, when it was revived by George I., who fixed the number of knights at 37. In 1815, the prince regent enlarged the order, forming the present classes of knights grand crosses (72), and knights commanders (180), with an unlimited number of companions. See Knighthood. BATHS. Baths were long used in Greece, and introduced by Maecenas into Rome. The thermse of the Romans and gymnasia of the Greeks were sumptuous. The marble Laocoon was found in the baths of Titus, and the Farnese Hercules in those of Caracalla. — Strabo, BATHS IN ENGLAND. The baths of Somersetshire are said to have been in use eight centuries before Christ. In London, St, Agnes Le Clere, in Old-street-road, is a spring of great antiquity, and was well known in the time of Henry VIII. St. Chad's-well, Gray's-iun-road, derived its name from St. Chad, the fifth Bishop of Lichfield, in AD. 667. Old Bath-iiouse, Coldbath-square, was in use in 1697. A bath opened in Bagnio-court, London, is said to have been the first bath established in England for hot bathing. — Lei[/h. BATHS AND WASH-HOUSES, PUBLIC. An act to encourage the establishment of public baths and wash-houses, " for the health, comfort, and welfare of the inhabitants of populous towns and districts," was passed (9 & 10 Vict. cap. 74) Aug. 26, 1846. In the same session (cap. 87) a similar act was passed for Ireland. Several of these instituti Xantippus and Regains . . . 255 Asdrubal and Metellus . . 251 Lilybasum (Elder Hannibal) . . 250 Sellasia in Lacouia. . 222 Caphyaj, in Arcadia . . . 220 *Hannibal takes Saguntum . . 219 'Punic war (the Sicond) begins . . . 218 *Raphia (Antiochus defeated) . . 217 Trebia ( Victory of Hannibal) . . . 218 *Thrasymenus (do.). . 217 *Cann:i;((to.) .... . . 216 MarcoUus and Hannibal. . 209 'Mantinea (Machanidas slain) . . . 208 Nero and Asdrubal . 203 *Zama (Scipio and Hannibal) . . 202 Abydos (Siege of) .... . 200 Cyuocephalus .... . . 197 Perseus and the Romans . i;i i [The battles which are thus (*) marked will be found described in their alphabetical order through the volume, for more particular reference.] BAT 69 BAT BATTLES, cunlinmd. Prusias and Attalus . *Punic Vfa.r (the Third) *Carthage taken by Publius Scipio Metellus defeats Jugurtha . Aqufe Soxtiai .... *Cimbri and Romans Nicomedes and Mithridates Athens besieged by Sylla *Chasrouea (Si/Ua) Marius defeated by Sylla Jericho *Phai-salia .... *Zela (Ccesar ; Veni, vidi, vici) . Muuda, iu Spain *Philippi (Roman Republic ends) Octavius and Pompoy the Younger *Aotium (the empire of Rome is confirmed to Augustus Gvesar) . ANNO *Shropshire (Caraetacus taken) Boadicea and Romans *Jerusalem ..... Silures defeated in Britain Antoninus and the Moors Issus (Niger slain) Claudius and Goths (300,000 slain) Constantius and Aleotus . *Constantine and Maxentius ("In signo vinces ") *Adrian()ple (Constantine) . *Aquileia (Constantine II. slain) *Argentaria, in Alsace *Aquileia (Maximus slain) *Aquileia (Eugenius slain) . Mountains of Fesulaj *Rome taken by Alaric Alemauni and Goths *Havenna Franks defeated by Aetius . Genseric takes Carthage . *Stamford (Britons and Sax07is) Clullons-sur-Marne . Ebro (Suevi and Goths) . Crayford, Kent .... Il)swich (Britons and Saxons) Saxons and Britons . Pevensey Moor Saxons and Britons . Bath Banbury . " . . . Bedford Hatfield (Penda and Edtrin) Oswestry (Penda and Oswald) Leeds Laudisfam . hoc DANISH INVASIONS, ETC, Helston (Danes and Egbirt) Romney (Klhelwolf and Banes) Stoko-Courcy (Danes). Canterbury (Danes) *Thanet (Danes now settle here) . Mertou (Danes) Assendon (Danes) Wilton (Danes) Faruham (Danes) Bury (F.tlirnrd and Etlielwald) Maldon (Danes) .... Stamford, Lincolnshire . AVidoudane .... Brombridgo .... *Seniiucas, Spain [The Saxons and Danes fought with different success from i)3S to 101(5.] B.C. 155 149 146 109 102 101 90 87 86 82 67 48 47 45 42 36 31 DOMINI . 51 . 61 . 70 . 70 . 145 . 194 . 269 296 312 323 340 378 388 394 405 410 417 426 428 439 449 451 456 457 466 477 485 508 520 5-12 571 633 641 665 740 834 840 845 852 854 871 871 872 894 905 918 923 938 938 938 Ashdon (Canute and Edmund) . 1016 . Oct. 5, Oct. 14, Crossford (viith the WelsJi) . *Cloutarf, Ireland . *Dunsinane .... Stamford (//araM). *Hastings (Conquest) . Llechryd, Wales Alnwick .... •Ci-usades commence *Tiuchebray, Normandy Rouen, in Normandy . Brennevillo, Normandy . Cardigan ( Welsh ami English) ♦Northallerton, or battle Standard Yor]L (castle besiigid) *Ourique, Portugal Leeds (besieged by K 'Lincoln .... English defeat off Anglesey . 'Ratiitew (Argyll and Angus) . . . Farnham, Surrey (Leicester and De L\iry) Alnwick ( IFm. Z/ie Xio») . . July 13, *KscA\on (Richard I.) . . Sept. 3, *Gisors (Dieu ei mon droit) Black Mountains (Adolphus) . . . •Bovines (French and Germans) •Lincoln .... May 19, Tholosa John) of the Aug. 22, July 25^ . Feb. 2, May 14, Aug. 4, . July 22, . Fcb.'24i . June 25, Baliol and . July 31, 'july'19; Aug. 25, Sei'.t. 19^ ■"Lewes *Evcsham .... Chesterfield Llewellyn and the English * Dunbar (King of Scots taken) •Falkirk (((oHoec) Courtray, in Flanders Rosliu, Scotland . *Baunockburn . *Boroughbridge Duplin, Scotland (Edward EiirlofMar) *Brec!iiu (Siige of) *Halidon Hill, Berwick *Dunbar (Siege of) . Aberoche, France *Cressy (Ich Dieu) . ' Durham, Nevil's Cross . *Poitiers Auray, in Brittany ■Rochelle .... "Berwick .... *Kosbach "Sempach .... "Otterburn (Chivy Cliase) . Myton-upon-Swalo, York *Nicopolis (Turks and Christians) Kincardine, Scotland *Nisbet 'Shrewsbury (Batthfield) Monmouth . *Harlaw .... 'Agincourt . *Nicopolis (.wcojii/) *Anjou, or Beague *Crevant, Burgundy *Verneuil ... •Patay, (Joan of Arc and the English) *lleiTings *Brcchin, Scotland . *Castillou, in Guiunuo Nov. 17, July 9, May 7, July 21, May 11, July 24, Oct. 25, June 11, .\ug. 16, A.D. 1038 1039 1054 1066 1066 losr 1092 1096 1106 1117 1119 1136 11S8 1138 1139 11.39 1141 1157 1164 1173 1174 1191 1198 1212 1214 1217 1220 1264 1265 1266 1282 1296 1298 1302 1303 1314 1322 1332 1333 1333 1337 1344 1346 1346 1356 1363 1371 1378 1382 1386 1388 1391 1396 1397 1402 1403 1405 1411 1415 1420 1421 1423 1424 1429 1429 1452 1453 WAR OF THE ROSES. "St. Alban's(rorA-ajid Xajiccwto-) . . 1455 "Belgrade 1456 "Bloreheath .... Sept. 23, 1459 "Northampton . . . . July 19, 1400 •Wakefield .... Dec. 31, 1460 Mortimer's Cross . . . Feb. 2 1461 [The battles which are thus (*) marked will be found described in their alphabetical order through the volume, for more particular refurcnce.J BAT 70 BAT BATTLES, continued. *Towton March 29, *lSt. Alban's (second) . . . Feb. 15, *Hexham (Yorkis!s defeated) . May 15, Banbury .... July '2(3, *Stamford March 13, *Bamet (Edward IV.) . . April 11 *Tewkesbury .... May 4, Murteii (diaries the Bold) . June 22, *Bosworth . . . . A>ig. 22, Stoke (Lambert Simnel taken) St. Aubiu, in France Kuocktow, Ireland . . . . * Blackheath (Cornish rebels defeated) *Ravenna (Gaston de Foix) . April 11 *Flodden Sept. 9^ *Guinegate, or Battle of Spurs . *Mariguan, Italy . . . Sept. 13, Bicocco, near Milan *Pavia (French and Austrians) Feb. 24 *Mohatz Aug. 19 *Solway Moss . . . . Nov. 25, Ancram, Scotland . . Feb. 17, *Pinkey Sept. 10, *Ket and Warwick .... *St. Quintin .... Aug. 10, *Cida.is (taken) . . . . Jan. Graveliues, in Flanders Dreux, in France .... St. Denis (MoMmorency) . *Langside . • . . May 13, * Jarnac March 13 Monoontour (Raleigh) "Lepanto .... Oct. 7, Coutras (K. of Navarre and France) Arques (Huguenots victorious) . Blackwater, Ireland ... Nieuport, Flanders .... Kinsale (Siege of) .... ♦Prague Nov. 7 •Lutzingen (Gustavus slain) Arras, in France .... CIVIL WAR COMMENCES. * Worcester .... Sept. 13, •Edgehill fight .... Oct. 23, Liscarrol, Ireland Kilrush Ballintobber Hopton Heath Rocroy (French and Spaniards) . . Drayton-iu-Hales . . . Jan. 25, Barnham Moor . . . March 29, Ross, Ireland Lansdown (Royaliats beaten) July 5, Rouud-away-down . . July 13, *Newbury (Lord Falkland killed) *Stratton (poet Waller) *Alderton Moor Donnington, Lincoln Liskeard, Cornwall Alresford .... Friedburg, Suabia Oldcastle, Chester *Cropredy Bridge, Oxford *Marston Moor *Newark .... *Newbury (second battle) *Naseby .... *Alford (Covenanters) Donnington, Gloucester . *Benburb, Ireland . Kingston, Surrey *Dun!8 Aklialzic .... . Aug. 24, 1828 Czoroi .... . Sept. 26, 1828 •Varna (surrmiler.t) . Oct. 11, 1828 •Morea (Castle surrenders) . Oct. 30, 1828 •Lepanto (Greeks) . May '.), 1829 Kulertscha, near Schumla . June 11, 1829 Silistria (.turrenders) . June 18, 1829 •Balkan (Passage of llie) . July 26, 1829 *Adrianoi)le (entered) . Aug. 20, 1829 •Algiers (French) . . July 4, 1830 *Piiris(Da>/sor'Juhj) . July 27, 28,' 29, 1830 •Brussels (Dutch) . . Sept. 21, 1830 •Antwerp .... . Oct. 27, 1830 Grochow. See Warsaw . . Feb. 20, 1831 yfawt (Poles) . . ' . March 31, 1831 A.D. «Seidlez(PoJ60. • • . April 10, 1831 •ZeUcho (Poles) .... April 10, 1831 •Oscroleuka (Poles) . . . May 26, 1831 »Wilna (Pules) .... June 12, 1831 *\\arn:ivr (taken) . . . Sept. 8, 1831 Vallonga (Don Pedro) . . July 23, 1832 •Kouiah Dec. 21, 1833 Leiria (Portugal) . . . Feb. 14, 1834 •St. Sebastian .... May 5, 1836 •St. Sebastian . ... Oct. 1, 1836 •Bilboa (British Legion) . . Dec. 24, 1836 Heruani . . ... May 15, 1837 *lruii (British Legion) . . May 17, 1837 Valeiitia July 15, 1837 •Herora (Don Carlos) . . Aug. 24, 1837 •Constautina (^(jriers) . . . Oct. 13, 1837 •St. Eustace (Canada) . . Dec. 14, 1837 Penuecerrada (Spain). . . June 22, 1838 Altura (6;i)ai/i) . . . June 25, 1838 •Prescott (Canada) . . . Oct. 17, 1838 •Ghiznee (India) . . . July 23, 1839 •Fall of Morella .... May 31, 1840 •Capture of Sidon. See Syria Sept. 27, 1810 * Fall of Bey rout, . . . Oct. 10, 1840 Afghanistan. See India . Nov. 2, 1840 *Storming of Acre . . . Nov. 3, 1840 Kotriah (Sciiide) . . . Dec. 1, 1840 Chuen-pe. See China . . Jan. 7, 1841 Clinton (Bngue farts taken) . Feb. 26, 1841 Amoy (citt/ taken) . . . Aug. 27, 1841 Chin-hae (taken) . . . Oct. 10, 1841 ''Cabul (mas.?acre) . . . Nov. 2, 1841 Yu-yaou (taken) . . . Dec. 28, 1841 *Cabul pass (ma-tsacre) . . Jan. 8, 1842 Candahar (Afghans) . . March 10, 1842 Ning-po. See China . .' March 10, 1842 Jellalabad (India) . . . April 5, 1842 Chiu-keang. See China . . July 21, 1842 •Ghiznee (India) . . . Sept. 6, 1842 Ameers of Sciude . . . Feb. 17, 1843 Maliarajpoor and |. g^^ ^„^.^ ^^^ 29, 1843 Punniar . J •Moodkee (India) . . . Dec. 18, 1845 •Ferozeshah (India) . . . Dec. 21, 1845 PhuUoor (India: Sir H. Smith's army attacked on the Sutlej by the Jan. 21, 1846 Sikhs) . •Aliwal (India) . •Sobraon (India) Montery (.Ut'Xifo) Bueno Vista (i/'j;ic-o) St. Ubes (Portugal) . Mexico (tkott) . Sonderbund Valanese (llwngarians) . •Mooltan (India) . •ChiUianwallah (India) . •Goojerat (India) . Vigovano (/{(K^if.s'ti) Novaro (Sardinian.t) . Kronstadt (Hnnijarians). Acs (Austr. and Hung.) . . yf:iitzcn (ditto) Schiissburg (Hem) . . . tcmesv/iir (Ilai/nau) Ustcdt (Dams and Holts) . . •Oltenitza i Turks and Russians) "Citato (Turks (Uid Russians) . Jan 28, 1816 . Feb. 10, 1846 . Sept. 24, 1846 . Feb. 22, 1847 . May 9, 1847 . Aug. 19, 1847 . Nov. 13, . Sept. 29, . Nov. 7, . Jan. 13, . Feb. 21, March 21, 1849 ftl.irch 23, 1849 . June 21, 1819 . July 2, 1849 . July 14, 1849 . July 31, 1849 . Aug. 9, 1849 July 2.5, 1850 Nov. 4, 1853 Jan. 6. 1854 1847 1848 1848 1849 1849 (jtinrgevt (Turks and Ru.tsians) July 8, 1854 Ji,i.yiiz\d (Ka.'isians and Turkt) July 30, 1854 Kuruk-Dui-ek (/iits«. ami Turks) Aug. 5, 1854 *\Una, (Allies and Russians) . Sept. 20, 1854 *B:\h\\iiav:i(AlliesaHd llussians) Oct. 25, 1854 •Inkermannf.-K/icsand /i«i'«ian.«) Nov. 5, 1854 'Eu|iatoria( 7'(U-(i«)id. The archbishops of Canterbury and York, taking place of all dukes, have the title of Grace. The bishops of London, Durham, and Winchester have precedence of all bishops ; the others rank according to the seniority of conse- cration. A late contest in Ireland between the bishops of Meath and Kildare for precedency was decided in favour of the former, who now ranks after the archbishop of Dublin. The others rank according to consecration. BISHOPRICS, COLONIAL. The first was the Right Rev. Doctor Samuel Seabury, con- secrated bishop of Connecticut by four noujuriug prelates, at Aberdeen, in Scotland, November 14, 1784. The bishops of New York and Pennsylvania were consecrated in London, by the archbisliop of Canterbury, Feb. 4, 1787 ; and the bishop of Virtiinia in 1790. The first Roman Catholic bishop of the United States was Dr. Carroll of Miryland, in 1789. Bishops of Quebec, Jamaica, Gibraltar, &c. were afterwards appointed. Colonial bishoprics have since been established in all our important settle- ments. That of Calcutta, by act 53 Goo. III. c. 155, passed July 21, 1813 ; of Madras, 3 & 4 Will. IV. c. 85, passed Aug, 28, 1833; and of Bombay, same time. There are now twetity-uine bishops for the colonies, all appointed since 1836, those above excepted. Adelaide. Antigua. Barbadoes. Bombay. Calcutta. Capo Town. Colombo. Predericton. Gibraltar. Graham's-town. Guiana. Jamaica. Labuan. Madras. Mauritius. Jlelbourne. Montreal. Natal. Newcastle. Newfoundland. New Zealand. Nova Scotia. Rupert's Land. Quebec. Sierra Leone. Sydney. Tasmania. Toronto. Victoria. By 15 & 16 Vict. c. 52, and 16 & 17 Vict. c. 49, the colonial bishops may perform all episcopal functions in the United Kingiom, but have no jurisdiction. BISSEXTILE, OB LEAP YEAR. An intercalary day was thrown into every fourth year to adjust the calendar, and make it agree with the sun's course. It originated with Julius Cajsar, who ordered a day to be counted before the 24th of February, which among the Romans was the 6th of the calends, and which was therefore reckoned twice, and called bissextile, 45 B.C. This added day we name the 29i,h of February every fourth year. See Calendar and Leap Year. BITHYNI A. This country, previou.sly called Behricia, was first invaded by the Thracians under Bithynus, son of Jupiter, who gave it the name of Bithynia. It was suV)ject successively to the Assyrians, Lydians, Persians, and Macedonians. Mo*t of tlie cities were built by Grecian colonists. The first king of whom we have anj' knowledge is Dydalsus, who, in the reign of Artaxerxes Muemon (b.c. 333) made himself independent. Of the customs of the Bithynians we know little more than that, in imitation of the Persians, they built no temples to their deities, and that they placed their tribunals of justice opposite to the sun, to remind the judges that tlieir decisions should be enlightened. on the throne of B.C. Dydalsus appears Bitliynia .... Botyras, his son, succeeds . . . . Bas, or Bias, sou of Bjtyras ZypoiJtes, son of Bias He defeats the Syrian general Patrocles . Zypoetes dies, leavin ? four sons, of whom the eldest, Nioomsdes, succeeds . Hisqueon, Ditizele, torn to pieces by dogs that guarded her palace . . . . 38.3 S7S 334 318 279 273 251 Zoilas, sou of Nicomodos, reigns B.C. 243 Intending to m issacre the chiefs of tlie Gauls at a feast. Zcilas is detected in his design, and is himself put to death . . 230 His sou, Prusias, succeeds . . . ♦ Prusias defeats the Gauls, and takes several of their citie? . . . . 223 Prusias forms an alliance with the king of Macedon, and maiTies Apamea, the daughter of Philip .... 20S BIT 88 BLA the kingdom with an army of 250,000 infantry, 40, 000 cavalry, and 130 chariots armed with scythes . . . B.C. 86 The fleet of Bithyuia surrenders to that of Pontus * * Nicomedes, dyine, bequeaths Ms kingdom to the Roman republic . . . .75 BITHYNIA, Continued. Prusias II., his son . . . B.C. 186 Defeats the army of Attains, king of Per- gamus, and takes that city . . . 155 Nicomedes II . 149 Assassinated by his brother . . .92 Nicomedes III., surnamed Philopater . Deposed at the head of 50,000 men, by Mithridates, king of Pontus, who enters la modern history, Bithynia makes no figure, except that from its ruins rose the Othinan Turks, who, in a.d. 1327, took Prusa, its capital, and made it the seat of their empire before they possessed Constantinople. BLACK BOOK. A book kept in the exchequer, which received the orders of that court. A book kept in the English monasterie.?, wherein details of the scandalous enormities pi'actised in religious houses were entered for the inspection of visitors, under Henry VIII. 1535, in order to blacken them and hasten their dissolution; hence the vulgar phrase, " I'll set you down in the black book." BLACKBURN, in Lancashire, so called in Domesday-book. The manufacture of a cloth called Blackburn cheque, carried on in 1650, was superseded by Blackburn greys. In 1767, James Hargreave-s, of this town, invented the spinning-jenny, for which he was eventually expelled from the county; and it was not till 1810 or 1812 that the townspeople availed themselves of his discoveries and engaged largely in the cotton manufacture, now their staple trade. BLACK-HOLE at CALCUTTA. Here 146 British gentlemen, merchants and others, in the service of the East India Company, were seized by order of the nabob, Surajah Dowlah, and thrust into a dungeon called the "Black-hole," in the fort, by his soldiers. These latter saw that the place was too small for such a number, but they were afraid to awaken the nabob, then asleep, for further orders. One hundred and twenty -three of the sufferers died before morning, having been suffocated by the heat, crushing, and stench of a dungeon only eighteen feet square, June 20, 1756. Calcutta was retaken next year, and the nabob was deposed and put to death by his successor. — HolweU's India Tracts. BLACK MONDAY. Easter Monday, 1351, "when the hailstones are said to have killed both men and horses in the army of our king Edward III. in France." — Bailey. This was a memorable Easter Monday, which in the 34rth of Edward III. "happened to be full dark of mist and hail, and so cold, that many men died on their horses' backs with the cold," 1351. — Stowe. In Ireland, it was the day on which a number of the English were slaughtered at a village near Dublin, in 1209. BLACK ROD. The usher belonging to the order of the Garter is so called from the blach rod he carries in his hand. — Cowel. It has a gold lion at the top, and is carried by the king's chief gentleman usher, instead of a mace, at the feast of St. George at Windsor, instituted a.d. 1349-50. He also keeps the chapter-house door when a chapter of the order is sitting, and during the sessions of parliament attends the house of lords. BLACK FRIARS. Friars of the order of St. Dominic, instituted in 1215 by Dominic de Gusman, a priest of Spain. They had monasteries throughout Europe, and their power, influence, and authority became almost universal. Among their convents in England were those at Oxford, and in London, on the banks of the Thames ; the site and vicinity of the latter are called Blackfriars to this day. BLACKFRIARS-BRIDGE, London. The first stone of this bridge was laid Oct. 31, 1760; and it was completed by Mylne, in 1770, though for some time previously made passable. It was the first work of the kind executed in England, in which arches approaching to the form of an ellipsis were substituted for semicircles. It is about a thousand feet in length and forty-five wide. It was partially repaired in 1831 : but the thorough repair of its arches and piers (which had suffered from the combined exciting action of wind and water, and the vicissitudes of temperature) was commenced in 1837; the carriage-way was closed for tlie purpose of levelling the centre, and reducing the ascent, July 22, 1840; and the bridge was again opened with improved approaches, October 1 following. The carriage-way sunk considerably in 1850, and several arches have since required propping up, owing to their dangerous state. BLACKHEATH. On this plain the celebrated Walter the Tyler assembled his 100,000 men : his rebellion arose out of the brutal rudeness of a tax-collector to his daughter. The indignant plebeian having killed the collector in his rage, raised this multitude of BLA 89 BLI followers to oppose a ginevous impost called the poll-tax, June 12, 1381. Subsequently in an interview with the king (Richard II.), in Smithfield, Tyler having frequently raised his sword in a menacing manner, William of Walworth, then lord mayor of London, struck him down with the mace, and one of the king's knights despatched him. His awed followers, on being pi'omised a charter by Richard, submitted and dispersed; but the grant of it was afterwards revoked by parliament. Here, also. Jack Cade and his 20,000 Kentish men encamped, 1451. See Cade. Battle of Black- heath, in which tlie Cornish rebels were defeated and Flannoc's insurrection quelled, June 22, 1497. The cavern, on the ascent to Blackheath, the retreat of Cade, and the haunt of banditti in the time of Cromwell, was rediscovered in 1780. BL.iCK SEA, THE EuxiNE (Pontus Euxinus of the Ancients), a large internal sea lying between the S. W. provinces of Russia and Asia Minor, connected with the sea of Azoflf by the Straits of Yenikald, and with the sea of Marmora by the channel of Constantinople. This sea was much frequented by the Greeks and Italians, till it was closed to all nations by the Turks from the 15th to the 18th centuries: but after the fall of Constantinople in 1453, all but Turkish vessels were excluded till the Russians obtained admission by the treaty of Kainardji, in 1774. In 1779 it was partially opened to British and other traders, since which time the Russians have gradually obtained the preponderance. It was entered by the British and French fleets, Jan. 3, 1854, at the requisition of the Porte, after the destruction of the Turkish fleet at Sinope by the Russians, Nov. 30, 1853. A dreadful storm in this sea raged from Dec. 13 to 16, 1854, and caused great loss of life and shipping, and valuable stoi-es for the Allied armies. — See Rmso-Tarklsh War. BLACKWALL, LONDON. In this neighbourhood are erected the finest commercial docks and warehouses in the world. The West India docks were commenced Feb. 3, 1800, and opened Aug. 27, 1802. The East India docks were commenced under an act passed July 27, 1803, and opened Aug. 4, 1806. The Blackwall railway was opened to the public July 4, 1840; the eastern terminus being at Blackwall wharf, and the western in Fenchurch-street. BLASPHEMY. This crime is condemned both by the civil and canon law of England. Justinian adjudged it the punishment of death. In Scotland, the tongue was ampu- tated. Visited by fine and imprisonment, 9 & 10 Will. III. 1696-7. — Statutes at Large. In England this offence has been subjected, on some late occasions, to the visitation of the laws. Daniel Isaac Eaton was tried and convicted in London of blasphemy, 13th March, 1812. A protestaut clergyman, named i^'sier^ 7'a^^or, was tried in London twice for the same crime, and as often convicted. Taylor was last brought to the bar, and sentenced to two years' imprisonment, and largely fined, for (among other things) reviling the Redeemer in his discourses, July 1831. Even as late as in Dec. 1840, two prosecutions against publishers of blasphemous writings subjected the offenders to the sentence of the court of Queen's Bench. BLAZONRY. The bearing coats-of-arms was introduced, and became hereditary in families in France and England, about a.d. 1192, owing to the knights painting their banners with different figures, thereby to distinguish them in the crusades. — Dugdale. BLEACHING. This art was known early in Egypt, Syria, and India, and in ancient Gaul. — Pliny. In the last century, an improved chemical system was adopted by the Dutch, who introduced it into England and Scotland in 1768. There are now immense bleach-fields in both countries, particularly in Lancashire and in the counties of Fife, Forfar, and Renfrew, and in the vale of the Leven, in Dumbarton. The chemical process of Berthollet was iuti'oduced in 1795. — Btanchi- mcnt dcs Toilcs. BLENHEIM, BATTLE of, fought Aug. 2, 1704, between the English and confederates, commanded by the duke of Marlborough, and the French and Bavarians, under marshal Tallard and the elector of Bavaria, whom Marlborough signally defeated with the loss of 27,000 in killed, and 13,000 prisoners, Tallard beingamong the latter: the electorate of Bavaria became the prize of tlie conqvierors. The nation testified its gratitude to the duke by the gifts of the honour of Woodstock and hundred of Wotton, and erected for him one of the finest seats in the kingdom, known as the domain and house of Blenheim. — Ilamc. BLINDING, by consuming the eyeballs with limcor scalding vinegar, was a punishment inflicted anciently on adulterers, perjurers, and tliieves. In the middle ages they changoil the penalty of total blindness to a diminution of siglit. Blinding the con- quered Wixs a practice in barbarous states ; and a whole army was deprived of their BLi yo Boa eyes by Basilius, in the eleventh century. See Bulgarians. Several of the Eastern emperors had their eyes torn from their heads. See article Eastern Empire. BLISTERS. They were first made, it is said, of cantharides. — Freind. Blisters are said to have been first introduced into medical practice by Aretaeus, a physician of Cappadocia, about 50 B.C. — Le Clerc's Hist, of Physic. BLOOD, CIRCULATION of the. The circulation of the blood through the lungs was first made public by Michael Servetus, a Spanish physician, in 1553. Csesalpinus published an account of the general circulation, of which he had some confused ideas ; improved afterwards by exjierimeuts, 1569. Paul of Venice, commonly called Father Paolo, whose real name was Peter Sarpi, certainly discovered the valves which served for the circulation ; but the honour of the positive discovery of the circulation of the blood belongs to our immortal countryman, Harvey, by whom it was fully confirmed, 1628. — Freind's Hist, of Physic. BLOOD-DRINKING was anciently tried to give vigour to the system. Louis XL, in his last illness, drank the warm blood of infants, in the vain hope of restoring his decayed strength, 1438. — Henault. Eating blood was prohibited to Noah, Gen. ix. ; and to the Jews, Lev. xvii. The prohibition was repeated by the apostles at the council of Jerusalem, Acts xv. BLOOD, TRANFUSION of. In the fifteenth century an opinion prevailed that the declining strength and vigour of old people might be repaired by transfusing the blood of young persons, drawn from their veins, into those of the infirm and aged. It was countenanced in France by the physicians, and prevailed for many years, till the most fatal efiTects ensued from the operation. Some of the principal nobility having died, and others turned raving mad, it was suppressed by an edict. It was attempted again in France in 1797, and practised more recently there, in a few cases, with success; and in England (but the instances are rare) since 1823. — Med. Journ. " One English physician, named Louver, or Lower, practised in this way; he died in 1691." — Freind's Hist, of Physic. BLOOD'S CONSPIRACY. Blood, a discarded officer of Oliver Cromwell's household, and his confederates, seized the Duke of Ormond in his coach, and had got him to Tyburn, intending to hang him, when he was rescued by his friends. Blood, afterwards, in the disguise of a clergyman, stole the regal crown from the Jewel-office in the Tower : yet, notwithstanding these and other ofi"ences, he was not only pardoned, but had a pension of 500^. ^^er annum settled on him by Charles II., 1673. BLOOMER COSTUME. See a note to article Dress. BLOOMSBURY GANG, a cant term applied to an influential political party in the reign of George III., in consequence of the then duke of Bedford being at its head. The marque>s of Stafford, the last survivor, died Oct. 26, 1803. BLOWING MACHINES. The first cylinders of magnitude, used in blowing machines, erected by Mr. Smeaton at the Carron iron-works, 1760. One equal to the supply of air for forty forge-fires lately erected at the king's dockyard, Woolwich. By means of the Blow-pipe the alkalies are melted, and even volatilised, in a few minutes ; rock crystal and quartz are converted into glass ; opal and flint into enamel ; blue sapphire, talc, emerald, and lapis lazuli, are converted into glass ; gold and diamond are vola- tilised ; platina and brass wire burn with a green flame ; copper melts without burning ; but iron burns with brilliant light. — Phillips. BLUE-COAT SCHOOLS. There are numerous schools in the empire under this deno- mination, so called in reference to the costume of the children. The Blue-coat school in Newgate-street, London, is regarded as the first charitable foundation of the kind in the world; it was instituted by Edward VI. in 1552. See CJirist's Hospital. BLUE-STOCKING. This term is applied to literary ladies, and was originally conferred on a society of literary persons of both sexes. One of the most active promoters of the society was Benjamin Stillingfleet, the distinguished naturalist and miscellaneous writer, who always wore blue worsted stockings, and hence the name : the society existed in 1760 etseq — Anecd. of Boioyer. The beautiful and fascinating Mrs. Jerningham is said to have worn blue stockings at the conversaziones of lady Montague; and this peculiarity also fastened the name upon accomplished women. BOARD OF HEALTH. See Health. BOARD OF CONTROL. Mr. Pitt's celebrated bill, establishing this board for the purpose of aiding and controlling the executive govei-nment of India, and of super- intending the territorial concerns of the company, was passed 24 Geo. III. May 18, BOA 91 . BOH 1784. Act amended and the board remodelled, 33 Geo. III. c. 52, 1793. The president of the board is a chief minister of the crown, and necessarily one of the members of the Cabinet. See East India Bill, India Bill, and India. BOARD OF TRADE and PLANTATIONS. Cromwell seems to have given the first notions of a board of tiade : in 1655 he appointed his son Richard, with many lords of his council, judges, and gentlemen, and about twenty merchants of London, York, Newcastle, Yarmouth, Dover-, &c., to meet and consider by what means the trade and navigation of the republic might be best promoted. — Thoinas's Notes of the Rolls. Charles II., on his restoration, established a council of trade for keeping a control over the whole commerce of the nation, 16fi0 ; he afterwards instituted a board of trade and plantations, which was remodelled by William III. This board of superin- spection was abolished in 1782 ; and a new council for the affaii's of trade, on its present plan, was appointed Sept. 2, 1786. BOATS. Their invention was so early, and their use so general, that the art cannot be traced to any age or country. Flat-bottomed boats were made in England in the reign of the Conqueror : the flat-bottomed boat was again brought into use by Barker, a Dutchman, about 1690. The life-boat was first suggested at South Shields; and one was built by Mr. Gi-eathead, tlie inventor, and was first put to sea, Jan. 30, 1790. See Life Boat. BOCCACCIO'S Decamerone, a collection of a hundred stories or novels, not of moral tendency, feigned to have been related in ten days ; severely satirizing the monks and clergy. A copy of the first edition (that of Valdafer, in 1471) was knocked down at the duke of Roxburgh's sale, to the duke of Marlborough, for 2'260^., June 17, 1812. This identical copy was afterwards sold, by public auction, for 875 guineas, June 5, 1819. BCEOTIA, a political division of Greece, north of Attica. Thebes, the capital, was equally celebrated for its antiquity, its grandeur, and the exploits and misfortunes of its kings and heroes. The country was known successively as Aonia, Messapia, Hyautis, Ogygia, Cadmeis, and Bocotia. From the general character of the inhabitants, the term Boeotian was used by the Atlienians as a synonyme for dulness; but unjustly, since Piudai-, Hesiod, Plutarch, Democritus, Epaminondas, and the accomplished and beautiful Corinna, were natives of Boeotia. of obscurity follow . . . B.C. 1128 Battle of Chseronea, in which the Thebans defeat tlie Athenians . . 447 Haliartus, son of Tliersaudor, builds the city so called * * Epaminondas defeats the Lacedemo- nians at Leuctra, restores his country to independence, and puts it in a con- dition to dictate to the rest of Greece . 371 Philip, King of Macedon, defeats the Thebaus and Athenians near Chaj- ronea ....... 338 Alexander destroys Thebes, but spares the house of Tiudar . . . .335 Arrival of Cadmus, the founder of Cad- mea B.C. 1493 Reif^n of Polydore 1459 Labdacus ascends the throne . . 1430 Amphiou and Zethus besiege Thebes, and dethrone Laius . . . . 13SS CEdipus. not knowing his father Laius, kills him in an affi-ay, confirming the oracle as to his death by the hands of his son 1276 Qiilipus encounters the Sphinx, and re- solves her enij,''mas . . . . 1251) War of the Seven Captains . . . 1225 Thebes besieged and taken . . . 1216 Thersander reigns in Thebes . . . 1215 The Tliebans abolish royalty, and ages BOGS, commonly the remains of fallen forests, covered with peat and loose soil. Moving bogs are slips of land cai'ried to lower levels by accumulated water. Of recent acts, one relating to Ireland for their drainage, passed March, 1830. Tlve bog-laud of Ire- laud has been estimated at 3,000,000 acres ; that of Scotland, at upwards of 2,000,000; and that of England, at near 1,000,000 of acres. In Jan. 1849, Mr. Rees Recce took out a patent for certain valuable products from Irish peat. (Sec Iloiusehold Words, No. 41.) BOHEMIA. Boicmum.— Tacitus. This country derives its name from the Boii, a Celtic tribe. It was originally governed by dukes : till the title of king was obtained from the emperor Henry IV. The kings at first held their territory of the empire, but they at length tlirew ofi" the yoke ; and the crown was elective till it came into the house of Austria, in which it is now hereditary. Tlie Slavoni.ans, seizing Bohemia, are ruled by dukes . . . a.d. 550 City of Prague founded . . . 795 Introduction of Christianity . . . 894 Bohemia conquered by the emperor Henry III., wlio spreads devastation through the country . , . 1041 The regal title ia confeiTcd on Uratislas, the first king . . . a.d. 10(31 The regal title is farther confirmed to Ottoacre 1 1199 Reigu of Ottnacrc IL, who carries his arms into Prussia .... 125S Ottoacre refusing to do homage to the BOH 92 BOM BOHEMIA, Continued. emperor Rodolphus, is by him van- quished, and deprived of Austria, Styria, and Carniola . . a.d. 1282 In the reign of Winceslas III. mines of silver are first discovered, and agricul- ture is encouraged and improved {dseq.) 1284 Winceslas IV., becoming odious for his vices, is assassinated .... 1305 John, count of Luxemburg, is chosen to succeed 1310 Silesia is made a province of Bohemia 13-12 King John slain at the battle of Crecy, fought with the English . - . 1346 John Huss and Jerome of Prague, two of the first Reformers, are burnt fir heresy, which occasions an insurrec- ti' lU ; when Sigismund, who betrayed them, is deposed, and the Imperialists are driven from the kingdom 1415 and 1416 Albert, duke of Austria, marries the daughter of the late emperor and king, and receives the crowns of Bohemia and Hungary . a.d. 1437 The succession infringed by Ladislas, sou of the king of Poland, and George Podiebrad, a Protestant chief . 1400 to 1458 Ladislas VI., king of Poland, elected king of Bohemia, on the death of Podiebrad 1471 The emperor Ferdinand I. marries Anne, sister of Louis the late king, and obtains the crown The elector palatine Frederic is driven from Bohemia .... The crovm secured to the Austrian fiimily by the treaty of . . . . Silesia and Glatz ceded to Prussia . Prague taken by the Prussians . . . The memorable siege of Prague Revolt of the peasantry . . . . Edict of Toleration promulgated . The French occupy Prague . . . See Germany. 1527 1618 1648 1742 1744 1757 1775 1781 1806 This kingdom has suffered much from contending armies and civil wai's ; its capital, Prague, is famous in modern history for sieges and battles. See Prague. BOILING OF LIQUIDS. Liquids fii-st ascertained by Dr. Hooka not to be increased in heat after they have once begun to boil ; and that a fire, if made fiercer, can only make them boil more rapidly, but without adding a degree to their heat, a.d. 1683. The following have been ascertained to be the boiling points of certain liquids : — Ether . . 98 degrees. Ammonia . 140 Alcohol . 176 Water . . 212 Muinate of Lime 230 degrees. Nitric Acid . 243 Sulpliuric Acid. 500 Phosphorus . 554 Oil of Turpentine 560 degrees. Sulphur . . 570 Linseed oil . . 600 Mercury . . 660 These are the results of various experiments made from time to time by eminent chemists of our own country, and of Germany and France. BOILING TO DEATH. A capital punishment in England, by statute 23 Hen. VIII. 1532. This act was occasioned by seventeen persons having been poisoned by Rouse, the bishop of Rochester's cook, when the offence of poisoning was made treason, and it was enacted to be punished by boiling the criminal to death! Margaret Davie, a young woman, suffered in the same manner for a similar crime, in 1541. BOIS-LE-DUC, BATTLE of, between the British and the French republican army, in which the British were defeated, forced to abandon their position, and to retreat to Schyndel, Sept. 14, 1794. This place was captured by the French, Oct. 6, following; it surrendered to the Prussian army, under Bulow, in 1814. BOLOGNA, distinguished for its many rare and magnificent specimens of architecture. Its ancient and celebrated university was founded by Theodosius, a.d. 433. Pope Julius II., after besieging and taking Bologna, made his triumphal entry into it with a pomp and magnificence by no means fitting (as Erasmus observes) for the vice- gerent of the meek Redeemer, Nov. 10, 1506. Here, in the clmrch of St. Patrouius, which is remarkable for its pavement, Cassini drew his meridian line, at the close of the seventeenth century. It was taken by the French, 1796; by the Austrians, 1799; again by the French, after the battle of Marengo, in 1800 ; and restored to the pope in 1815. A revolt in 1831 was suppressed by Austrian interference. BOMARSUND, a strong fortress on one of the Aland isles. Sir Charles Napier, com- mander-in-chief of the Baltic expedition, gave orders for the disembarkation of the armament on Bomarsund, which was completed on Aug. 12, 1854, and the bombard- ment of the western tower was commenced by the French, who had furnished the military contingent of this expedition under General Baraguay d'Hilliers. On the 16th the fortress surrendered, and the Russian authority over the Aland isles ceased. The governor-general Bodisco, and the garrison, about 2000 men, surrendered prisoners of war to England and France. The fortifications were destroyed. Tlie English portion of the prisoners was sent for confinement to Lewes. BOMBAY, the most westerly and smallest of our three Indian presidencies, was given (with Tangier, in Africa, and 300,000/. in money) to Charles II. as the marriage por- tion of the infanta, Catherine of Portugal, 1661. Granted to the East India Company " in free and common socage, as of the manor of East Greenwich, at an annual rent of BOM 93 BOO 10^." 1668. Confirmed by William III. 1689. Bombay was at first the seat of govern- ment over all the company's establishments in India. See India. BOMBS. Invented at Veulo, in 1495, but according to some authorities near a century after. They came into general use in 1634, having been previously used only in tlie Dutch and Spanish armies. Bomb-vessels were invented in France, in 1681. — Voltaire. The Shrapnel shell is a bomb filled with balls, and a lighted fuse to make it explode before it reaches the enemy; a thirteen-inch bomb-shell weighs 198 lbs. BONArARTE'S EMPIRE of FRANCE. Napoleon Bonaparte, the most extraordinary man of modern times, ruled over France, and subdued most of the nations of the Continent, in the early part of the present century. See his various achievements under their respective heads throughout the volume : Napoleon Bonaparte born at Ajaccio, in Corsica Aug. 15, 1769 He first distinguished himself in the command of the artillerynt Touton . 1793 Marries Josephine, and appointed to couimaud army of Italy . March 9, 1790 Victories in Italy .... 1790-7 He embarks for Egypt . May 10, 1798 Is repulsed before Acre . . May 27, 1799 He returns from Egypt . Aug. 23, 1799 Deposes the French directory, and be- comes first consul . . Nov. 9, 1799 Sends overtiues of peace to the king of England Jan. 1, 1800 His life attempted by an " infernal ma- chine " Doc. 24, 1800 Elected president of the Italian, late Cisalpine republic Elected consul for 10 years Made first consul for life Accepts the title of emperor from the senate in name of the people May 18, Crowned emperor bv tiie pope Dec 2, Crowned king of Italy . . May 26, 1805 Divorced from the empress Joso|)liine, she having no heir . . Dec. 16, Marries Maria Louisa of Austria, April 7, A son, the fruit of this marriage, born, (styled king of Rome, and afterwards Napoleon II.) see i^rajice . March 20, His overtures of peace to England are rejected .... April 14, 1812 Unfortiuiate Russian campaign . 1812-13 He renounces the thrones of France and Italy, and accepts the Isle of Elba for his retreat . . . April .5, 1814 Embarks at Frejua . . April 28, 1814 Arrivos at Elba . . . May 3, 1814 Quits Elba, and lands at Cannes Mar. 1, 1815 Jan. 25, 1802 May 8, 1802 Aug. 2, 1802 1804 1804 1809 1810 1811 Enters Lyons . . . March 10, 1815 Arrives at Fontainebleau . March 20, 1815 Joined by all the army . March 22, 1815 The allies sign a treaty for his subjuga- tion March 25, 1815 He abolishes the slave-trade March 29, 1815 Leaves Paris for the army . June 12, 1S15 Is defeated at Waterloo Returns to Paris And abdicates in favour 1815 1815 June 18, . June 20, of his infant June 22 America, he July 3, 1S15 1815 Intending to embark for arrives at Rochefort . He surrenders to Capt. Maitland, of the Belleropkon . . . July 15, Transferred at Torbay to the Northumber- land, and admiral Sir George Cockburn sails with him for St. Helena, Aug. 8, Arrives at St. Helena (where it is decreed by the allied sovereigns he shall remain for life) Oct. 15, The family of Bonaparte excluded for ever from France by the law of am- nesty .... Jan. 12, Death of Bonaparte . . May 5, 1821 H is will registered in England (see article Wills) Aug. His son, ex-king of Rome, dies July 22, The French chambers dcci-ee, with the consent of England, that the ashes of Napoleon be removed from St. Helena, and broueht to France . ^lay 12, They are exhumed . . Oct. 16, The Belle Poule, French frigate, arrives at Cherbourg with the remains of Napoleon, in the care of the Prince de Joinvillo . . . Nov. 30, They are interred with great solemnity in the Hotel dcs Invalides Dec. 15, 1815 1815 1815 1816 1824 1832 1840 1840 1840 1840 BONDAGE, OR VILLANAGE. Bondage was enforced under William I. soon after the conquest. A villain in ancient times meant a peasant enslaved by his lord. A release from this species of servitude was ordered on the mauoi's of Elizabeth, in 1574, and led to its final overthrow in England. See Villanar/e, BONE-SETTING. This branch of the art of surgery cannot be said to liave been practised scientifically imtil 1620, before which time it was rather imperfectly under- stood. — Bell. The celebrity obtained by a practioner at Paris, about 1600, led to the general study of bone-setting as a science. — Preind's Hist, of Physic. BONES. The art of softening bones was discovered about a.d. 1688, and they were used in the manufacture of cutleiy, and for various other purposes immediately after- wards. The declared value of the bones of cattle and of other animals, .and of fish (exclusive of whale-fins) imported into the United Kingdom from Russia, Prussia, Holland, Denmark, &c., amounts annually to nearly 200,000/. BONHOMMES. These were hermits of simple and gentle lives, who made their appear- ance iu France about the year 1257 ; and they came to England in 128-3. The prior of the order was called Lr ban hommc, by Louis VI., and hence they derived their name. — Da Fresno//. The name was afterwards given a more general interpretation in that kingdom. Jlenault, BOOKS, ANCIENT. Books were originally boards, or the inner bark of trees ; and BOO 94 BOO bark is still used by some nations, as are also skins, for which latter parchment was substituted. Papyrus, an Egyptian plant, was adopted in that country. Books whose leaves were vellum were invented by Attalus, king of Pergamus, about 198 B.C., at which time books were in volumes or rolls. The MSS. in Herculaneum consist of papyrus, rolled and charred, and matted together by the fire, and are about nine inches long, and one, two, or three inches in diameter, each being a separate treatise. The Pentateuch of Moses, and the history of Job, are the most ancient in the world ; and in profane literature the poems of Homer, though the names of others still more ancient are preserved. BOOKS, PRICES OP. Jerome states that he had ruined himself by buying a copy of the works of Origen. A large estate was given for one on cosmogi-aphy, by Alfi-ed, about A.D. 872. The Roman de la Rose was sold for about 30Z. ; and a Homily was exchanged for 200 sheep and five quarters of wheat ; and they usually fetched double or treble their weight in gold. They sold at prices varying from 10/. to iOl. each, in 1400. _ In our own times, the value of some volunjes is very great. A copy of Macklin's Bible, ornamented by Mr. Tomkins, has been declared worth 500 guineas. — Butler. A yet more superb copy was insured in a London office for ZQOOl.—Il Becamerone of Boccaccio, edition of 1471, was bought at the duke of Roxburgh's sale, by the Duke of Marlborough, for 2260/., June 17, 1S12.— Phillips. BOOKS PRINTED. The first printed books were hymns and psalters, and being printed only on one side, the leaves were pasted back to back. The first printed book wa3 the Book of Psalms, by Faust, and SchcefFer, his son-in-law, Aug. 14, 1457. Several works were printed many years before; but as the inventors kept the secret to themselves, they sold their first printed works as manuscripts. This gave rise to an adventure that brought calamity on Faust ; he began in 1450 an edition of the Bible, which was finished in 1460. The second printed was Cicero de Offi-ciis, 1466. — Blair. The first book printed in England was The Game and Plai/ of the Chesse, by Caxton, 1474. The first in Dublin was the Liturgy, in 1550. The first classical work printed in Russia was Corn. Nepotis Vitce, in 1762. Lucian's Dialogues was the first Greek book printed in America (at Philadelphia), 1789. Books of astronomy and geometry were ordered to be destroyed in England as being infected with magic, 6 Edw. VI. 1552. — Stoioes Chronicles. See Bibliography. BOOK-BINDING. The book of St. Cuthbert, the earliest ornamented book, is supposed to have been bound about a.d. 650. A Latin Psalter in oak boards was bound in the niuth century. A MS. copy of the Four Evangelists, the book on which our kings from Henry I. to Edward VI. took their coronation oath, was bound in oaken boards, nearly an inch thick, a.d. 1100. Velvet was the covering in the fourteenth century ; and silk soon after. Vellum was introduced early in the fifteenth century ; it was stamped and ornamented about 1510. Leather came into use about the same time. Cloth binding superseded the common boards generally about 1831. Caoutchouc or India-rubber backs to account-books and large volumes were introduced in 1841. BOOK-KEEPING. The system by double-entry, called originally Italian book-keeping, was taken from the course of Algebra which was published by Burgo, at Venice, then a great commercial state, in the fifteenth century. It was made known in England by James Peele, who published his Book-keeping m 1569. — Anderson. BOOKSELLERS' ASSOCIATION. A number of eminent publishers of London had formed themselves into an association for the regulation of the trade, and for some years restricted the retail booksellers from selling copies of works under the full publishing price. A dispute hence arose as to the right, maintained by the latter, to dispose of books (when they had once become theirs by purchase) at such less profit as they might deem sufficiently remunerative. This dispute was, in the end, referred to lord chief justice Campbell, before whom the parties argued their respective case?, atStratheden House, April 14, 1852. His lordship gave judgment, in effect against the association, which led to its immediate dissolution. May 19, following. BOOTHIA, FELIX, discovered and named by sir John Ross, in honour of sir Felix Booth, who had presented him with 20,000Z. to enable him to fit out his Polar expedition. Sir Felix Booth died at Brighton in Feb. 1850. BOOTS are said to have been the invention of the Carians, and were made of iron, bra.ss, or leather ; of the last material, some time after their invention, boots were known to the Greeks, for Homer mentions them, about 907 B.C. They are frequently mentioned by the Roman historians. BOR 95 BOS BORAX was known to the ancients. It is used in soldering, brazing, and casting gold and other metals, and was called chrysocolla. It is also used in medicine, and in composing fitctis, or a wash or paint for the ladies. — Pardon. Boras is naturally produced in the mountains of Thibet; and was brought to Europe from India about 1713. It has lately been found in Saxony. BORNEO. An island in the Indian Ocean, the largest in the world except Australia, was discovered by the Portuguese in 152(3. The Dutch traded here in 1604, established factories in 1776, and still remain on the island. A large part was inhabited or infested by pirates, upon whom the British made a successful attack in 1813. They were again chastised by Captain Keppel, in March, 1843. By a treaty with the sultan, the island of Labooan, or Labuan, on the north-west coast of Borneo, and its dependencies were incorporated with the British Empire, and formally taken possession of in presence of the Bornean chiefs, Dec. 2, 1846. His excellency James Brooke, rajah of Sarawak, by whose exertions this island was annexed to the British crown, and who had been appointed governor of Labuan and consul-general of Borneo, subsequently visited England, and received many honours, among which was the freedom of the corporation of London, Oct. 21, 1847. Labuan was made into a bishopric in 1855. BORNOU. An extensive kingdom in central Africa, explored by Denhara and Clap- perton, who were sent out by the Eriti.sh government in 1822. The population is estimated by Denham at five, by Earth at nine millions. BORODINO, OR MOSKWA, BATTLE of, one of the most sanguinary in the records of the world, was fought Sept. 7, 1812, between the French and Russians; commanded on the one side by Napoleon, and on the other by Kutusoflf, 240,000 men being engaged. Each party claimed the victory, because the loss of the other was so immense ; but it was rather in favour of Napoleon, for the Russians subsequently retreated, leaving Moscow to its fate. The road being thus left open, the French entered Moscow, Sept. 14, with little opposition. See Moscow. BOROUGH, anciently a company of ten families living together. The term has been applied to such towns as send members to parliament, since the election of burgesses in the reign of Henry III. 1265. Burgesses were first admitted into the Scottish parliament by Robert Bruce, 1326 ; and mto the Irish, 1365. BOROUGH-ENGLISH, was an ancient tenure by which the younger son inherits, and is mentioned as occurring a.d. b34. It existed in Scotland, but was abolished by Malcolm IIL in 1062. BOROUGH-BRIDGE, BATTLE of, between the earls of Hertford and Lancaster and Edward IL The lattei-, at the head of 30,000 men, pressed Lancaster so closely, that he had not time to collect his troops together in sufficient force, and being di-fcated and made prisoner, was led, mounted on a lean horse, to an eminence near Pontefract or Fomfret, with great indignity, and beheaded by a Londoner, 1322. — GoldsiaUh. BOSCOBEL, a village in Shrop.shire. Here Charles II. concealed himself in the renowned oak, aftei- the battle of Worcester (See Worcester) m which Cromwell defeated the Scots army, that had marched into England to reinstate Charles on the throne, Sep*-. 3rd, 1651. — Goldsmith. BOSPHORUS (properly BOSPORUS), now called Curassia, near the Bosphorus Cim- merius, now the straits of Kertch, or Yenikal^. The history of tiie kingdom is involved in obscurity, though it contiimed for 530 years. It was named Cimmerian, from the Oimmeri, wlio dwelt on its borders. The descendants of Archeanactes of Mitylene settled in this country, but they were dispossessed by Spartacus, in 438 B.C. See Azof. The Archcanactidre rule here . B.C. 502-480 Thoy are succeeded by Spartacus I. 480-438 Seleucus 431 » » « • » Satyrus 1 407 303 .•i.".3 34S Loucon Spartacus II Parysades EumeUis, .aiming to dethrone his brother Satyrus H., is defeated ; but Satyrus is wounded and dies Prytaiiis, his next brother, ascends the 310 throne, but is soon after murdered in his palace by Eumelus . . b.c. 310-9 Eumclus, to secure his usurpation, puts to death all his relations . . . 309 Eumelus is killed 304 The Scythians inv.adc Bosphorus . . 285 [During their rule of 204 ye.-irs, even the names of the kings who were tributary to the conquerors are unrecorded and unknown J Mithridates conquers Bosphorus 80 BOS 96 BOU Polemon killed by barbarians of the Pains Ma3otis A.D. 33 Polemon II. reigns 33 Mithridates II. reigns 40 Withridates conducted a prisoner to Rome, by order of Claudius, and his kingdom made a province of the em- pire. BOSPHORUS, Continued. An awful earthquake lays numei'ous cities and towns in ruins . . . B.C. 65 Battle of Zela, gained by Julius Ca;sar over Pharnaces . . . . . . 47 Ccesar makes Mithi-idates of Pergamus king of Bosphorus 4T Asander usurps the ci'own . . . . 46 Polemon conquers Bosphorus, and, fa- voured by Agrippa, reigns . . .14 BOSPHORUS, THRACIAN, (now channel of Constantinople). Darius Hystaspes threw a bridge of boats over this strait when about to invade Greece, 493 B.C. See Con- stantinople. BOSTON, Ameeica. Here originated that resistance to the British authorities which led to American independence. The act of parliament laying duties on tea, paper, colours, &c. was passed June 1767, and so excited the indignation of the citizens of Boston, that they destroyed several hundreds of chests of tea, Nov. 1773. Boston was pro- scribed in consequence, and the port shut by the English pai'liameut, until restitution should be made to the East India Company for the tea that had been lost, March 25, 1774. The town was besieged by the British next year, and 400 houses were destroyed. A battle between the royalists and independent troops, in which the latter were defeated, took place in June, 1775. The city was evacuated by the king's troops, April, 1776. BOSWORTH FIELD, BATTLE of, the thirteenth and last between the houses of York and Lancaster, in which Richard III. was defeated by the earl of Richmond, afterwards Henry VII. the former being slain, Aug. 22, 1485. The crown of Richard was found in a hawthorn bush, on the plain where the battle was fought, and Henry was so impatient to be crowned, that he had the ceremony performed on the spot, with that very crown. In the civil contests between the " Roses," many of the most ancient families in the kingdom were entirely extinguished, and no less than 100,000 human beings lost their lives. This great battle established a new dynasty on the throne of England. See England. BOTANY. Aristotle is considered the founder of the philosophy of botany (about B.C. 347). The Historia Plantaruin of Theophrastus, written about 320 B.C. Authors on botany ai'e numerous from the earlier ages of the world, to the close of the fifteenth century, when the science became better understood. The study was advanced by Fuchsius, Bock, Bauhin, Ca2salpiuus, and others, between 1535 and 1600. — MelcMor Adam. The system and arrangement of Liunajus, the first botanist of modern times, was made known about 1750 ; and Jussieu's system, founded on Tournefort's, and called "the Natural System," in 1758. At the time of Linnaeus' death, a.d. 1778, the species of plants actually described amounted in number to 11,800. The number of species of all denominations now recorded cannot fall short of 100,000. BOTANY BAY, originally fixed on for a colony of convicts from Great Britain. The first governor, Capt. Arthur Phillip, who sailed from England in May, 1787, arrived at the settlement in Jan. 1788. Tlie bay had been discovered by captain Cook in 1770, and the place took its name from the great variety of herbs which abounded on the shore. The colony was fixed at Port Jackson, about thirteen miles to the north of the bay. See New South Wales and Transportation. BOTTLE-CONJUROR. The famous imposition of this charlatan occurred at the old Haymarket theatre, Jan. 16, 1748; he had announced that he would jump into a quart bottle, and so imposed upon the credulous multitude, that the theatre was besieged by 10,000 persons, anxious to gain admittance and witness the feat. The object of filling the house was accomplished ; but the duped crowd (who really expected to see the man enter the quart bottle), in the storm of their indignation, nearly pulled the whole edifice down. BOTTLES, in ancient times were made of leather. Bottles of glass were fir.^t made in England about 15.')8. See Glass. The art of making glass bottles and drinking glasses was known to the Romans at least before 79 a.d., for these articles and other vessels have been found in the ruins of Pompeii. A bottle which contained two hogsheads was blown, we are told, at Leith, in Scotland, in January 1747-8. BOULOGNE, a French seaport in Picardy, was taken by the British in Sept. 14, 1544, but restored to France upon the peace, 1550. Lord Nelson attacked Boulogne, dis- abling ten vessels and sinking five, Aug. 3, 1801. In another attempt he was repulsed BOU 97 BOV with great loss, and captain Parker of the Medusa and two-thirds of his crew were killed, Aug. 18, following. la 1804, Bonaparte assembled 160,000 men and 10,000 horses, and a flotilla of 1300 vessels and 17,000 sailors to invade England. The coasts of Kent and Sussex were covered with martello towers and lines of defence ; and nearly half the adult population of Britain was formed into volunteer coi'ps. It is supposed that this French armament served merely for a demonstration, and that Bonaparte never seriously intended the invasion. Sir Sidney Smith unsuccessfully attempted to burn the flotilla with fire machines called catamarans, Aug. 31, 1805. Congreve-rockets were used in another attack, and they set the town on fire, Oct. 8, 1806. The army was removed on the breaking out of the war with Austria in 1805. Prince Louis Napoleon (afterwards president of the French republic, and now empe- ror) made a descent here with about fifty followers, Aug. 6, 1840, without success. On July 10, 1854, he reviewed the French troops destined for the Baltic, and on Sept. 2, following, he entertained Prince Albert and the King of the Belgians. See France. BOUNTIES, were first granted on the exportation of British commodities — a new prin- ciple introduced into commerce by the British parliament. The first bounties granted on corn were in 1688. They were first legally granted in England, for raising naval stores in America, 1703, and have been gi-anted on sail-cloth, linen, and other goods. — Elements of Commerce. BOUNTY. MUTINY on board the Bounty, an armed ship returning from Otaheite, with bread-fruit, April 23, 1789. The umtineers put their captain, Bligli, and nine- teen men into an open boat, near Annamooka, one of the Friendly Islands, April 28, 1789 ; they reached the island of Timor, south of the Moluccas, in June, after a perilous voyage of nearly 4000 miles, in which their preservation was next to mira- culous. The mutineers were tried, Sept. 15, 1792, when six were condemned, of whom three were executed. See Pitcairns Inland. BOURBON, HOUSE of. Anthony de Bourbon was the chief of the branch of Bourbon, so called from a fief of that name which fell to them by marriage with the heiress of the estate. Henry IV. of France and Navarre, justly styled the Great, was son of Anthony, and came to the throne in 1589. The crown of Si)ain was settled on a younger branch of this family, and guaranteed by the peace of Utrecht, 1713. — Rainn. The Bourbon Family Compact took place, 1761. The Bourbons were expelled France, 1791, and were restored, 1814. The family was again expelled on the return of Bonaparte from Elba, and again restored after the battle of Waterloo, 1815. The elder branch was expelled once more, in the persons of Charles X. and his family, in 1830, a consequence of the revolution of the memorable days of July in that year. The Orleans branch ascended the throne, in the person of the late Louis-Philippe, as "king of the French," Aug. 9, following, who was deposed Feb. 24, 1848, when his family also was expelled France. See France. BOURBON, ISLE of. Discovered by the Portuguese, in 1545. The French first settled here in 1672, and built several towns. The island surrendered to the British, Sept. 21, 1809, and was restored to France in 1815. — Alison. It is near the Isle of France, and the two are styled the Mauritius. There occurred an awful hurricane here in February, 1829, by which immense mischief was done to the shipping, and in the island. See Mauritius. BOURDEAUX (or BORDEAUX,,) was united to the dominions of Henry IL of England, by his marriage with Eleanor of Aquitaino. Edward the Black I'riuce brought liis royal captive, John, king of France, to this city after the battle of Poitiers, in 1356, and here held his court during eleven years : his son, our Richard II. was born at Bourdcaux, 1362. The fine equestrian statue of Louis XV. was erected in 1743. Boiu'deaux was entered by the victorious British army, after the battle of Orthcs, fought Feb. 25,1814. BOURIGNONISTS, a sect foujided by Madame A nioincltc Boungnon, a fanatic, who, in 1658, took the habit of St. Augustin, and travelled into France, Holland, England, and Scotland. In the last she made a strong party and some thousands of sectarists, about 1670. She maintained that Christianity does not consist in faith or practice, but in an inward feeling and supernatural imi)ulso. This visionary published a book entitled the Li(iht of the World, in which, and in-several other works, she maintained and taught her pernicious notions. A disci^dc of hers, muued Court, left her a good estate. She died in 1680. BOVINES, BATTLE of, in which Philip Augustus of France obtained a complete victory (though not without great danger of his life) over the emperor Otho and his H BOW 98 BRA allies, consisting of more than 150,000 men. Tlie earls of Flanders and Boulogne were taken prisoners. The chevalier Gu^rin had the command of the king's army, not in order to fight, but to animate the barons and other knights in honour of God, the king, and kingdom, and in defence of their sovereign lord. Matthew de Mont- morenci, who was constable of France four years after, had a considerable share iu this victory. Fought A.D. 1214. — Henault. BOWLS, OR BOWLING, an English game, played as early as the thirteenth century, and once in great repute among the higher ranks. Chai-les I. played at it. It formed a daily share in the diversions of Charles II. at Tunbridge. — Mimoires de Grammont. BOWS AND ARROWS, see Archery. The invention of them is ascribed to Apollo. They were known in England previous to a.d. 450. The use of them was again introduced into England by the Conqueror, 1066 ; and greatly encouraged by Richard I. 1190. — Bakei's Chronicle. The usual range of the long-bow was from 300 to 400 yards ; the length of the bow was six feet, and the arrow three. Cross-bows were fixed to a stock of iron or wood, and were discharged by a trigger. BOXING, or PRIZE FIGHTING, the pugikitus of the Romans, and a favourite sport with the British, who possess an extraordinary strength in the arm, an advantage which gives the British soldier great superiority in battles decided by the bayonet. A century ago, boxing formed a regular exhibition, and a theatre was erected for it in Tottenham-court — Broughtou's amphitheatre, behind Oxford-road, built 1742. Schools were opened in England to teach boxing as a science iu 1790. Mendoza opened the Lyceum iu the Strand in 1791. Owing to the dishonest practices in the " ring," selling the victory, one combatant allowing the other to beat him, &c., the fights have been fewer of late, and the number and respectability of the patrons of boxing have declined. BOXTEL, BATTLE of, between the British and allied army, commanded by the duke of York and the army of the French republic. The latter attacked the allies and obtained the victory after an obstiuate engagement, taking 2000 prisoners and eight pieces of cannon, and the duke retreated across the Meuse, Sept. 17, 1794. BOYDELL'S LOTTERY was a lottery of a gallery of paintings, got up at vast expense by the eminent alderman Boydell, of Loudon, a great encourager of the arts. The collection was called the Shakspeare Gallery, and every ticket was sold at the time the alderman died (which was before the decision of the wheel), Dec. 12, 1804. Alderman Boydell was lord mayor of London in 1791. BOYLE LECTURES, instituted by Robert Boyle (son of the great earl of Cork) a philosopher, distinguished by his genius, virtues, and benevolence. He instituted eight lectures in vindication of the Christian religion, which are delivered at St.Mary- le-bow church, on the first Monday iu each month, from January to Maj^, and Septem- ber to November — endowed 1691. BOYNE, BATTLE of, between king William III. and his father-in-law, James XL, fought July 1, 1690. The latter was signally defeated, his adherents losing 1500 men, and the protestant army about a third of that number. James immediately afterwards fled to Dublin, thence to Waterford, and escaped to France. The duke of Schomberg was killed in the battle, having been shot by mistake as he was crossing the river Boyne, by the soldiers of his own regiment. Near Drogheda is a splendid obelisk 150 feet in height, erected in 1736 by the Protestants of the empire, in commemo- ration of this victoiy. BOYNE, MAN of WAR, of 98 guns. This magnificent ship was destroyed by fire at Portsmouth, when great mischief was occasioned by the explosion of the magazine, and numbers perished. May 4, 1795. Large portions of the Boyne have been recovered from time to time, and explosions, with the view of clearing the harbour of the wreck, were successfully commenced in June 1840. BRABANT was erected into a duchy a.d. 620, and devolved upon Lambert I., count of Louvaiu, in 1005, and from him descended to Philip II. of Burgundy, and in regular succession to the emperor Charles V. In the seventeenth century it was held by Holland and Austria, as Dutch Brabant and Walloon. These provinces underwent many changes in most of the great wars of Europe. The Austrian division was taken by the French 1746 — again iu 1794 by their republic : and it now forms part of the kingdom of Belgium, under Leopold, 1831. See Belrjium. BRACELETS. They were early worn and prized among the ancients; wo read of them BRA 99 BRA iu almost all nations ; those that were called armillce were usually distributed as rewards for valour among the Roman legions. — Nouv. Diet. Those of pearls and gold were worn by the Roman ladies ; and armlets are female ornaments to the present day. BRAGANZA, HOUSE of, owes its elevation to royalty to a remarkable and bloodless revolution in Portugal, a.d. 1640, when the nation, throwing off the Spauish j'oke, which had become intolerable, advanced John, duke of Braganza, to the throne, on which and on tliat of Brazil, this family continues to reign. — See Portugal and Brazil. BRAHMIN'S, a sect of Indian philosophers, reputed to be so ancient that Pythagoi'as is thouglit to have learned from them his doctrine of tlie Metempsychosis ; and it is affirmed that some of the Greek philosophei's went to India on purpose to converse with them. The modern Brahmins derive their name from Brahmo, one of three beings whom God, according to their theology, created, and with whose assistance he formed the world. They never eat flesh, and abstain from the use of wine and all carnal enjoyments. — Strabo. The moderu Indian priests are still considered as the dejiositaries of tlie whole learning of India. — llolwdl. BRANDENBURG, FAMILY of. Is of great antiquity, and some historians say it was founded by tlie Slavonians, wlio gave it the name of Banher, which signifies Guard of the Forest. Henry I. surnamod tlie Fowler, fortified Brandenburg, a.d. 923, to serve as a rampart against the Huns. He bestowed the government on Sifroi, count of Riugelheim, with the title of Margrave, which signifies jjrotoctor of the marches or frontiei-s, in 927. The emperor Sigismund gave perpetual investiture to Fredei'ick IV. of Nuremberg, who was made elector in 1417. See Prussia. BRANDENBURG-HOUSE, Hammersmiih, celebrated as the residence of queen Caroline, the unfortunate consort of George IV., who took possession of it Aug. -3, 1820, and here received the various addresses and deputations of the British people, conse- quent upon her trial iu the house of lords, under a bill of pains and penalties, that year. She expired at Brandenburg-house, Aug. 7, 1821, wnich was demolished in 1823. See Queen Caroline. BRANDYWINE, BATTLE of. Between the British royalist forces and the revolted Americans, in which the latter (after a fight, sometimes of doubtful result, and which continued the entire day) were defeated with great loss, and Philadelphia fell into the possession of the victors, Sept. 11, 1777. BRASS was known among all the early nations. — Usher. The Briti.sh from the remotest period were acquainted with its use. — Whittaker. When Lucius Mummius burnt Corinth to the ground, 146 B.C., the riches he found were immense, and during the conflagration, it is said, all the metals in the city melted, and running together, formed the valuable composition described as Corinthian Brass. This, however, may well be doubted, for the Corinthian artists liad long before obtained groat credit for tlicir method of coml)ining gold and silver with copper ; and the S\ riac translation of the Bible says, that Hiram made the vessels for Solomon's temple of Corinthian brass. Articles made of this brilliant composition, though in themselves trivial and insignifi- cant, were yet highly valued. —2>w Fresnoy. BllAURONLA.. Festivals in Attica, at Brauron, where Diana had a temple. The most remarkable that attended these festivals were yomig virgins in yellow gowns dedicated to Diana. They were about ton years of age, and not undi'r five, and tlierefore theii' consecration was called " dckatcucin," from ^iKa, decern ; 600 B.C. BRAY, THE VIC.VR of. Bray, in Berks, is famous in national song for its vicar, the Rev. Symon Symonds, who was twice a papist and twice a protestant in four suc- cessive reigns — those of Henry VIll., Edwanl VI., Mary, and Elizabeth. Upon being called a turn-coat, he said he kept to ids principle, that of " living and dying the vicar of Bray," between the years 1533 and 1558. The story was first published by Fuller in his Church History. BRAZEN BULL. Perillus, a bras-s-founder at Athens, knowing the cruel disposition of Plialaris of Agrigentum, contrived a new species of punishment for him to inflict upon his oppressed subjects. He cast a brazen bull, larger than life, with an opening in the side to admit the victims. Upon their being shut up in this engine of torture, a fire was kindled underneath to roast them to death; and the throat was so con- trived that their dying groans resembled the roaring of a bull. He brought it to the tyrant, and expected a large reward. Phalaris admired the invention and workman- ship, but said it was reasonable the artist shovild make the first experiment upon his own work, and ordered hia execution. Ovid mentions that the Agrigentes. maddened n 2 BRA 100 BRE by the tyrant's cruelties, revolted, seized him, cut his tongue out, and then roasted him in the brazen bull, by which he had put to death so great a number of their fellow-citizens, 5G1 B.C.- — Vita Phalaridis. BRAZIL was discovered by Alvarez de Cabral, a Portuguese, who was driven upon its coasts by a tempest in 1500. He called it the Laud of the Holy Cross ; but it was subsequently called Brazil on account of its I'ed wood, and was carefully explored by Amei'igo Vespucci, about 1504. The gold mines were first opened in 1684 ; and the diamond mines were discovered 1730 (see Diamonds). The French having seized on Portugal in 1807, the royal family and nobles embarked for Brazil. A revolution took place here in 1821. Brazil was erected into an empire, wlien Dom Pedro assumed the title of emperor, Nov. 18, 1825. He abdicated the throne of Portugal, May 2, 182G ; and that of Brazil, in favour of his infant son, now (1855) emperor, April 7, 1831, and returned to Portugal, where a civil war ensued. — See Portugal. EMPERORS OF BRAZIL. 1831. Dom Pedro II. succeeded on his father's 1825. Dom Pedro (of Portugal) first emperor, Nov. 18, abdicated the throne of Brazil in favour of his infant sou, April 7, 1831 : died Sept. 24, 1834. abdication. Assumed the govern- ment July 23, 1S40; crowned July 18, 1841. The present emperor, 1855. BREAD. The woi'd is sometimes used for all the necessaries of human life, especially in the Scriptures. Ching-Noung, the successor of Fohi, is reputed to have been the first who taught men (the Chinese) the art of husbandry, and the method of making bread from wheat, and wine from rice, 1998 B.C. — Wnir. Hist. Baking of bread was known in the patriarchal ages ; see Exodus, xii. 15. Baking bread became a profession at Rome, 170 B.C. During the siege of Paris by Henry IV., owing to the famine which then raged, bread, which had been sold whilst any remained for a crown a pound, was at last made from the bones of the charnel-house of the Holy Innocents, A.D. 1594. — Henault. In the time of James I. the usual bread of the 'poor was made of barley ; and now in Iceland, cod-fish, beaten to powder, is made into bread ; and the poor use potato-bread in many parts of Ireland. Earth has been eaten as bread in some parts of the world : near Moscow is a portion of land whose clay will ferment when mixed with flour. The Indians of Louisiana eat a white earth with salt ; and the Indians of the Orouooko eat a white unctuous earth. — Greig ; Phillips. BREAD, HOUSEHOLD. There was an assize of bread in England in 1202. The London Bakers' Company was incorporated in 1307. Bread-street in London was once the market for bread in that city, and hence its name. Until the year 1302, the London bakers were not allowed to sell any in their shops. — Stowe. Bread was made with yeast by the Eugli.sli bakers in 1G34. For the recent statutes relating to bread, see Assize of Bread. BREAD-FRUIT TREE. It is mentioned by several voyagers, — by Dampier, Anson, and Wallis, among others. A vessel under the command of captain Bligh was fitted out to convoy these trees to various parts of the British colonies in 1791. The number taken on board at Otaheite was 1151. Of these, some were lefb at St. Helena, 352 at Jamaica, and five wci'e reserved for Kew Gardens, 1793. The Bread- fruit tree was successfully cultivated in Fi-euch Guiana, in 1802. In the West Indies the negroes prefer their own preparations of the plantain fi-uit to bread; and hence the bread-fruit tree, transported at such an expense from the South Sea Islands, has been attended with little success in the colonies. BREAKWATER at PLYMOUTH. The first stone of this stupendous work was lowered in the presence of a multitude of spectators, Aug. 12, 1812. It was designed to break the swell at Plymouth, and stretches 5280 feet across the Sound; it is 360 feet in breadth at the bottom, and more than thirty at the top, and consumed 3,666,000 tons of granite blocks, from one to five tons each, up to April, 1841 : and cost a million and a half sterling. The architect was Rennie. The first stone of the lighthouse on its western extremity was laid Feb. 1, 1841. BREAST-PLATES. The invention of them is ascribed to Jason, 937 B.C. The breast- plate formerly covered the whole body, but it at length dwindled in the lapse of ages to the diminutive gorget of modern times. See Armour. Ancient breast-plates are mentioned as made of the more costly metals, as gold and silver, until iron and steel were found of greater security to the warrior. — Atkins. BRECHIN, in Scotland. The siege here was sustained against the army of Edward III. 1333. The battle of Brechin was fought between the forces of the earls of Huntly and Crawfurd ; the latter defeated, 1452. The see of Brechin was founded by David I. in 1150. One of its bishops, Alexander Campbell, was made prelate when but a boy, BRE 101 Bill 1556. The bishopric was discontinued soon after the revolution in 1688 ; but was revived as a post-revolution bishopric in 1731. See Bishops of Scotland. BREDA, in Holland, was taken by Prince Maurice, of Nassau, in 1590 ; by the Spaniards in 1625; and again by the Dutch in 1637. Our Charles II. resided here at the time of the restoration, 1660. See Restoration. Breda was taken by the French in 1793, and retaken by the Dutch the same year. The French garrison was shut out by the burgesses in 1813, when the power of France ceased here. BREECHES. Among the Greeks, this garment indicated slavery. It was worn by the Dacians, Parthians, and other northern nations ; and in Italy, it is said, was worn in tlie time of Augustus CaDsar. In the reign of Honorius, about a.d. 394, the hraccari, or breeches-makers, were expelled from Rome ; but soon afterwards the use of breeches was adopted in other countries, and at length became general. BREHONS were ancient judges in Ireland, and are said to have administered justice with religious impartiality, but in later times with a tendency to love of country. It was enacted by the statute of Kilkenny, that no English subject should submit to the Brehon law, 40 Edw. III. 1365. This law, however, was not finally abolished or disused until some time after. — Burn's Annals. BREMEN, said to have been founded in 788, and long an archbishopric and one of the leading towns of the Hanseatic league, was allowed a seat and vote in the college of imperial cities in 1640. In 1648 it was secularised and erected into a duchy and held by Sweden till 1712, when it was taken posscssiou of by Denmark in 1731, by whom it was ceded to Hanover. It was taken by the French in 1757; they were expelled by the Hanoverians in 1758; but again seized it in 1806. Bremen was annexed by Napoleon to the French empire in 1810 ; but its independence was restored in 1813, and all its old franchises in 1815. See Hanse Towns. BRESLAU, BATTLE of, between the Austi'ians and Prussians, the latter under prince Bevern, who was defeated, but the engagement was most bloody on both sides, Nov. 22, 1757, wlien Breslau was taken ; but was regained the same year. This city was for some time besieged by the French, and surrendered to them, Jan. 5, 1807, and again in 1813. BREST, in France, was besieged by Julius Cajsar, 54 B.C. — possessed by the English, A.D. 1378 — given up to the duke of Britanny, 1391. Lord Berkeley and a British fleet and army were repulsed here with dreadful loss iu 1694. Tlie magazine burnt, to the value of some millions of pounds sterling, 1744. The marine hospitals, with fifty galley-slaves, burnt, 1766. The magazine again destroyed by fire, July 10, 1784. From this great depot of the French navy, numerous squadrons wci-e erpiipped against England during the late war, among them the fleet which lord Howe defeated on the 1st June, 1794. P^nglaud maintained a large blockading squadron off the harbour from 1793 to 1815 ; but with little injury to France. It is now a chief naval station of that kingdom, and from the fortifications and other vast works of late construction, it is considered impregnable. BRETIGNY, PEACE of, concluded with France at Bretigny, and by which England retained Gascony and Guienne, acquired Saintonge, Ageuois, Perigord, Limousin, Bigorre, Angoumois, and Rovergne, and renounced her pretensions to Maine, Aujou, Touraine, and Normandy ; England was also to receive 3,000,000 crowns, and to release king Jolin, who had been long a prisoner in London, May 8, 1360. BREVIARIES. The Breviary is a book of mass and prayer used by the chiu'ch of Rome. It was first called the custos, and afterwards the breviary; and both the clergy and laity use it publicly and at home. It was in use among the ecclesiastical orders about A.D. 1080 ; and was reformed by the councils of Trent and Cologne, and by Pius v.. Urban VIII., and other popes. The quality of type in which the breviai-y was first printed gave the name to the type called bi'ovier at the present day. BREWERS arc traced to Egypt. Brewing was known to our Anglo-Saxon ancestors. — Tindal. " One William Murle, a rich maltman or bruor, of Dunstable, had two horses all trapped with gold, 1414." — Stoicc. In Oct. 1S51, there were 2305 licensed brewers in England, 146 in Scotland, and 97 in Ireland; total 2548: these are exclusively of retail and intermediate brewers ; and there are, besides, victuallers, &c., who brew their own ale. In London, there are about 100 wholesale brewers, many of them in immense trade. Various statutes relating to brewers and the sale of beer have been enacted from time to time. See Ale, Beer, Porter. BRIAR'S CREEK, BATTLE of ; one of a series of successful actions which occurred with the revolted Americans, iu 1779. The Americans, 2000 strong, under tho BRI 102 BRI command of their general, Ashe, were totally defeated by the English forces, under general Prevost, at same place, Mnrch 16, same year. Another action was fought, with the like result, at Briar's Creek, May 3, following. BRIBERY. Thomas de AVeyland, a judge, was banished the land for bribery, in 1288 ; he was chief justice of the common pleas. William de Thorpe, chief justice of the king's bench, was hanged for bribery in 1351. Another judge was fined 20,000/. for the like offence, 1616. Mr. AValpole, secretary-at-war, was sent to the Tower for bribery, in 1712. Lord Strangford was suspended from voting in the Irish house of lords, for soliciting a bribe, January, 1784. See next article. BRIBERY AT ELECTIONS made, as in the preceding cases, an indictable offence. Messrs. Sykes and Rumbold wei'e fined and imprisoned for bribery at an election, March 14, 1776. An elector of Durham convicted, July 1803. Messrs. Davidson, Parsons, and Hopping convicted and imprisoned for bribery at Ilche^ter, April 28, 1804. Mr. Swan, M.P. for Penryn, fined and imprisoned, and sir Manasseh Lopez, sentenced to a fine of 10,000/. and to two years' imprisonment for bribery at Grampound, Oct. 1819. Of late years several elections have been made void, and boroughs disfranchised, on account of bribery : among others, the members for Liverpool and Dublin were unseated, in 1831, and new elections proceeded with. The friends of Mr. Knight, candidate for Cambridge, were convicted of bribery, Feb. 20, 1835 ; and the elections for Ludlow and Cambridge were made void in 1840. The borough of St, Alban's was disfranchised by act passed, June 17, 1852 ; and the Corrujjt Practices at Elections bill (15 & 16 Vict. c. 57) was passed June 30, same year. Elections at Derby and other places were declared void, by reason of bribery, in the session of 1853. BRICKS. Bricks for building were used in the earliest times in Babylon, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Used in England by the Romans about a.d. 44. Made under the direction of Alfred the Great, about 886. — Saxon Chron. The size regulated by order of Charles I., 1625. Taxed, 1784. The number of bricks which paid duty in England in 1820 was 949,000,000; in 1830, the number exceeded 1,100,000,000; in 1840 it amoimted to 1,400,000,000; and in 1850, to 1,700,000,000. The duties and draw- backs of excise on bricks were repealed in the last-mentioned year. See Building. BRIDEWELL, originally the name of a royal palace of king John, near Fleet-ditch, London; it was built anew by Heniy VIII., in 1522, and was given to the city by Edward VI. in 1553. There are several prisons of this name throughout the kingdom ; among others is a new house of correction for Westminster, so called, and for which an act was passed in 1826. There is a new Bridewell in South wark, as also various houses of correction. The new Bridewell prison was erected in 1829, and that of Tothill-fields was rebuilt in 1831. The fir^.t London Bridewell was in a locality near to St. Bride's well. BRIDGES were so early and general, and the expedients for their construction so various that their origin cannot be traced. They were first of wood. The ancient bridges in China ai-e of great magnitude, and were built of stoue. Abydos is famous for the bridge of boats which Xerxes built across the Hellespont. Trajan's magnificent stoue bridge over the Danube, 4770 feet in length, was built in a.d. 103. The Devil's Bridge in the canton of Uri, so called from its frightful situation, was built resting on two high rocks, so that it could scarcely be conceived how it was erected, and many fabulous stories were invented to account for it. At Schaffbausen an extraordinary bridge was built over the Rhine, which is tliere 400 feet wide : there was a pier in the middle of the river, but it is doubtful whether the bridge rested upon it : a man of the lightest weight felt the bridge totter under him, yet waggons lieavily laden passed over without danger. This bridge was destroyed by the French in 1799. BRIDGES IN ENGLAND. The ancient bridges in England were of wood, and were fortified with pilanks and merlined ; tlie first bridge of stone was built at Bow, near Stratford, a.d. 1087. Westminster-bridge, then the finest erected in these realms, and not surpassed by any in the world, except in China, was completed in twelve years, 1750. The first iron bridge, on a large scale, was erected over the Severn, in Sliropshire, 1779. The finest chain suspen.>>ion bridge is that of the Menai Strait, completed in 1825. Hungerford suspension bridge was completed and opened May 1, 1845. See Blachfiiars, Hungerford, London, Menai Strait, Waterloo, Victoria, and other bridges. BRIDGEWATER, in Somersot.shire, was incorporated by king John, in A.D. 1200, and made a distinct county by Henry VIII. In the war between Charles I. and tlie BRI 103 BRI parliament, the forces of the latter reduced part of the town to ashes. Here stood an ancient castle, in which the ill-advised duke of Monmouth lodged when he was proclaimed king in 1685. BRIDGEWATER CANAL, the first great work of the kind in England, was begun by the duke of Bridgewator, styled the father of canal navigation in this country, in 1758 : Ml'. Briudley was the architect. The canal commences at Worsley, seven miles from Manchester ; and at Barton-bridge is an aqueduct which, for upwards of 200 yards, conveys the canal across the navigable river Irwell ; its length is about twenty-nine miles. BRIEF, a written instrument in the Roman Catholic Church, of early but uncertain • date. Briefs are the letters of the pope despatched to princes and others on public affairs, and are usually written short, and hence the name, and are without preface or preamble, and on paper; in which particulars they are distiui^ui.shed from hidls. The latter are ample, and are always written on parchment. A brief is sealed with red wax, the seal of the fisherman, or St. Peter in a boat, and always in the presence of the pope ; they are used for graces and dispensations, as well as business, BRIENNE, BATTLE of, between the allied armies of Russia and Prussia, and the French, fought on the 1st, and resumed on the 2nd February, 1814. The allies were defeated with great loss; this was one of the last battles in which the French achieved victory, previously to the fall of Napoleon. BRIGHTON, in Sussex, now a place of most fashionable resort, though formerly inhabited chiefly by fishermen. From here Charles II. embarked for France, after the disas- trous battle of Worcester, in 1651. The prince of Wales, afterwards George IV., built a fanciful yet magnificent marine palace at Brighton, formerly known as the Pavilion, 1784. It was afterwards greatly enlarged, and the entire exterior altered into a general resemblance of the kremlin at Moscow, and was distinguished as a royal palace : lately sold to the corporation of Brighton. The Block-house was swept away, March 20, 1786. Part of the cliflf fell, doing great damage, Nov. 16, 1807. The chain pier, 1134 feet long and 13 wide, was completed in 1823. The length of the esplanade here from the Steync is about 1250 feet. BRISTOL was built by Brennus, a prince of the Britons, 380 B.C., and is mentioned in A.D. 430 as a fortified city. It was called Caer Oder, a city in the valley of Bath; and sometimes, by way of eminence, Caer Brito, the British city, and by the Saxons Brighstowe, pleasant place. Gildas and Nennius speak of Bristol in the fifth and seventh centuries. The city was gi'auted a charter, and became a distinct county in the reign of Edward III. Taken by the earl of Gloucester, in his defence of his sister Maud, the empress, against king Stephen, a.d. 1138.* St Mary's church was built 1292. A new charter was obtained in 1581. Bristol was attacked with groat fury by the forces of Cromwell, 1655. An act was passed for a new exchange in 1723, but it was not erected until 1741. The bridge was built by act. May 1760. The memorable attempt to set the shipping on fire was made Jan. 22, 1777. BRISTOL RIOTS. Riot at Bristol on account of a toll, when the troops fired on the populace, and many were wounded, Oct. 25, 1793. Riot on the entrance of sir Charles Wetherell, the recorder, into the city, attended by a large police and special force, to open the sessions. He being politically obnoxious to the lower order of the citizens, a riot ensued, which was of several days' continuance, and which did not terminate until the mansion-house, the bishop's palace, several merchants' stores, some of the prisons (the inmates liberated), and nearly 100 houses had been burned and many lives lost, Oct. 29, 1831. Trial of the rioters, Jan. 2, 1832; four were executed and twenty-two transported. Suicide of col. Brereton daring his triiU by court-martial, Jan. 9, same year. BRISTOL, SEE of, one of the six bishoprics erected by Henry VIIL out of the spoils of the monasteries and religious houses which that monarch had dissolved. The cathedral was the church of the abbey of St. Austin, founded here by Robert Fitz- Harding, son to a king of Denmark, and a citizen of Bristol, a.d. 1148. It is valued in the king's books at 338^. 8s. id. Paul Bushe, provincial of the Bons-hommes, was the first bishop, in 1542 — deprived for being married, 1554. The see of Bristol was united by an order in council with that of Gloucester, in 1836, and they now form one see under the name of Gloucester and Bristol. • From the period of Honry II. in the twelfth to the middle of the eighteenth century, Bristol ranked next to Loudon, as the most populous, commercial, aud flourishiug iilace in the kingdom, but since the lattur time it has decliucd, and boon exceeded in these respects by Liverpool, Maucljostor, Leeds, Birmingham, aud Glasgow. BRI 104 BRI BRITAIN. The earliest records of the history of this island are the manuscripts and poetry of the Cambrians. The Celts were the ancestors of the Britons and modern Welsh, and were the first inhabitants of Britain. Britain, including England, Scotland, and Wales, was anciently called Albion, the name of Britain being applied to all the islands collectively — Albion to only one. — Pliny. The Romans first invaded Britain under Julius Caesar, 55 B.C., but they made no conquests. The emperor Claudius, and his generals Plautius, Vespasian, and Titus, subdued several provinces after thirty pitched battles with the natives, a.d. 43 and 44. The conquest was completed by Agi'icola, in the reign of Domitiau, a.d. 85. First invasion of Britain by the Romans, under Julius Caisar . . .B.C. Cymbeline, king of Britain . . . . Expedition of Claudius into Britain, a.d. London founded by the Romans Caractaeus carried in chains to Rome The Romans defeated by Boadicea; 70,000 slain, and Loudon burnt 55 4 40 49 51 61 A vast army of Britons is defeated by Sue- tonius, and 80,000 slain . . . . Reign of St. Lucius, the first Christian king of Britain, and in the world Severus keeps his coiut at York, then called Eboraoum He dies at York Carausius, a tyrant, usurps the throne of Britain 2S6 He is killed by Alectus, who continues the usurpation 293 Constantius recovers Britain by the defeat of Alectus 296 61 179 207 211 449 A.D. Constantius, emperor of Rome, dies at York 306 The Roman foi-ces are finally withdrawn from Britain .... 4'20 to 426 The Saxons and Angles are called in to aid the natives agaiust their northern neighboui-s, the Picts and Scots Having expelled these, the Anglo-Saxons attack the natives themselves, driving them into Wales Many of the natives settle in Armorica, since called Britanny . . . . The Saxon Heptarchy; Britain divided into seven kingdoms Reign of the renowned Arthur . Arrival of St. Augustin (or Austin), and establishment ofChristianity . . Cadwallader, last king of the Britons began his i-eign The Saxon Heptarchy ends See England. 455 457 457 506 596 678 828 KINGS OR GOVEBNORS OP BRITAIN. FROM JULIUS CjESAR TO THE SAXONS. [Where dates are not mentioned, it has been found impossible to reconcile the conflicting authorities for them ; and in the same way in the orthography of names, a like diflBculty occurs.] BEFORE CHRIST * Cassibelan. * Theomantius. 4. Cymbeline. * Guiderius. AFTER CHRIST. 45. Arviragus. 73. Marius. 12.'). Coilus 1. 179. St. Lucius. 207, 284. 293, 296. 306. 837 [The first Christian king of Britain, and in the world. He dies, and leaves the Roman emperors his heirs.] Seveinis, emperor of Rome. Died at York in 210. Bassianus. Asclepiodorus, duke of Cornwall. Coilus IL Carausius, tyrant of Britain. Alectus, sent from Rome by the senate. ( St. Helena. ( Constantius, emperor of Rome. Constantine, son of the two former, who added Britain to the Roman empire, and was the first Christian emperor of Rome, in 306. Constantine ; son of the above. 340. 350. 353. 361. 363. 364. 375. 381. 388. 395. 446. 404. 471. 4S1. 500. 500. 542. 546. 576. * 580. 586. 613. 015. 678. Constans ; his brother. Magnentius. Constantius ; Gratianus Punarius, and afterwards Martinus, his vicars iu Britain. Julian the Apostate. Jovian ; found dead in bod. Valentinian. Gratiau. Maximus ; assumes the purple in Britain ; is slain. Valentinian; colleague of Gratian above named. Honorius. ' Vortigern, who called in the Saxons. Vortimer. Vortigern, again. Aurelius Ambrosius ; a Roman. Uthur Pendragon. Arthur, the renowned king. Constantine, cousin of Arthur. Aurelius Conan ; a cruel prince. Vortipor ; a vicious ruler. Cuneglas ; also a tyrant. Malgo Coranus ; another tyrant. Careticus. Cadwau VI. ; prince of N. Wales. Cadwallan. Cadwallader; after whose death the Saxons conquer all the country east of the Severn and divide it. The British princes lose the name of kings, and arc called princes of Wales. KINGS OF THE HEPTARCHY. KENT. [Co-extmsive with tin shire of ^eii^.] 455. Hengist. 488. jEsc, Esca, or Bscus, son of Hengist ; in honoiu of whom the kings of Kent were for some time called jEscings. 512. Octa, son of M%a. 642. Hermcnric, or Ermcnric, son of Octa. 500. St. Ethelbert ; first Christian king. Eadbald, son of Ethelbert. 640, 664. 673, 685 694. 72.5. 748. 760, 794. Ercenbert, or Ercombert, son of Eadbald. Ecbert, or Egbert, son of Ercenbert. Lother, or Lothair, brother of Ecbert. Edric ; slain in 687. [The kingdom was now subject for a time to various leaders.] Wihtred, or Wihgtred. Klbert II. 1 sons of Wihtred succeed- ji^lric. j '"? '^'ich other. Edbert, or Ethelbert Pryn : deposed. BRI .105 BRI BRITAIN, continued. 796. Ciitlired, or Guthred. 805. Baldred ; who iu S23 lost his life and kingdom to Egbert, king of VVessex. SOUTH SAXONS. [Simsex and Surrey.} 490. Ella, a warlike prince, succeeded by 514. Cissa, liis son, whose reign was long and peaceful, exceeding 70 years. [The South Saxons here fell into an almost total dependence on the kingdom of Wessex, and we scarcely know the names of the princes who were possessed of this titular sovereignty. — l/itme.] 64S. Bdilwald, Bdilwach, or Adelwach. OSS. Authun and Bcrtlum, brothers ; they reigned jointly; botli were vanquished by lua, king of Wes.sex, and the king- dom was finally conquered iu 725. WEST SAXONS. [Berks, Snidhamptoii, Wilts, So)nerset, Dorset, Devon, and part of Cornwall.] 519. Ccrdicus. 534. Cynric, or Kenric, son of Cordic. 559. Ceawlin, son of Cynric ; banished by his subjects, and died in 59'!. 591. Coolric, nepliew to Ceawlin. 597. Ccdlwulf. 611. I Cynogils, and in 614. ) Cwichelm, his son reign jointly. 643. Cenwal, Cenwalh, or Cenwald. 672. Sexburga, his queen, sister to Ponda, king of Mercia; of great qualities: probably deposed. 674. Esc wine ; in conjunction with Ccntwine ; on tlie death of Escwine 676. Centwine rules alone. C85. Coadwal, or Ca;adwaUa : this prince went in lowly state to Rome, to expiate his deeds of blood and died there. 688. Ina, or Inas, a brave and wise ruler : he also journeyed to Rome, where he passed his time iu obscurity, leaving behind him an excellent code of Laws. 72S. Etlielheard, or Etlielai-d, related to Ina. 740. Cuthred, brother to EtheUieard. 754. Sigebryht, or Sigebert ; * having mur- dered a nobleman, ho lied, but was recognised and slain. 755. Cynewulf, or Konwulf, or Cenulpe, t a noble youth of the line of Cerdic : mur- dered by a banished subject. 784. Bertric, or Beorhtric : t poisoned by drink- ing of a cup his quocn liad prepared for another. 800. Egljcrt, aficrwards solo monarch of England. EAST SAXONS. [ffs«f.r, Middlesex, and pai-t of Ilerts.} 527. Ercheuwin, or Erchwino. 587. Sledda ; his son. 597. St. Sebert, or Sabert ; son of the pre- ceding : first Christian king. 014. Saxred or Sexted, or Serred, jointly with Sigebert aud Seward : all slain. 623. Sigebert 11. suruamod the little; son of Seward. G55. Sigebert III. surnamed the good ; bro- ther of Sebert : put to death. 601. Swithelm, son of Sexbald. 663. Sigher, or Sigcric, jointly with Sebbi, or Sebba, wlio became a monk. 093. Sigonard, or Sigohard, aud Suenfrid. 700. Offii ; left his ciuoen and kingdom, and became a monk at Rome. 709. Suebriclit, or Selred. 738. Switlu-ed, or Switlicd ; a long reign. 792. Sigcric ; died iu a pilgrimage to Komo. 799. Sigered. 823. The kingdom seized upon by Egbert king of Wessex. NORTHOMBKIA. [Lancaster, York, Cumberland, Westmorland, Durham, and Norlhwnhcrland.] *»* Northumbria was at first divided into two separate governments, Bernicio, and Deira : the former stretching from tlie river Tweed to the Tyne, and the latter from the Tyne to the llumber. 547. Ida ; a valiant Saxon. 560. Adda, his eldest son ; king of Bernicia. — Ella, king of Deira ; afterwards sole king of Northumbria. 567. Glappa, Clappa, or Elapea ; Bernicia. 572. Ueodwulf; Bernici.a. 573. Freodvvulf ; Bernicia. 580. Theodric ; Bernicia. 588. Ethelric ; Bernicia. 593. Ethelfrith, surnamed the Fierce. 617. Edwin, son of Ella, king of Deira in 500. The greatest prince of the Ileptarchy in th.it age. — Hume. Slain iu battle with Pemia, king of Mercia. 0.34. Tlie kingdom again divided ; Eanfrid I'ules iu Bernicia, and Osric in Deira : both put to death. 035. Oswald slain iu liattlc. 044. Osweo, or Oswy ; a reign of great renown. 670. Ecfrid, or lOgfrid, king of Northumbria. 085. Alcfrid, or Ealdfertli. 705. Osred, son of Ealdferth. 716. Ccnrcd ; sprung from Ida. 718. Osric, son of Alcfrid. 729. Ceolwulf; died a monk. 738. Eadbcrt, or Egbert ; retired to a monas- tery. 757. Oswulf. or Osulf ; slain iu a sedition. 759. Edilwald or Mollo ; slain by Aired, who w.as impatient for the thi-oue. 705. Aired, Aili-ed, or Alured ; dejiosod. 774. Ethclrod, sou of Mollo ; expelled. * The fato of Sigebryht, and of the two monarchs that immediately succeeded him, strikingly illustrates the condition of society iu Britain .at this time: — Sigebryht had treacherously conspired against, and murdered his friend, Duke Cuml)ran, governor of ll.ampsliire, who had given liim an asylum wlicn expelled from his tlirone. For tliis infamous deed he was forsaken by the world, and wandered al)out iu the wilds ami forests, where he was at length discovered by one of Cumbran's servants, who took vengeance upon him for the murder of his master, by cutting him to pieces. JIume. t Cynovulf had an intrigue with a young lady, who lived at Merton, iu SuiTcy, whither havin" secretly retired, ho was sudleuly environed in the night-time, by Kyuehard, brother of Sigebryht whom Cynewulf liad banislicd, and, after makinjr a vigorous resistance, w.as murdered, with all his attendants. The nolnlity and i)eoplo of the neighbourhood rising next day iu arms, revenged the slaughter of their king by putting every one concerned iu it to the sword. — Iliime. X Beorhtric had married Eadburga, natural daughter of OITa, king of Mercia, a woman equally infamous for cruelty aud incoutinonco. She had mixed a cup of poison for a yo'ung nobleman, an object of her jealousy ; b>it the king drank of the fatal cup along with the uobleman,''and both soon expired. Tiie crimes of E idburg.i otjliged her iu tlic end to fiee to Prance, whence she was oxpolled, and she afterwards wandered to Ifcily, where shj died iu poverty and want. — Iluine. BRI 106 Bin BKITAIN, continued, 778. Elwald, or Celwold ; deposed and slain. 789. Osred, son of Aired ; fled. 790. Elthelred restored ; afterwards slain. V95. Erdulf, or Ardulf ; deposed. SOS. Alfwold II. ; succeeded by Erdulf, and perliaps others ; but the kingdom after so many fatal revolutions lost all attachment to its government and princes, and was prepared fur its sub- jection to the yoke of Egbert. — Hume. EAST ANGLES. INorfoll; Suffolk, Cambridge, Me of Bli/.] 575. UfFa ; a noble German. 582. Titilus or Titulus ; son of Uffa. 599. Redwald ; son of Titilus : the greatest prince of the East Angles. 624. Erpwald or Eorpwald. 629. Sigebert ; half-brother to Erpwald. <;32. Egfrid, or Egric ; cousin to Sigebert. 635. Anna, or Annas ; a just ruler ; killed. 654. Ethelric, or Ethelhere ; slain in batcle. •655. Ethelwald ; his brother. 664. Aldulf, or Aldwulf. 713. Selred, or Ethelred. 746. Alphwuld. 749. Beorn and Ethelred, jointly. 758. Beorn alone. 761. Etlielred. 790. Ethelbert, or Ethelbryht ; treacherously put to death in Mercia in 792, when Offa, king of Mercia, overran the coun- try, which was finally subdued by Egbert. MERCIA. ICounties of Gloucester, Hereford, Chester, Staf- ford, Worcester, Oxford, Salop, Warxcick, Derby, Leicester, Bucks, Northampton, Notts, Lincoln, Bedford, Rutland, Huntingdon and part of Herts. ] 586. Crida, or Cridda ; a noble chieftain. 503. [Interregnum.] 597. Wibba, a valiant prince, his son. 615. Ceorl, or Cheorl ; nephew of Wibba. 626. Penda, a fierce, cruel, and revengeful warrior ; killed in battle. 655. Peada, son of Penda ; murdered. 656. Wulf here, brother of Peada ; to make way for whom Peada was slain : he slew his two sons with his own hand. 675. Ethelred ; became a monk. 704. Cenred, Cendred, or Kendred ; became a monk at Rome. 709. Ceolred, or Celred, or Chelred, son of Ethelred. 716. Ethelbald ; slain in a mutiny by one of his own chieftains, his successor, after a defeat in battle. 755. Beornred, or Bernred : himself slain. 755. Otfa ; he formed the great dyke on the borders of Wales known by his name. 794. Egfrid, or Egferth, sou of Offa : he had ruled jointly with his father for some years : died suddenly. 794. Cenulf, or Kenulph ; slain. 819. Kenelm or Cenelm, a minor ; reigned five months : killed by his sister Quen- dreda, from the ambitious hope of assu- ming the government. — Hume. 819. Ceolwulf, Tincle to Kenelm ; driven from the throne. 821. Beomulf, or Burnwulf; killed by his own subjects. 823. Ludecan ; a valiant ruler : slain, 825. Withlafe, or Wiglaf. 838. Berthulf, or Bertulf. 852. Burhred, or Burdred. [This last kingdom merged, like the other kingdoms of the Heptarchy, into that of England.] The Saxons, although they were divided into seven different kingdoms, yet were for the most part subject to one king alone, who was entitled Rex gentis Anylomm, or King of the English nation ; those which were stronger than the rest giving the law to them in their several turns, till, in the end, they all became incorporated in the empire of the West Saxons under Egbert. The following were kings or octarchs during the Heptarchy * : — KINGS, OR OCTARCHS, OF THE ENGLISH SAXONS. 457. Hengist, first king of Kent. 490. Ella, king of the South Saxons. 519. Cerdic, king of the West Saxons. 534. Kenric, ditto. 560. Cealwin, ditto. 593. St. Ethelbert, ditto, and of Kent. 616. Redw.ald, king of the East Angles. 630. Edwine, king of Northumbria. 635. Oswald, ditto; slain. 644. Osweo, or Oswy, ditto. 6/0. Wulf here, king of Mercia. 675. Ethelred, king of Mercia. 704. Cenred, ditto. 709. Celred, ditto ; slain in battle. 716. Ethelbald, ditto; slain. 758. Oflfa, ditto. 796. Egferth, or Egfrido, ditto. 790. Kenulph, ditto. 820. Egbert, king of the West Saxons ; the first and absolute monarch of the whole Heptarchy, who vanquished all or most of the Saxon kings, and added their dominions to his own. That Britain formerly joined the Continent has been inferred from the similar cliffs of the oppo-site coasts of the English Channel, and from the constant encroachments of the sea in still widening the channel. For instance, a large part of the cliffs of Dover fell, estimated at six acres, Nov. 27, l^\(i.— Phillips s Annals. BRITANNIA TUBULAR BRIDGE.— See Tubular Bridge. BRITISH INSTITUTION, Pall Mall. Founded in 1805, and opened Jan. 18, 1806, on a plan formed by sir Thomas Bernard, for the encouragement of Briti.sh artists. The gallery that was purchased for this institution was erected by alderman Boydell, to exhibit the paintings that had been executed for his edition of Shakspeare. — Leiyh. * The term "Octarchy" is sometimes applied, by writers, to the Saxon kingdoms, ina.smuch as Northumbria, the seventh kingdom, was at different periods divided into two kingdoms, Bernicia and Deira, ruled by sejiarute kings. Other writers apply the tei-m to the successive kings whose authority was acknowledged by the other princes of the Heptarchy ; these they call Octarchs. BRI 107 BRU BRITISH MUSEUM. Tiie origiu of this great national institution was the grant by parliament of 20,000Z. to the daughters of sir Hans Sloane, in payment for his fine library, and vast collection of the productions of nature and art, which had cost him 50,000^. The library contained 50,000 volumes and valuable MSS. and 69,352 articles of vertti were enumerated in the catalogue of cuiiositics. The act was passed April 5, 1753 : and in the same year Montagu-house was obtained by government as a place for the reception of these treasures. The museum has since been gradually increased to an immense extent, by gifts, bequests, the purchase of every species of curiosity, MSS., sculpture, and work of art, and by the transference to its rooms of the Cottonian, Harleian, and other libraries, the Elgin marbles, y as a medicine — never as food. The Christians of Egypt burnt butter in their lamps instead of oil, in the third centurj-. Butter forming an important article of commerce as well as food in these countries, various statutes have passed respecting its package, weight, and sale ; the principal of which are the 36th & 38th Geo. III. and 10 Geo. IV. 1829. In 1675, there fell in Ireland, during the wintertime, a thick yellow dew, wliicli had all the medicinal properties of butter. In Africa, vegetable butter is made from the fruit of the shea tree, and is of richer taste, at Kebba, than any butter made from cow's milk. — Mungo Park. BUTTONS. Of early manufacture in England : those covered with cloth were prohi- I BYN 114 CAB bited by a statute, thereby to encourage the manufacture of metal buttons, 8 Geo. I. 1721. The manufacture owes nothing to encouragement from any quarter of late years, although it has, notwithstanding, much improved. — Phillips. BYNG, Hon. Admiral JOHN. Shot on board the Monarch ship of war at Spithead, March 14, 1757. This brave officer, so distinguished by his services, and who had given so many signal proofs of his courage as a commander, was charged with neglect of duty in an engagement with the enemy off Minorca on the 20th of May preceding. As his conduct could not merit the accusation of cowardice, and as he was too Bntish for that of disaffection to be hazarded against him, he was condemned for an error of judfiment, and suffei'ed death. The following bold inscription was cut upon his tomb, at South-hill, Bedfordshire : — TO THE PERPETUAL DISGRACE OF PUBLIC JUSTICE, THE HONOURABLE JOHN BYNG FELL A MARTYR TO POLITICAL PERSECUTION, MARCH 14, 1767: WHEN BRAVERY AND LOYALTY WERE INSUFFICIENT SECURITIES FOR THE LIFE AND HONOUR OF A NAVAL OFFICER. BYRON'S VOYAGE. Commodore Byron left England on his voyage round the globe, June 21, 1764, and returned May 9, 1766. In his voyage he discovered the populous island in the Pacific Ocean which bears his name, Aug. 16, 1765. Though brave and intrepid, such was his general ill-fortune at sea, that he was called by the sailors of the fleet " Foul-weather Jack." — Bdlchambers. BYZANTIUM, now Constantinople, founded by a colony of Athenians, 715 B.C. — Easehius. It was taken by the Romans a.D. 73, and was laid in ruins by Severus in 196. Byzantium was rebuilt by Constantine in 338 ; and after him it received the name of Constantinople. See Constantinople. c. CABAL. A Hebrew word, used in various senses. The rabbins were cabalists, and the Christians so called those who pretended to magic. In English history, the Cabal was a council which consisted of five lords in administration, supposed to be pensioners of France, and distinguished by the appellation of the Cabal, from the initials of their names : Sir Thomas Clifford (C), tlie lord Ashley (A), the duke of Buckingham (B), lord Arlington (A), and the duke of Lauderdale (L) ; 22 Charles II. 1670.— Ilume. CABBAGES. Three varieties were brought to these realms from Holland, a.d. 1510. To sir Arthur Ashley of Dorset, the first planting them in England is ascribed. This vegetable was previously imported from the Continent. It was introduced into Scotland by the soldiers of Cromwell's army. See Gardening. CABINET COUNCIL.* There were councils in England so early as the reign of Ina, king of the West Saxons, a.d. 690 ; Offa, king of the Mercians, a.d. 758 ; and in other reigns of the Heptarchy. State councils are referred to Alfred the Great. — Spclman. Cabinet councils, properly so called, are, however, of comparatively modern date. The cabinet councils in which secret deliberations were held by the king and a few of his chosen friends, and the great officers of state, to be afterwards laid before the second council, now styled the privy council, originated in the reign of Chai-les I. — Salmon. The great household officers were formerly always of the cabinet. "But in Walpole's time there was an interior council, of Walpole, the chancellor, and secretaries of state, who, in the fii'st instance, consulted together on the more con- fidential points." — Crokei-'s Memoirs of Lord *JIervey. The modern cabinet council has usually consisted of the following twelve members : — Lord chaiicellor. First lord of the treasury. Lord president of the council. Chancellor of the exchequer. Lord privy seal. Home, foreign, and colonial secretaries of state. First lord of tlie admiralty. President of the board of control. President of the board of trade. Chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster. * The term cabinet council originated thus : The affairs of state in the reign of Charles I. were principally man.iged by the archbishop of Canterbury, the earl of Strafford, and the lord Cottington ; to these were added, the earl of Northumberland, for ornament ; the bishop of Loudon, for his place, being lord treasurer; tlie two secretaries, Vane and Wiudebauk, for service and intelligence ; only tlie marquis of Hamilton, by his skill and interest, meddled just so far, and no further, than he had a mind. These persons made up the committee of state, reproachfully called the JujUo, and afterwards, enviously, the cabinet coimciL— Lord Clarendon. CAB 115 C.ES lu 1850, the number was fifteen, and included the secretary-at-war, the postmaster- general, and the chief secretary for Ireland. The present number (1855), including tlie marquess of Lansdowne, without office, is fourbeeu. The cabinet ministers of the various reigns will be found under the head Administrations of England. CABLES. Their use was known in the earliest times : a machine for making the largest, by which human labour was reduced nine-tenths, was invented in 1792. This machine was set in motion by sixteen horses, when making cables for ships of large size. Chain cables were introduced into the British navy in 1812. CABRIOLET. One-horsed cabriolets (indgo Cabs) were introduced into the streets of liOudou, as public conveyances, in 1823, when the number plying was twelve. In 1831 they had increased to 165, and then the licenses were thrown open. The number at present running in the metropolis exceeds three thousand. For a few years after the introduction of these vehicles, a solitary hackuey-coach was sometimes seen mixing with them upon the stands; but now (1855) the latter have entirely disappeared. On June 28, 1853, an act (which has been called Mr. Fitzroy's act) was j)assed for " the better regulation of Metropolitan stage and hackney carriages and for prohibiting the use of advertising vehicles," by which the cab fares weie reduced to V)d. a mile. The act came iuto operation July 11, and on the 27th a general strike of the London cabmen took place. Much inconvenience was felt, and every kind of vehicle was employed to supply the deficiency. The cabs re-appeared on the stands on the 30th : some alterations (previously agreed on) were made in the act. CADDEE, OR LEAGUE of GOD'S HOUSE, the celebi-ated league of independence in Switzerland, formed by the Grisons to resist domestic tyranny, a.d. 1400 to 1419. A second league of the Grisons was called the Grise or Gray League, 1424. A third league, called the League of Ten Jurisdictions, was formed in 1436. — Ilist. of Switzerland. CADE'S INSURRECTION. Jack Cade, an Irishman, a fugitive from his country on account of his crimes, assumed the name of Mortimer, and headed 20,000 Kt-utish men, who armed " to punish evil ministers, and procure a redress of grievances." Cade entered London in triumph, and for some time bore down all opposition, and beheaded the lord treasurer, lord Saye, and several other pei-sous of cousecjuence. The insurgents at length losing ground, a general pardon was iiroclaimed ; and Cade, finding himself deserted by his followers, fled : but a reward being offered for his apprehension, he was discovered, and refusing to surrender, was slain by Alexander Iden, sherifl' of Kent, 1451. CADIZ, anciently Gadiz; called by the Romans Gades. Built l>y the Carthaginians 530 R.c. — Priestley. One hundred vessels of the armament preparing as the Spanish Armada, against Englaud, were destroyed in the port by sir Francis Drake, 1587. Cadiz was taken by the English, under the earl of Essex, and plundered, Sept. 15, 1596. It was attempted by sir George Rooke in 1702, but he failed. Bombarded by the British in 1797, and blockaded by their fleet, imder lord St. Vincent, for two years, ending in 1799. Again bombanled by the British, Oct. 1800. A French squadron of five ships of tlje line and a frigate, surrendered to the Spaniards and British in Cadiz harbour, June 14, 1808. Besieged by the French, but the siege was raised after the battle of Salamanca, July 1812. Massacre of a thousand inhabitants by the soldiery, March 10, 1820. Cadiz was declared a free port in 1829. C.ESARIAN OPERATION. The Cicsariau section, it is said, first gave the name of Ctcsar to the Roman family : it is performed by cutting the child out of the womb, when it cannot be otherwise delivered. Of twenty-two cases operated on in these islands, twenty-one of the mothers died, and ten of their children were born dead. Of twelve extracted alive, four survived only a few days. The case of Alice O'Neil, an Irishwoman, who survived the section, which was performed by a female, is authenticated by Dr. Gabriel King of Armagh, and surgeon Duncan Stewart, of Dungannon. In January, 1847, the operation was performed in Bartholomew's hospital, Loudon, on a young woman of diminutive stature, under the influence of ether ; but she died the next day. — House Returns. On the Continent the operation has been more frequent and more successful. — M. Baudelocquc. CxESARS, ERA of the; ou SPANISH ERA, is reckoned from tlie 1st of Jan. 38 B.C. being the year following the conquest of Spain by Augustus. It was much used in Africa, Spain, aud the south of France: but by a synod held in 1180 its use was abolished iii all the churches dependent on Barcelona. Pedro IV. of Arragon abolished the use of it in his dominions in 1350. John of Castile did the same iu I 2 CAF 116 CAL 1383. It continued to be used in Portugal till 1455. The months and days of this era are identical with the Julian calendar ; and to turn the time into that of our era, subtract thirty-eight from the year ; but if before the Christian era, subtract thirty- nine. CAFFRARIA, and CAFFIR WAR. See Kaffmria. CAI-FONG, IN China. This city, being besieged by 100,000 rebels, the commander of the forces who was sent to its relief, in order to drown the enemy, broke down its embankments : his stratagem succeeded, and every man of the besiegers perished ; but the city was at the same time overflowed by the watei's, and 300,000 of the citizens were drowned in the overwhelming flood, A.D. 1642. CAIRO, OR GRAND CAIRO, the modern capital of Egypt, remarkable for the minarets of its mosques, and the splendid sepulchres of its caliphs, in what is called the city of the dead. It was built by the Saracens, in a.d. 969. Burnt to prevent its occupation by the Crusaders, in 1220. Taken by the Turks from the Egyptian sultans, and their empire subdued, 1517. Ruined by an earthquake and a great fire, June, 1754, when 40,000 persons perished. Set on fire by a lady of the Begler-beg, Dec. 1755. Taken by the French under Napoleon Bonaparte, July 23, 1798. Taken by the British and Turks, when 6000 French capitulated, June 27, 1801. CALAIS, taken by Edward III. after a year's siege, Aug. 4, 1347, and held by England 210 years. It was retaken in the reign of Mary, Jan. 7, 1558, and its loss so deeply touched the queen's heart, as to cause some to say it occasioned her death, which occurred soon afterwards, Nov. 17, same year. " When I am dead," said the qvieen, " Calais will be found written on my heart." Calais was bombarded by the English, 1694. Here Louis XVIII. landed after his long exile from France, April 24, 1814. See France. CALCUTTA. The first settlement of the English liere was made in 1689. It was purchased as a Zemindary, and Fort William built in 1698. Calcutta was attacked by a large army of 70,000 horse and foot, and 400 elephants, in June, 1756. On the capture of the fort, 146 of the British were crammed iuto the Black-liole prison, a dungeon about eighteen feet square, from whence twenty-three only came forth the next morning alive. See Black-hole. Calcutta was retaken the following year, and the inhuman Soubah put to death. Supreme Court of Judicature established 1773. College founded here, 1801. Bishopric of Calcutta instituted by act 53rd Geo. III. c. 155, July, 1813. See Bengal and India. CALEDONIA. Now Scotland. The name is supposed by some to be derived from Gael or Gaelmen, or Gadel-doine, corrupted by the Romans. Tacitus, who died a.d. 99, distinguishes this portion of Britain by the appellation of Ccdedonia ; but the etymo- logy of the word seems undetermined. Venerable Bede says, that it retained this name until a.d. 258, when it was invaded by a tribe from Ireland, and called Scotia. The ancient inhabitants appear to have been the Caledonians and Picts, tribes of the Celts, who passed over from the opposite coasts of Gaul. About the beginning of the fourth century of the Christian era, they were invaded (as stated by some autho- rities) by the Scuyths or Scythians (since called Scots), who, having driven the Picts iuto the north, settled in the Lowlands, and gave their name to the whole country. Hence the origin of that distinction of language, habits, customs, and persons which is still so remarkable between the Highlanders and the inhabitants of the southern borders. Caledonian mouarchy, said to have been founded by Fergus I., about . B.C. 330 The Picts from the north of England settle in the soutliern borders . . . 140 Agricola carries the Roman arms into Caledonia, with little success, in the reign of Galdus, otherwise called Cor- bred II. a.d. 79 He is signally defeated by the forces of Corbred 80 Christianity is introduced into Caledonia in the reign of Donald I. . 201 I gge Scotland. The country is mvaded by the Scuyths, I The origin of the Scots, it should be stated, is very uncertain ; and the history of the country until the eleventh century, when Malcolm III. surnamed Canmore reigned (1057), is obscure, and intermixed with many improbable fictions. CALEDONIAN CANAL. The act for this stupendous undertaking— a canal from the or Scots, and the government is over- thrown, about .... A.D. 306 The Caledonian monarchy is revived by Fergus II 404 After many sanguinary wars between the Caledonians, Picts, and Scots, Kenneth II. obtains a glorious victory over the Picts, unites the whole country under one monarchy, and gives it the name of Scotland 838 to 843 CAL 117 CAL North Sea to the Atlantic Ocean — received the royal assent, July 27, 1803; and the woi-ks were commenced same year. By means of this magnificent canal the nautical intercourse between the western ports of Great Britain, and those also of Ireland to the North Sea and Baltic, is shortened in some instances 800, and in others, 1000 miles. A sum vastly exceeding a million sterling was granted by parliament from time to time; and this safe navigation for ships of nearly every tonnage was completed, and opened Oct. 30, 1822. CALENDAR. The Roman calomlar, which has in great part been adopted by almost all nations, w-as introduced by Romulus, who divided the year into ten months, com- prising 304 days, 738 B.C. The year of Romulus was of fifty days less duration tlian the lunar year, and of sixty-one less than the solar year, and its commencement did not, of course, correspond with any fixed season. Numa Pompilius, 713 B.C. corrected this calendar, by adding two months ; and Julius Ciiosar, desirous to make it more correct, fixed the solar year as being 365 days and six hoiirs, 45 B.C. This almost perfect arrangement was denominated the Julian style, and prevailed generally thi'oughout the Christian world till the time of pope Gregory XIII. The calendar of Julius Ca3sar was defective in this particular, that the solar year consisted of 365 days, five hours, and forty-nine minutes ; and not of 365 days, six hours. This difference, at the time of Gregory XIII. had amounted to ten entire days, the vernal equinox falling on the 11th, instead of tlie 21st of March. To obviate this error, Gregory oi-dained, in 1582, that that j ear should consist of 365 days only; and to prevent further irregularity, it was determined that a year beginning a century should not be bissextile, with the exception of that beginning each fonrtli century : thus, 1700 and 1800 have not been bissextile, nor will 1900 be so: but the year 2000 will be a leap year. In this manner three days are retrenched in 400 years, because the lapse of eleven minutes makes three days in about that period. The year of the calendar is thus made as nearly as possible to correspond with the true solar year ; and future errors of chronology are avoided. See Neiv Style. CALENDAR, FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY. See French Revolutionary Calendar. CALENDAR. This machine, which is used in glazing various kinds of cloth, was introduced into England by the Huguenots, who were driven by persecution from Franco, Holland, and the Netherlands, to these countries, about 1685. — Anderson. CALICO, the well-known cotton cloth, is named from Calicut, a city of India, which was discovered by the Portuguese, in 1498. Calico was first brought to England by the East India Company, in 1631. Calico printing, and the Dutch loom engine, were first used in 1676. — Anderson. Calicoes were prohibited to be printed or worn, in 1700; and again, in 1721. They were first made a branch of manufactui'e in Lancashire in 1771. See Cotton. CALIFORNIA (from the Spauisli, Calienfe Fornalla, hot furnace, in allusion to the climate), was discovered by Cortez, in 1535; and taken possession of by sir Francis Drake, who had his right to it confirmed by the king of the country, in 1578. The Jesuits made their settlements here, about 1690; but they were subsequently expelled by the Spaniards. This peninsula for a long period lieforo 1846 belonged to Mexico; but in July in tliat year, the wliole territory, by a bloodless conquest, was annexed to the possessions of the United States of North America. The late discovery of the auriferous region here has attracted a universal tide of emigration to it from Europe, America, and the countries of the utmost East; tens of thousands from the British Isles being among the earliest adventurers. The fii-st known discovery of gold in its wonderful quantity was made by a located captain, named Sutter, and his friend Mr. Marshall, in September, 1847 ;* but it is supposed that the existence of gold was * Captain Sutter says : he was sitfcin.'ij one evening in his room writing, wlicn Ulr. Ufarsliall suddenly entered, with great excitemeiit in liis face, andunaUe to speak, (lung upon the table a handful of seales of pure virgin gold. Ho at length explained that, while widening a channel wliich had been made too narrow to allow a mill-wlioel to work |)roi>crly, a mass of s,and and gravel had been thrown up by the excavators. Glittering in this sand, Mr. Mar.shall noticed what he thought to be an opal, a stone common in Call'"ornia : it was, however, a scale of i>ure gold, and the first idea of the discoverer was, that some Indian tribe or ancient po.'^.sessors of the land had buried a treasure. But examination showed the whole soil to teem witli the precious metal ; and then mounting a hor.se, he rode down to carry the intelligence to his partner. To u it secret, rroceeding together to the spot, they picked up a quantity of the scales ; and with nothing but a small knife, Captain Sutter extracted from a little hollow in the rock a solid mass of gold weighing an ounce and a lialf. The attempt to conceal this valuable discovery was not suc- cessful. An artful Kentuckian labourer, observing the eager looks of the two searchers, followed, and nnitated them, picking ui) several flakes of gold. Gradually the report spread, and as the CAL 118 CAL known to numerous individuals previously, wlio concealed tlie source of their enormous gains, while they trafficked ostensibly in the inferior products of the laud. The recent discovery of the gold-fields of Australia (April, 1851) has tm-ned tlie stream of emigration from these kingdoms to that country. See Atistralia. — California is advancing rapidly in wealth and importance, but society is still in a very disor- ganised state. There were many murders committed iu 1853, and Lynch law is still in operation. CALIPER COMPASS, an instrument whereby founders and gunners measure the bore or diameter of cannon, mortars, and other pieces of ordnance, and also of small arms, and the diameter of shot. This compass is said to have been invented by an artificer at Nuremberg, in 1540. CALIPH, (in Arabic,) Vicar, or Apostle, the title assumed by the Sophi of Persia, in the succession of Ali, and by the Grand Seit^niors as the successors of Mahomet. The calijjhat was adopted by Abubeker, the father of the Prophet's second wife, in whoso arms he died, a.d. 631. In process of time the soldans or sultans engrossed all the civil power, and little but the title was left to the caliphs, and that chiefly in matters of religion. — Sir T. Herbert. CALIPPIC PERIOD, invented by Calippus, the first observer of the revolution of eclipses — a series of seventy-six years, at the expiration of which he imagined the new and full moons retxirned to the same day of the solar year, which is a mistake ; for in 553 years they come too late by one whole day: this period was begun about the end of June, in the third year of 112bh Olympiad, in the year of Rome 424, and 329 ■B.C.— Pardon. CALIXTINS, a sect derived from the Hussites, in the middle of the fifteenth century. They asserted the use of the cuji as essential to the Eucharist. Among the Lutherans they are those following the sentiments of Calixtus, who died 1656. Calixtus wrote a treatise against the celibacy of the priesthood. CALIYUG ERA, or ERA of CHINA, dates from 3101 B.C. and begins with the entrance of the sun into the Hindoo sign Aswin, which is now on the 11th April, N.S. In the year 1600, the year began on the 7th of April, N.S., from which it has now advanced four days, and, from the precession of the equinoxes, is still advancing at the rate of a day in sixty years. The number produced by subtracting 3102 from any given year of the Caliyug era, will be the Christian year in which the given year begins. CALLAO, IN Peru. Here, afcer an earthquake, the sea retired from the shore, and returned in mountainous waves, which destroyed the city, a.d. 1687. The same phenomenon took j^lace Oct. 28, 1746, when all the inhabitants perished, with the exception of one man, who was standing on an eminence, and to whose succour a wave providentially threw a boat. CALLIGRAPHY, beautiful writing, in a small compass. Invented by Callicrates, who is said to have written an elegant distich on a sesamum seed, 472 B.C. The modern specimens of this art ai'e, many of them, astonishing and beautiful. In the sixteenth century, Peter Bales wrote the Lord's Prayer, creed, and decalogue, two short Latin prayers, his own name, motto, day of the month, year of our Lord, and of the I'eign of queen Elizabeth, to whom he presented it at Hampton-court, all within the circle of a silver penny, enchased in a ring and border of gold, and covered M'ith crystal, so accurately done as to be plainly legible, to the great admiration of her majesty, the whole of the privy council, and several ambassadors then at court, 1574. — HoUnslicd. CALMAR, TREATY op. The celebrated treaty, whereby Denmark, Sweden, and Norway were united under one sovereign ; Margaret of Waldemar, " the Semiramis of the North," being the first, 1397. The deputies of the three kingdoms assembled at Calmar for the election of a king ; and Margaret, having defeated Albert of Sweden (whose tyranny had caused a revolt of his subjects), in 1393, she was made choice of to rule over Denmark, as well as Sweden and Norway, of which she was then queen. This treaty is commonly called the Union of Calmar. — Ilcnault. CALOMEL. The mercurial compound termed calomel is first mentioned by Crollius early in the seventeenth century, but must have been previously known. The first directions given for its preparation were those announced by Beguin, in 1608. It is said that corrosive sublimate was known some centuries before. would-be monopolists returned towards the mill, a crowd met tliem, holding out flakes of gold, shoutiug with joy, and calling out, Oro ! Oio ! Gold ! Gold ! CAL 119 CAM CALORIC SHIP ERICSSON. In this vessel it was attempted to supei'sede steam as a motive power, by caloric or heated air. The ship Ericsson was constructed in America on this new principle of motion, and sailed down the bay of New York, Jan. 4th, 1853; and, it was thought, proved that caloric was adapted to locomotion, and destined, perhaps, to work a complete revolution in navigation. The vessel was designed by captain Ericsson, wliose name she bore, and on this trial trip sailed fourteen miles an hour, at a cost of fuel full eighty per cent, less than is consumed by ordinary steam-ships. The plan was, however, finally abandoned in the United States in Sept. 1854. CALVARY, MOUNT, the place where the Redeemer suffered death, a.d. 33. Calvary (which cannot now be traced, for the ground is an entire plain) was a small eminence or hill adjacent to Jerusalem, appropriated to the execution of malefactors. See Luke, xxiii. 33. Adrian, at the time of liis persecution of the Christians, erected a temple of Jupiter on Mount Calvary, and a temple of Adonis on the manger at Bethlehem, a.d. 142. Within the city of Jerusalena is the church of the Holy Sepulchre, whither pilgrims flock from all Christian countries. See Holy Places. CALVES'-HEAD CLUB. Some noblemen and gentlemen who composed it having ridiculously exposed raw heads in bloody cloths at the windows of the tavern where it was held, the mob would have pulled down the house if the guards had not dispersed them, Jan. 16, 1734, The club was in consequence suppressed Salmorts Chron. CAL VI, SIEGE OF. The British forces besieged the strong fortress of Calvi on the 12th June, 1794, and after a close investment of it for fifty-nine days, it surrendered on August 10, following : the garrison marched out with the honours of war, and were conveyed to Toulon. Calvi surrendered to the French, in 179G. CALVINISTS, named after their founder, John Calvin, one of tlie great Protestant Reformers, who was born at Noyon, in Plcardy, in 1509 : but adopting the principles of the Reformers, he fled to Angouleme, where he composed his Iiistitntio Vhristiance Religionis, in 153-3, published in 1536, two years afterwards. Ho subsequently retired to Basle, and next settled in Geneva. Although he differed from Lutlier in essential points, still his followers did not consider themselves as different on this account from the adherents of Luther. A formal separation first took place after the conference of Poissy, in 1561, where they expressly rejected the tenth article of the confession of Augsburg, besides some others, and took the name of Calvinists. CAMBRAY. The town whence the esteemed manufacture called cambric takes its name. The city was taken by the Spaniards by a memorable surprise, in 1595. Cambray was taken and retaken several times. In the war of the French revolution it was invested by the Austrians, Aug. 8, 1793, when the republican general, Dcclay, replied to the Imperial summons to surrender, that " he knew not hw to do thai, but his soldiers knew how to fight." In 1794, the French were defeated at CrBsar's Camp, in the neighbourhood, by the allied army under the duke of York, April 23. In the late war it was seii^cd by the British under general sir Charles (Jolville, June 24, 1815. The citadel surrendered the next day. and was occupied by Louis XVIII. and his court. This was one of the fortresses stipulated to be occupied by the allied army for five years. CAMBRAY, LEAGUE of. This was the celebrated league against the republic of Venice, comprising the pope, the emperor, and the kings of France and Spain; and whereby Venice was forced to cede to Spain her possessions in the kingdom of Naples, entered into Dec. 10, 1508. A treaty was concluded here in 1529, between Francis I. of France and Charles V. of Germany ; also a treaty between the emperor Charles VI. and Pliilip V. of Spain, in 1724-5. CA^IBRICS. A fabric of fine linen used for ruflles. — Shalspeai-e. Cambrics were first worn in England, and accounted a great luxury in dress, 22 Eliz. 1580. — Stowe. The importation of cambrics was restricted in 1745 ; and was totally prohibited by statute of 32 Geo. II., 1758. Re-admitted in 178C, but afterwards again prohibited. The importation of cambrics is now allowed. CAMBRIDGE. Once called Grania, and of most ancient standing, being frequently mentioned in the earliest accounts of the old British historians. Roger de Mont- gomery destroyed it with fire and sword to be revenged of king William Rufus. The university is said to have been commenced by Sigebert, king of the East Angles, about A.D. 631 ; but it lay neglected during the Danish invasions, from which it suffered much. It was somewhat restored by Edwai'd the Elder, iu 915 ; and learning CAM 120 CAM began to revive about 1110, when Henry I. bestowed many privileges upon the town; as did Henry III. In Wat Tyler's and Jack Straw's rebellion, in the reign of Richard II., the rebels entered the town, seized the university records, and burnt them in the market-place, 1381. Cambridge now contains thirteen colleges and four halls, of which first, Peter-house is the most ancient, and King's College the noblest foundation in Europe ; and the chapel is esteemed to be one of the finest pieces of Gothic architecture in the world. COLLEGE,?. Christ College, founded . . a.d. 1412 [Endowed by Margaret, countess of Rich- mond, mother of Henry VII. J Corpus Christi, or Beuet . . . . 1351 DowningCoUege, by sii- George Downing, by will, in 1717 ; its charter . . 1800 Emmanuel College, by sir Walter Mild- may . . . . " . . . . 1584 Gonville and Caius. by Edmund GonviUe 1348 Enlarged by Dr. Jolui Caius in . . 1557 Jesus College, by John Alcock, bishop of Ely . - 1496 King's College, by Henry VI. , . . 1441 Magdalene College, by Stafford, duke of Buckingham 1519 Peter-house College, by Hugo de Bal- sham, bishop of Ely . . . . 1234 Queen's College, by Margaret of Anjou, consort of Henry VI. . . a.d. St. John's College, endowed by Margaret, countess of Richmond . . . . Sidney-Sussex College, founded by F. Sidney, countess of Sussex . Trinity CoUege, by Henry VIII. . . Catherine Hall, founded .... Clare Hall, first by Dr. Richard Baden, in 1326 ; destroyed by fii-e, and re- established by Elizabeth de Burg . . Pembroke Hall, founded by the countess of Pembroke Trinity Hall, by William Bateman, bishop of Norwich 1443 1511 1593 1540 1475 1344 1343 1351 In 1687, the university refused the degree of M.A. to father Francis, a Benedictine monk, recommended by the king ; and the pre.sidency of Magdalene College was also refused to Farmer, a Roman Catholic, notwithstanding the mandate of James in the same year. CAMDEN, BATTLES of. The first battle between general Gates and lord Cornwallis, the former commanding the revolted Americans, who were defeated, was fought Aug. 16, 1780. The second battle between general Greene and lord Rawdon, when the Americans were again defeated, April 25, 1781. Camden was evacuated, and burnt by the British, May 13, 1781. CAMERA LUCID A. Invented by Dr. Hooke, about 167i.— Wood's Aih. Ox. Also an iu.strument invented by Dr. Wollaston, in 1807. The camera obscura, or dark chamber, was invented, it is believed, by the celebrated Roger Bacon, in 1297 ; it was improved by Baptista Porta, the writer on natural magic, about 1500. — Moreri. Sir I. Newton remodelled it. By the recent invention of M. Daguerre, in 1839, the pictures of the camera are rendered permanent. CAMERONIANS. A sect in Scotland (so called from Archibald Cameron), which separated from the Presbyterians, and continued to hold their religious meetings in the fields, and afterwards took arms against Charles II. on account of his breaking the solemn league and covenant. At the Revolution of 1688 they were formed into a regiment by William III. and permitted to retain many of their I'eligious pecu- liarities. The 26 th and 79th regiments are still called Cameronian. CAMLET. This stuff was originally made of silk and camel's hair, but now it is manu- factured of wool, hair, and silk. Camlet is mentioned by writers of the middle ages, as a stuff prepared from camel's hair alone. The true oriental camlet first came to these countries from Portuguese India, in 1660. — Anderson. CAMP. All the early warlike nations had camps, which are consequently most ancient. The disposition of the Hebrew encampment was, we are told, at first laid out by God himself The Romans and Gauls had intrenched camps in open plains ; and vestiges of such Roman encampments are existing to this d;iy in numerous places in England and Scotland. A camp was formed at Hyde Park in 1745. See Chohham and x\ Idershott. CAMPEACHY-BAY. Discovered about a.d. 1520 ; it was taken by the English in 1659; by the Buccaneers, in 1678 ; and by the freebooters of St. Domingo, in 1685. These last burnt the town and blew up the citadel. The English logwood-cutters made their settlement here in 1662. CAMPERDOWN, BATTLE of, memorable engagement off Camperdown, south of the Texel, and signal victory obtained by the British fleet, under admiral Duncan, over the Dutch fleet, commanded by admiral Do Winter ; the latter losing fifteen ships, which were either taken or destroyed. This was one of the most brilliant naval achievements of the late war, Oct. 11, 1797. This victory obtained the brave and CAM 121 CAN good British admiral a peerage. 1804. He died suddenly^on his way to Edinburgh, Aug. i. CAMPO FORMIO, TREATY of. Concluded between France and Austria, the latter power yielding the Low Countries and the Ionian Islands to France, and Milan, Mantua, and Modena to the Cisalpine republic. This memorable and humiliating treaty resulted from the ill success of Austria on the Rliine. By a seci-et article, however, the emperor took possession of the Venetian dominions in compensation for the Netherlands, Oct. 17, 1797. CANADA. This country was discovered by John and Sebastian Cabot, a.d. 1499, and was settled by the French in 1608, but it had been pi'eviously visited by them. Canada was taken by the English in 1028, but was restored in 1631. It was again conquered by the English in 1759 (see Quebec), and was confirmed to them by the peace of 1763. This country was divided into two provinces. Upper and Lower Canada, in 1791 ; and it was during the debates on this bill in the British parliament, that the quarrel between Mr. Burke and Mr. Fox arose. Mr. Fox seemed anxious for a reconciliation, but Mr. Burke rejected it with disdain. Canada was made a bishopric in 1793. In the war of 1812, the Americans invaded Canada at different points, with 30,000 men, but they were forced to retire after several sanguinary battles, discomfited in their attempts to reduce the country. — The Papineau Rebellion conmienced at Montreal, Dec. 6, 1837. The Canadian rebels came to an engagement at St. Eustace, Dec. 14 following. See St. Eustace. The insurgents surrounded Toronto, and were repulsed by tlie governor, sir Francis Head, Jan. 5, 1838. Appointment of lord Durham as governor-general, Jan. 16, 1838. Lount and Mathews hanged as traitors, April 12, 1838. Lord Durham announced his resolve to resign his government, Oct. 9, 1S3S, and immediately returned to Europe. The spirit of rebellion again manifested itself in Beauharnais, Nov. 3, 1838. The insui'gents concentrated at Napierville imder command of Nelson and others, Nov. 6 ; some skirmishes took place, and they were routed with the loss of many killed and several hundred prisoners. Sir John Colborne announced the suppression of the rebellion in his despatches, dated Nov. 17, 1838. An act to make temporary provision for the government of Lower Canada passed Feb. 1838, and was amended by act 2 & 3 Vict. Aug. 1839. The act 16 & 17 Vict. c. 21, authorising the Canadian legislature to make provision concerning the clergy reserves, was passed May 9, 1853. CANALS. The most stupendous in the world is a canal in China, which passes over 2000 miles, and to 41 cities, commenced in the tenth century. Tlie canal of Lan- guedoc, which joins the Mediterranean with the Atlantic Ocean, was commenced in 1606. That of Orleans, from the Loire to the Seine, commenced in 1075. That between the Caspian Sea and the Baltic, commenced 1709. That from Stockholm to Gottenberg, commenced 1751. That between the Baltic and North Sea at Kiel, opened 1785. That of Bourbon, between the Seine and Oise, commenced 1790. The great American Erie Canal, 330 miles in length, was commenced in 1817. The first canal made in England was by Henry I. when the river Trent was joined to the Witham, A.D. 1134. The most remarkable canals in Great Britain are : — New River caual, commenced . a.d. 1608 Hrouglit to Liiiidou . . . . 1014 Thames made navigable to Oxford . 1624 Kcuiiet made navigable to Reading . . 1715 Lagan navigation, commenced . . 1755 Caerniarthcnsbivc canal . . . . 1756 Droitwich to tlie Severn .... 1756 Duke of Bridgewater's navigation (first great canal), commenced . . . 1758 Northampton navigation . . . 1761 Dublin to the Shannon (thcGr.and), com- menced (opened to Sallins, 17S'J) . . 1765 Stafford and Worcester, couunenced . 1705 l''orth to Clyde, commenced . . . 170S Birmingham to Bilstoii .... 1708 Oxford to Coventry, commenced . . 1769 Lea made uavigtibie fn)m Hertford to Ware, 1730 ; to London . ... 1770 Leeds to Liverpool 1770 Jlonklaud (Scotland), commouccd . . 1770 EUesmcrc and Chester .... 177'2 Basingstoke canal, commeuccd . . . 1772 Liverpool to Wigan .... 1774 Stroud to the Severn 1775 St;ifford.shire caual, commenced . . 1776 Stouibridge caual, completed . . . 1776 Runcorn to Manchester . Trent and Mersey, opened . Chesterfield to the Trent Belfast to Lough Ncagh Thames to T.eachdale Sallins to Monastereven Dublin to the Sliannon (Royal) Severn to tlie Thames, completed Forth and Clj'de, completed . Biadford, completed . Grand Jimctiou canal Birmingliam .and Coventry Monastereven to Athy Worcester and Birmingham Manchester, Bolton, and Bury Ij.ancaster, act passed . Warwick and Bimiiugham Bai-nsley, cut .... Boclidalc, act p.assed Iluddci-sticld, act passed . Derby, completed . Hereford and Gloucester , Paddiugton canal, commenced Kciuiet and Avon, opened . Peak-forest c.an.al, completed . Thames to Fenny Stratford A.D. 1776 1777 1777 1783 17S.S 17S6 1788 1789 1790 1700 1700 1790 1701 1791 1791 1792 1793 1794 1704 1794 1794 1796 1798 1799 1800 1800 CAN 122 CAN CANALS, continued. Buckingham canal TSOl Grand Surrey, act passed . . . . 1801 Brecknock, canal 1802 Caledonian canal (the Great) commenced 1803 Ellesmere aqueduct 1805 Ashby-(le-la-Zonch, opened . . . 1805 Aberdeen, completed . . . . 1807 Glasgow and Ardrossan, opened . . 1811 Leeds and Liverpool, opened . . . 1S16 Wey and Avon 181G Edinburgh and Glasgow Union . . . 1818 Sheffield, completed .... 1819 The Regent's canal 1S20 Caledonian canal, completed Oct. 30, 1822 Birmingham and Liverpool, begun . . 1826 Gloucester and Berkeley ship-canal, com- pleted 1827 Norwich and Lowestoft navigation, opened 1831 In England, there are 2800 miles of canals, and 2500 miles of rivers?, taking the length of those only that are navigable — total, 5300 miles. In Ireland, there are 300 miles of canals; 150 of navigable rivers, and 60 miles of the Shannon, navigable below Limerick : in all, 510 miles. — Williams. Great as have been the advantages derived from canals, their progress has been largely checked by the formation of railways. — 3IcOulloch. CANAEY ISLANDS. These islands were known to the ancients as the Fortunate Isles. The first meridian was referred to the Canary Isles by Hipparchus, about 140 B.C. They were re-discovered by a Norman, named Bethencourt, a.d. 1402 ; and were seized by the Spaniards, who planted vine.?, which floui'ish here, about 1420. The canary-bird, so much esteemed in all parts of Europe, is a native of these isles ; it was brought into England in 1500. CANDIA, the ancient Crete, whose centre is Moimt Ida. It was seized by the Saracens A.D. 823, when they changed its name. Taken by the Greeks, in 961 ; sold to the Venetians, 1194, and held by them until the Turks obtained it, after a twenty-four years' siege, during which more than 200,000 men perished, 1669. CANDLE, SALE by INCH of. The custom of selling at public auctions by inch of candle is said to have been borrowed from the Church of Rome, where there is an excommunication by inch of candle, and the sinner is allowed to come to repentance before final excommunication, while yet the caudle burns. CANDLES. The Roman candles were composed of strings surrounded by wax, or dipped in pitch. Splintei'S of wood fatted were used for light among the lower classes in England, about a.d. 1300. At this time wax caudles were little used, and esteemed a luxury, and dipped candles usually burnt. The Wax-chandlers' company was incorporated 1484. Mould candles are said to be the invention of the sieur Le Brez, of Paris. Spermaceli candles are of modern manufacture. The Chinese make candles from wax obtained from the berries of a tree, which wax is fragrant, and yields a bright light. See Cavdleberry Myrtle. The duty upon candles in England amounted, pidviously to the abolition of the impost, to about 500,000^, annually ; it was repealed by statute 1 & 2 Will. IV. and the makers were placed upon the same footing as melters of tallow, 1831. CANDLESTICKS. Anciently candlesticks with seven branches were regarded as emblematical of the priest's ofiice, and accordingly they were engraven on their seals and on their cups while living, and on their tombs when dead. Candlesticks were known and used in Britain in the days of king Edgar, a.d. 959, for historians of his time mention " silver candelabra and gilt candelabra well and honourably made ;" but even in 1388 they were not common. Candlesticks are fast giving place to lamps and gas-jets. CANDLEBERRY MYRTLE. Plants of this extrordinary tree came to this country from N. America, in 1699. The tree is found in perfection at Nankin, in China, where it flourishes with beautiful blossoms and fruit. The latter, when ripe, is gathered and thrown into boiling water ; the white unctuous substance which covers the kernels is thereby detached, and swims at the top ; it is skimmed off and purified by a second boiling, when it becomes transparent, and of a consistence between tallow and wax, and is converted into candles. CANDLEMAS-DAY. A feast instituted by the early Christians, who consecrated on this day all the tapers and candles used in churches during the year. It is kept in the reformed church in memory of the purification of the Virgin Mary, who, sub- mitting to the law under which she lived, presented the infant Jesus in the Temple. Owing to the abundance of light, this festival was called Candlemas, as well as the Pm'ification. The practice of lighting the churches was discontinued by English CAN 123 CAN Protestants, by an order of council, 2 Edw. VI. 1548 ; but it is still continued in the church of Rome. CANDY, IN Ceylon. In an expedition against it. a whole British detachment, wliich took possession Feb. 20, 1803, capitulated June 23 following, anxious to evacuate the place on account of its unhoalthiness, and the perfidy of the Candians ; but on the third day they were treacheroTisly massacred at Columbo, or imprisoned. The war against the natives was renewed in October, 1814, The king was vanquished and made prisoner by general Brownrigg, Feb. 19, 1815; he was deposed, and the sovereignty vested in Great Britain, March 2, 1815. CANN/E, BATTLE of. One of the most celebrated in history, and most fatal to the Komans. Hannibal commanded on one side 50,000 Africans, Gauls, and Spaniards ; and Paulus .15milius and Terentius Varro, 88,000 Romans, of whom 40,000 were slain. — Liry. The victor, Hannibal, sent three bushels of rings, taken from the Roman knights on the field, as a trophy to Carthage. Neither party perceived an awful earthquake which occurred during the battle. The place is now denominated the field of blood ; fought May 21, 21(3 B.C. — Bossuet. CANNIBALISM. It has prevailed from the remotest times. The Greeks inform ns that it was a primitive and universal custom; and many of the South American tribes and natives of the South Sea Islands eat human flesh at the present day, and the propen- sity for it prevails more or less in all savage nations. St. Jerome says, that some British tribes ate humnn flesh ; and the Scots from Galloway killed and ate the English in the reign of Henry I. The Scythians were drinkers of human blood. Columbus found cannibals in America. See Anthro2:tophagi. CANNING ADMINISTRATION. The illness of lord Liverpool in April, 1827, led to this administration. Right hon. George Canning, first lord of the treasury and chancellor of the exchequer; loi'd Harrowby, president of the council; duke of Portland, lord privy seal; lord Dudley, viscount Goderich, and Mr. Sturges Bourne, secretai'ies of state ; Mr. Wynn, president of the India board ; Mr. Huskisson, board of trade; lord Palmerston, secretary at war; lord Bexley, chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster ; duke of Clarence, lord high admiral; lord Lyndhurst, lord chancellor, &c. The marquess of Lansdowne had a seat in the cabinet, to which w^ere soon added the seals of the home department. The death of Mr. Canning caused a reconstruction of this cabinet, August following. CANNON. They are said to have been used as early as a.d. 1338. According to some of our historians they were vised at the battle of Cressy in 1346 ; but this Voltaire disputes. They are said to have been used by the English at the siege of Calais, 1347. Cannon were first used in the English service by the governor of Calais, 6 Rich. II. 1383. — Ei/mer's Foedera. Louis XIV. upon setting out on his disastrous campaign against the Dutch, inscribed upon his cannon, " The last argument of kings." See Artillery. CANNON, Remarkable. The largest known piece of ordnance is of brass, cast in India in 168.5. At Ehrenbreitstein castle, one of the strongest forts in Germany, opposite Coblentz on the Rhine, is a prodigious cannon, eighteen feet and a half long, a foot and a half in diameter in the bore, and three feet four inches in the breach. The ball made for it weighs 180 lbs. and its charge of powder 94 lbs. The inscription on it shows that it was made by one Simon, in 1529. In Dover castle is a brass gun called Queen Elizabeth's pocket-pistol, which was presented to her bj' the States of Holland; this piece is 24 feet long, and is beautifully ornamented, having on it the arms of the States, and a motto in Dutch, importing thus, " Cltfirgc mc well, and sponge me clean, I'll throw a ball to Calais Green." Some fine specimens are to be seen in the Tower. A leathern cannon was fired three times in the King's Park, Edinburgli, Oct. 23, l7&S.—Phillijw. The Tuiki.sh piece, now in St. James's Park, was taken by the French at Alexandria, but was retaken, and placed there in ilarch, 1S03. CANON. The first ecclesiastical canon was promulgated a.d. 5S0. — Usher. Canonical hours for prayer were instituted in 391. The dignity of canon existed not previously to the rule of Charlemagne, about 76 S. — Paschier. Canon law was first introduced into Europe by Gratian, the celebrated canon law author, in 1 1 51 ; and was introduced into England, 19 Stephen, 1154. — Stoice. CANONISATION, of pious men and martyrs as saints was instituted in the Romish CAN 124 CAP Church by pope Leo III. in 800. — Tallent's Tables. Saints have so accumulated, that every day in the calendar is now a saint's day. " The first canonisation made by papal authority was that of St. Udalricus, in 993. Before this time, tliat is, during the nine first centuries, it was settled that all bishops had an equal power in regard to the canonisation of saints ; but the authority of the pope, as well as the number of canonisations, having much increased, people had recourse to the see of Rome, in order to give a greater solemnity to the affair. Hence we find that Alexander III. issued a deci-ee, declaring that the canonisation of saints was one of those higher causes reserved to the apostolic see alone. Boniface pretended the same thing ; and Urban VIII. strictly forbade any reverence or worshijj to be given to those who died even in the reputation of sanctity, before they had been beatified or canonised by the church of Rome." — Henault. CANTERBURY. The Durovernum of the Romans, and capital of Ethelbert, king of Kent, who reigned a.d. 560. Its early cathedral was erected during the Heptarchy, and was several times burnt and rebuilt. It was once famous for the shrine of Becket (see Bechtt), and within it are interred Henry IV. and Edward the Black Prince. The present cathedral is a revival of that begun by archbishop Lanfranc. During the rebellion against Charles I. the usurper Cromwell made it a stable for his dragoons. St. Martin's church here is said to have been the first erection for Christian worship in Britain ; but this is doubted. The riot at Boughton, near Canterbury, produced by a fanatic called Thom, who assumed the name of sir William Courtenay, occurred May 31, 1838. See Thermites. CANTERBURY, ARCHBISHOPRIC of. This see was settled by Augustin, who preached the gospel in England, a.d. 596, and convei-ted Ethelbert, king of Kent. The king, animated with zeal for his new religion, bestowed great favours upon Augustin, who fixed his residence in the capital of Ethelbert's dominions. The church was made a cathedral, and consecrated to Christ. At one period it was called St. Thomas, from Thomas a Becket, murdered at its altai-, December, 1171. The archbishop is primate and metropolitan of all England, and is the first peer in the realm, having precedency of all officers of state, and of all dukes not of the blood royal. Canterbury had foi'merly jurisdiction over Ireland, and the ai'chbishop was styled a patriarch. This see has yielded to the church of Rome 18 saints and 9 cardinals ; and to the civil state of England, 12 lord chancellors and 4 lord treasurers. Augustin was the first bishop, 596. The see was made superior to York, 1073. See York. The revenue is valued in the king's books at 2816/. 17s. Qd. — Beatson. CANTHARIDES, a venomous kind of insects, which when di-ied and pulverised, are used principally to raise blisters. They are of a green colour, and are commonly found in Spain, hence they are called also Spanish flies. They were first introduced into medical practice by Aretaeus, a physician of Cappadocia, about 50 B.C. — Freind's History of Physic. CANTON. The only city in China with which Europeans had been allowed to trade, till the treaty of Aug. 29, 1842. Merchants first arrived here for this purpose in 1517. Nearly every nation has a factory at Canton, but that of England surpasses all others in elegance and extent. Various particulars i-elating to this city will be found under the article China. In 1822, a fii-e destroyed 15,000 houses at Canton ; and an inundation swept away 10,000 liouses and 1000 persons, in Oct. 1833. See China. CAOUTCHOUC, or INDIA RUBBER. An elastic resinous substance that exudes by incisions from two plants that grow in Cayenne, Quito, and the Brazils, called Ilceria caoutchouc and Siphonia dastica, and vulgarly called syringe trees. It was first bi'ought to Europe from South America, about 1733. It has latterly been in domestic use for various purposes, and preparations of it have been introduced into our manufactures ; among others, bookbinding and clothing. See India Rubber. CAP. The Romans went for many ages without regular covering for the head, and hence the heads of all the ancient statues appear bare. But at one period the cap was a symbol of liberty, and when the Romans gave it to their slaves, it entitled them to freedom. The cap was sometimes used as a mark of infamy, and in Italy the Jews were distinguished by a yellow cap, and in France those who had been bankrupts were for ever after obliged to wear a green cap. The general use of caps and hats is referred to the year 1449. They were worn at the entry of Charles VII. into Rouen, from which time they took the place of chaperons or hoods. The velvet cap was called mortier ; the wool cap, bonnet. The clerical or university square cap was invented by Patrouillet. See Capper. CAP 125 CAP CAPE BRETON. Discovered by the Euglish in 1584. It was taken by the French iu 1632, but was afterwards restored; and again taken iu 1745, and re-taken in 1748. It was finally possessed by the English, when the garrison and marines, consisting of 5600 men, were made prisoners of war, and eleven ships of the French navy were captured or destroyed, 1758. Coded to England at the peace of 1763. CAPE-COAST CASTLE. Settled by the Portuguese in 1610; but it soon fell to the Dutch. It was demolished by admiral Holmes in 1661. All the British settlements, factories, and shipping along the coast were destroyed by the Dutch admiral, De Ruyter, iu 1665. This cape was confirmed to the English by the ti'eaty of Breda, iu 1667. CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. Originally called the " Cape of Tempests," and also named the '• Lion of the Sea," and the " Head of Africa." The name was changed by John II. of Portugal, who augured favourably of future discoveries from Diaz having reached the extremity of Africa. The cape was doubled, and the passage to lutlia discovered by Vaseo da Gama, Nov. 20, 1497. Planted by the Dutch, 1651. Taken by the English, under admiral Elphinstone and genei-al Clarke, Sept. 16, 1795, and restored at the peace in 1802. Again taken by sir David Baird and sir Home Popham, Jan. 8. 1806 ; and finally ceded to England iu 1814. Emigrants began to arrive here from Britain, in March, 1820. The neighbouring Caffres have made several irruptions on the British settlements at the Cape ; they committed dreadful ravages at Grahamstown, Oct. 1834. See Kaffraria. In consequence of the resists ance of the inhabitants to the attempt to make the Cape a penal colony, commenced May 19, 1849, the project was abandoned. The constitution granted to the colony was promulgated on July 1, 1853, and has been i-eceived with much rejoicing. General .Pra3toi-ius, the chief of the Trans- Vaiil Republic, died in Aug. 1853. The British government having given up its j urisdiction over the Orange river territory, March 29, 1854, a free state was formed. See Orange River. CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS. These islands (a cluster so called in the Atlantic Ocean, near the cape of the same name) were known to the ancients under the name of Gorgados ; but were not visited by the moderns till discovered by Antouio de Noli, a Genoese navigator iu the service of Portugal, a.d. 1446. The Portuguese have possessed them ever since their discovery. CAPE ST. VINCENT, BATTLES of. Admiral Rooke, with twenty ships of war, and the Turkish fleet uuder his convoy, was attacked by admiral Tourville, with a force vastly superior to his own, off Cape St. Vincent, when twelve English and Dutch men-of-war, and eighty merchantmen, were captured or destroyed by the French, June 16, 1693. Battle of Cape St. Vincent, one of the most glorious achievements of the British navy. Sir John Jervis being in command of the Mediterranean fleet of fifteen sail, gave battle to tlie Spanish fleet of twenty-seven ships of the line oft' this Cape, and signally defeated the enemy, nearly double iu strength, taking four ships and destroyiug several others, Feb. 14, 1797. For this victory sir John was raised to the English peerage, by the title of earl St. Vincent. CAPET, HOUSE of. The third race of the kings of France. Hugo Capet, count of Paris and Orleaus, the first of this race (which was called from him Capetians and Capevigians), seized the throne on the death of Louis V. called the Indolent, who reigned but one year ; he was supposed to have been poisoned by his queen, who did not love him. His uncle should by right have succeeded. Thus ended the Carlo- vingian race, which lasted 236 years. Hugo was a man renowned for his military valour and public virtues ; a.d. 987. — llenaidt. The first line of the house of Capet expired with Charles IV. the Handsome, in 1328, when the branch of Valois ascended the throne in the persou of Philijj VI. — Idem. CAPITOL. Tbe principal fortress of ancient Rome, in which a temple was built to Jupiter, thence called Jupiter Capitolinns. The foundation laid by Tarquinius Priscus, 616 B.C. The Roman consuls made large donations to this temple, and the emperor Augustus bestowed 2000 pounds weight of gold, of which precious metal the roof was composed, while its thresholds were of brass, and its interior was decorated with shields of solid silver. Destroyed by lightning 188 B.C. ; by fire, a.d. 70. The Capitolinc games instituted by Domitian, a.d. 86. CAPPADOCIA. This kingdom was founded by Pharnaces, 744 n.c. The successors of Phaniaces are almost wholly unknown, until about the time of Alexander the Great, after whose death Eumenes, by ilefeatiug Ariarathes II. became king of Cappadocia. The people arc described as having been addicted to every vice that man is capable CAP 126 CAR of committing. They worshipped the Sun, under the emblem of Fire; and had, besides, temples erected to most of the deities of Greece, as Jujnter, A2wllo, Diana, and Bdlona. Of these temples, that of Comana was the most superb and celebrated. It was dedicated to Diana Taurica, under the name of Bellona. The high-priest, who was always chosen from the royal family, had uj^wards of 6000 persons under his command, and possessed £o absolute a power, that he often became an object of jealousy to the sovereign. Pharuaccs is declared king . .B.C. 7i4 [His successors arc unknown for nearly tbree centuries. the throne, poisons five of her own chil- dren ; the sixth and only remaining child is saved, and the queen put to death B.C. 153 This young prince reigns as Ariarathes VII 153 Gordius assassinates Ariarathes VII. . 97 Ariarathes VIII. assassinated . . .96 Cappadooia declared afree country by the senate of Borne . . . . . . 95 The people elect a new king, Ariobar- zanes I. . . . . . . .94 His sou, Ariobarzanes II., reigns . . 65 He is dethroned by Marc Antony . . 33 Archelaus, the last king of Cappadocia, dies, and bequeaths his kLugdom to the Eoman empire . . . . a.d. 17 Reign of Ariarathes I. .... 362 Perdiccas takes Cappadocia, and Ariara- thes is crucified 322 Defeat of tlie Parthians . . . . 217 Irruption of the Trocmi .... 164 Jlithridates, surnamed Philopator, ascends the throne 162 Oropherues dethrones Philopator . . 161 Attains assists Philopator, and Oropher- ues is dethroned 154 Philopator joins the Romans against Aris- tonicus, and perishes in battle . . 153 His queen Laodice, desirous of usurping CAPPER OR HATTER. A statute was passed that none should sell any hat above 20(/. nor cap above 2s. 8cZ. 5 Henry VII. 1489. Caps were first worn at the entry of Charles VII. into Rouen, 1449. A law was enacted that every person above seven years of age should wear on Sundays and holidays a cap of wool, knit, made, thickened, and dressed in England by some of the trade of cappers, under the forfeiture of three farthings for every day's neglect, 1571. From this law the following persons were excepted : maids, ladies, and gentlewomen, and every lord, knight, and gentleman,, of twenty marks of land, and their heirs, and such as had borne ofl&ce of worship, in any city, town, or place, and the warden of the London companies. See Cap, and Hals. CAPRI, the Caprese of the Romans, and memorable as the residence of Tiberius, and for the debaucheries he committed in this once delightful retreat, during the seven last years of his life : it was embellished by him with a sumptu ms palace and most magnificent woi'ks. The emperor Augustus had also made Capri his residence. Capri was taken by sir Sidney Smith, April 22, 1806. CAPUCHIN FRIARS, a sort of Franciscans, to whom this name was given from their wearing a great Capuchon, or cowl, which is an odd kind of cap, or hood, sewn to their habit, and hanging down ujion their backs. The Capuchins were founded by Matthew Baschi, about a.d. 1525. Although the rigours of this order have abated, still the brethren are remarkable for their extreme poverty and privations. — Ashe. CAR (The). Its invention is ascribed to Erichthonius of Athens, about 1486 B.C. The covered cars {currus arcuati) were in use among the Romans. The lectica (a soft- cushioned car) was the next invented ; and this gave jilace to the carpentwvi, a two- wheeled car, with an arched covering, hung with costly cloth. Still later were the carruae, in which ofiicers of state rode. Triumphal cars were introduced by Tarquin the Elder, and were stately chariots formed like a throne, in which the victor rode in triumph. CARACCAS. One of the early Spanish discoveries by Columbus, a.d. 1498. After many unsuccessful attempts to settle it by the missionaries, it was at last reduced by force of arms, and assigned in proj^erty to the Welsers, a German mercantile house, by Charles V., but, owing to the tyranny of their administration, they were dispos- sessed in 1550, and a supreme governor appointed by the crown. The pi'ovince declared its independence of Spain, May 9, 1810. In 1812 it was visited by a violent convulsion of nature ; thousands of human beings were lost ; rocks and mountains split, and rolled into valleys ; the rivers were blackened, or their courses changed ; and many towns swallowed up and totally destroyed. CARBONARI, a dangerous and powerful society in Italy, a substitute for freemasoniy, which committed the most dreadful outrages, and spread terror in several states. They were suppressed, however, by the Austrian government in Sept. 1820, pre- viously to which year their numbers and power had grown to their greatest height; in 1819 they had become most formidable. CARBONIC ACID GAS. This is a product of fermentation, and being heavier than air CAR 127 CAR it lies over all fermentive processes, puts out a candle, and produces suffocation. Carbonate of soda is formed by passing a current of carbonic acid into a solution of soda ; and it becomes a hard solid mass. Newton considered flame a red-hot smoke, but modern science regards it as tlie place where oxygen unites with hydrogen and carbon ; and the diminution of volume transfers an atomic excitement to the carbon, which radiates or protrudes light, the fixation of the gases causing the heat as long as the hydrogen is evolved. CARDINALS. Ecclesiastical princes in the Church of Rome. They are properly the council of the pope, and constitute the conclave or sacred college. At fii'st they were only the principal priests, or incumbents of the parishes in Rome. On this footing they continued till the eleventh century. They did not acquire the exclusive power of electing the popes till a.d. 1160. They first wore the red hat to remind them that they ought to shed their blood, if requii-ed, for religion, and were declared princes of the church by Innocent IV. 1243. Paul II. gave the scarlet habit, 1464 : and Urban VIII. the title of Eminence in 1630 ; some say, in 1623. — Du Cange. CARDS. Their invention is referred to the Romans ; but it is generally supposed that they were invented in France in 1391, to amuse Charles VI. during the intervals of a melancholy disorder, which in the end brought him to his grave. — Mczcray, Hist, cle France. The universal adoption of an amusement which was invented for a fool, is no very favourable specimen of wisdom. — Malhin. Cards are of Spanish, not of French origin. — Daines Sarrinrjton. Piquet and all the early games are French. Cards first taxed in England, 1756. 428,000 packs were stamped in 1775, and 986,000 in 1800. In 1825, the duty being then 2s. 6d. per pack, less than 150,000 packs were stamped ; but in 1827 the stamp duty was reduced to Is., and 310,854 packs paid duty in 1830. Duty was paid on 239,200 packs in the year ending 5th Jan. 1840; and on near 300,000, year ending 5th Jan., 1850. — Pari. Iltjwrts. CARICATURES. Caricatures oi-iginated, it is said, with Bufalmaco, an Italian painter : he first put labels to the mouths of his figures with sentences, since followed by bad masters, but more particularly in caricature engravings, about 1330. — Uu Piles. The modern caricatures of Gilrav, Rowlaudsou, H. B., R. Doyle and J. Leech are justly celebrated. The well-known " Punch " was first published in 1841. CARISBROOK CASTLE. Supposed to have been a fortress, even under the Britons and Romans, but the earliest historic notice of it refers to the year a.d. 530, when it was taken by Cerdic, founder of the kingdom of the West Saxons. Its subsequent Norman character has been ascribed to William Fitz-Osborne, earl of Hereford in William I.'s time. Much interest has been attached to this castle from its having been the place of impi'isonment of Charles I. immediately before his trial and death. That part of the castle in which the king lay, is much decayed, but the window can be shown through which the royal captive endeavoured to escape. Here died his daughter Elizabeth, aged fifteen, too probably of a broken heart, Sept. 8, 1650. CARLISLE. The frontier town and key of England, wherein for many ages a strong garrison was kept. Just below this town the famous Picts' wall began, which crossed the whole island to Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and here also ended the great Roman highway. The great church, called St. Mary's, is a venerable old pile ; a great jiart of it was built by St. David, king of Scotland, who held this country, together with Westmoreland and Northumberland, in vassalage from the crown of England ; it has also another church called St. Cuthbert's. Tlie castle, founded in 10. '2, by William II., was made the prison of the unfortunate Mary queen of Scots, in 1568. Taken by the parliament forces in 1645, and by the pretender in 1745. CARLISLE. SEE op. Erected by Henry I. in 1133, and made suffragan to York. The cathedral had been founded a sliort time previously, by Walter, dejiuty in these parts for William Rufus. The church was almost ruined by Cromwell and his soldiers, and has never recovered its former great beauty, although rejiaircd after the Restoration. This see has given to the civil state one lord chancellor tmd two lord treasurers ; it is valued in the king's books at 5301. 4s. lid. per annum. CARLO W. The celebrated castle here was erected by king John. It surrendered after a desperate siege to Rory Oge O'Moore, in 1577. Again to the parliamentary forces, in 1650. In a recent attempt to new-model this venerable pile, its foundations were so sapped, that the whole fabric gave way, and it now constitutes a heap of indiscri- minate ruins. I^attle here between the royal troops and the insurgents, the latter routed, May 27, 1798. CAR 128 CAR CARLSBAD, CONGRESS of, on the affairs of Europe. The popular spii-it of emancipa- tion that prevailed in many of the states of Europe against despotic government led to this congress, in wliich various resolutions were come to, denouncing the press and liberal opinions, and in which the great continental po'wers decreed measures to repress the rage for limited monarchies and free institutions, Aug. 1, 1819. CARMELITES, OR WHITE FRIARS. Named from Mount Carmel, and one of the four orders of mendicants, distinguished by austere rules, appeared in 1141. The order settled in France in 1252. — Henault. Their rigour was moderated about 1540. They claim their descent in an uninterrupted succession from Elijah, Elisha, &c. See Mosheini's Eccles. Hist. Moimt Carmel has a monastery, and the valley of Sharon lies to the south of the mount, which is 2000 feet high, shaped like a flatted cone, with steep and barren sides : it is often referred to in Jewish histories. CARNATIC. This country of Southern Hindostan, and which extends along the whole coast of Coromandel, is now under the control of British power. Hj der Ali entered the Carnatic with 80,000 troops, and was defeated by the British under sir fiyre Coote. July 1, and Aug. 27, 1781 ; and decisively overthrown, June 2, 1782. The Carnatic vyas overrun by Tippoo in 1790. The British have assumed entire authoi^ity over the Carnatic since 1801. See India. CARNATION. This beautiful flower, in several of its varieties, together with the gilly- flower, the Provence rose, and a few others, was first planted in England by the Flemings, about 1567. — Stowe. The carnation was so called from the original species being of a flesh-coloui', and the term is applied by painters to those parts of the human body that have no drapery. See article Flowers. CARNEIAN GAMES. These games were observed in most of the Grecian cities, but more particularly at Sparta, where they were instituted about 675 B.C. in honour of Apollo, surnamed Carneus. The festival lasted nine days, and was an imitation of the manner of living in camps among the ancients. CARNIVAL. {Camivale, Italian.) A well-kno.wn festival time in the Roman Catholic Church, observed in Italy, particularly at Venice ; it begins at Twelfth-day, and holds till Shrove-tide or beginning of Lent. This is a season of mirth, feasting, rejoicing, and indulgence ; and numbers visit Italy during its continuance. The carnival grew into its later festivities, from a merely religious festival, in the seventeenth centuiy. CAROLINA. Discovered by Sebastian Cabot in 1500. A body of English, amounting to about 850 persons, landed and settled here in 1667; and Carolina was granted to lord Berkeley and others a few years afterwards. See America and United States. The Caroline Islands were discovered by the Spaniards in the reign of Charles II. 1686. CARP. The esteemed fresh water or pond fish. In the palate of the carp is sometimes found a stone of a triangular form. — Pardon. The carp was first brought to these countries about a.d. 1525. — Isaah Walton. A large pond, in the village of Falmer, near Lewes, is^aid to have received the first carp imported into England from Normandy by the monks of a monastery in the vicinity, subordinate to the great priory of Southover, in the county of Sussex. — Lewis's Diet. CARPETS. They were in use, at least in some kind, as early as the days of Amos, about 800 B.C. — Amos ii. 8. Carpets were spread on the ground, on which persons sat who dwelt in tents ; but when first used in houses, even in the East, we have no record. In the 12th century carpets were articles of luxury, and in England, it is mentioned Jis an instance of Becket's splendid style of living, that his sumptuous apartments were every day in winter strewn with clean straw or hay ; about a.d. 1160. The manufacture of woollen carpets was introduced into France from Pei'sia, in the reign of Henry IV., between 1589 and 1610. Some artisans who had quitted France in disgust came to England, and established the carpet manufacture, about 1750. With us, as with most nations, Persian and Turkey carpets are most prized. Our Axminster, Wilton, and Kidderminster manufacture is the growth of the last hundred years. CARRIAGES. The invention of them is ascribed to Erich thonius of Athens, who pro- duced the first chariot about 1486 B.C. Carriages were known in France in the reign of Henry II. a.d. 1547; but they were of very rude construction, and rare. They seem to have been known in England in 1555 ; but not the art of making them. Close carriages of good workmanship began to be used by persons of the highest quality at the close of the sixteenth century. Henry IV. had one, but without straps or springs. Theu- consti-uctiou was various : they were first made in England CAR 129 CAR in the reign of Elizabeth, and were then called whirlicotes. The duke of Bucking- ham, in 1619, drove six horses; and the duke of Northumberland, in rivalry, drove eight. They were fix'st let for hire in Paris, in 1650, at the Hotel Fiacre ; and hence the name, fiacre. See Car, Cabriolets, Chariots, and Coaches. CARRICKFERGUS. The celebrated castle of this town is supposed to have been built by Hugh de Lacy, in 1178. The town surrendered to the duke of Schomberg, Aug. 28, 1689. William III. landed here, June 14, 1690, to reduce the adhereuts of James II. Memorable expedition of the French admiral Thurot, when the castle surrendered to his force of 1000 men, 1760. See Thurot's Invasion of Ireland. CARRON IRON-WORKS. They are situated on the banks of the Carron, in Stirling- shire, and form the largest foundry in existence, established in 1760. The works employ about 1600 men, and occupy about 100 acres of land in reservoirs, pools for water, and dams built about two miles above the works ; the streams, after turning 18 large wheels, fall into the tide navigation, which conveys their castings into the sea. Here are made the pieces of ordnance called carronades, so named from this foundry — first made in 1776. See Cannon. CARROTS. These, among other edible roots, were imported from Holland and Flander.?, It was not until about the close of the reign of Henry VIII. or after the year 1540, that they were produced in England. Originally, or when first brovight to England, this esculent was of much more diminutive size than now ; the carrot has much improved both in growth and flavour under English culture. — Mortimer. CARTESIAN DOCTRINES. Their author was Ren^ Des Cartes, the French philo- sopher, who promulgated them in 1647. He was an original thinker : his metaphy- sical principle, " I think, therefore, I am," is refuted by Mr. Locke ; and his physical principle, that " nothing exists but substance," is disproved by the Newtonian philosophy. His celebrated system abounds in great singularities and originalities; but a spirit of independent thought prevails throughout it, and has contributed to excite the same spirit in others. Des Cartes was the most distinguished philosopher of his time and country. —Dufresnoy. CARTHAGE. Founded by Dido, or Elissa, sister of Pygmalion, king of Tyre, 869 B.C. She fled from that tyrant, who had killed her husband, and took refuge in Africa. Carthago became so powerful as to dispute the empire of the world with Rome, which occasioned the Punic wars, and the total demolition of that city. Taken by Scipio, and burned to the ground, 146 B.C. when the flames raged dui'ing seventeen days, and many of the inhabitants perished in them rather than survive the sub- jection of their country. The Roman senate ordered the walls to be razed, that no trace might remain of this once powerful republic. — Emebius. Dido arrives in Africa, aud builds Byrsa. — Blair B.C. SCO First alliance of the Carthaginians with the Romans . . . . . . 509 The Carthaginians in Sicily are defeated by Gclo ; the elder Hamilcar perishes. — Ilerodolus, I. vii 480 They send 300,000 men into Sicily . .407 Tlie siege of Syracuse .... S'X> The Cavtliaginians land in Italy . . .379 Their defeat by Timoloon . . . 340 They are dL-feated by Agathocles, and immolate their children on the altar of Saturn, thereby to propitiate the gods. 310 The first Tunic war begins . . . 204 The Carthaginians defeated by the Romans in a naval engagement . . 260 Xanti|ipus defeats Rcgulus . . . 255 Asdrubiil defeated by Metellua . . . 251 l{egulus jnit to death .... 250 Romans defeated before Lilybrenm . . 250 End of the first Punic war . . . 211 War between the Carthaginians aud Afri- can mercenaries 241 Hamilcar Barcas is sent into Spain ; he takes with him his sou, the famous nannibal, at the age of niuo year?, having first made him swear an eternal enmity to the Romans . . . B.C. 23T Hamilcar is killed in battle by the Vtt- tones 227 Asdmbal is assassiuated .... 220 Hannibal subjects all Spain, as far as the Iberus 219 The second Punic war begins . . . 218 First great victory of Hannibal . . . 217 Hannibal crosses the Alps, and enters Italy with 100,000 men . . . .217 Great battle of Cannaj {which see) , . 216 New Cai-thage taken by Pub. Scipio . 210 Asdrubal, brother of Hannibal, defeated aud slain in Italy 207 The Cartliaginians expelled Spain . . 206 Scipio arrives in Africa, aud lays siege to Utica 204 H.anuibiil recalled from Italy . . . 203 Great battle of Zania {which see) . . . 202 An ignonunious peace ends the second Punic war 201 The tlurd Punic war begins . . . . 149 Destruction of Carthage, which is burned to the ground . . j . . 140 The Carthaginians bore the character of a faithless and treacherous people, so that the term Punic faith became proverbial. They were superstitious and offered human victims to appease the gods in times of public calamity : these sacrifices were usually their own children ; and when they had none they purchased infants for the purpose, aud obliged the mothers to present them, unmoved by their cries and agonies, to K CAR 130 CAS their burning idol.* Their usual mode of executing criminals was by crucifixion, to which they frequently added most aggravated circumstances of torture. CARTHAGENA, or New Carthage, in Spain. Built by Asdrubal, the Carthaginian general, 227 b.c. From here Hannibal set out on his memorable march to invade Italy, crossing the Alps, 217 B.C. This city was taken by a British force under sir John Leake in 1706, but it was retaken soon afterwards by the duke of Brunswick. Carthagena, in Columbia, was taken by sir Francis Drake in 1584. It was pillaged by the French of 1,200,000^. in 1697 J and was bombarded by admu-al Vernon in 1710-1, but he was obliged, though he took the forts, to raise the siege. CARTHUSIANS. A religious order foimded by Bruno of Cologne, who retired from the converse of the woi'ld, in 1084, to Chartreuse, in the mountains of Dauphind Their rules were formed by Basil Vll. general of the order, and were peculiarly dis- tinguished for their austerity. The monks could not leave their cells, nor speak, without express leave ; and their clothing was two hair-cloths, two cowls, two pair of hose, and a cloak, all coarse. The general takes the title of prior of the Chartreuse, the principal monastery, from which the order is named. — Auberti; Mirai, Origines Carthus. A Carthusian monastery (among others in England) was founded by sir "William Manny, in the reign of Edward III., on the site of the Charter-house, Loudon. See Charter-house. The Carthusian powdtr, so called because it was first administered by a Carthusian friar, father Simon, at Chartreuse, was first compounded about 1715. CARTOONS OF RAPHAEL. They were designed in the chambers of the Vatican under Julius II. and Leo X. about 1510 to 1515. The seven of them that are pre- served were purchased in Flanders by Rubens for Charles I. of England, for Hampton- court palace, in 1629. These matchless works represent — 1, the INIiraculous Draught of Fishes ; 2, the Charge to Peter ; 3, Peter and John healing the Lame at the gate of the Temple ; 4, the Death of Ananias ; 5, Elymas the Sorcerer struck with Blindness ; 6, the Sacrifice to Paul and Barnabas, by the people of Lystra; 7, Paul preaching at Athens. CARVING. We have scriptural authority for its early introduction. See Exodus xxxi. The art of carving is first mentioned in profane history, 772 B.C. and is referred to the Egyptians. It was first in wood, next in stone, and afterwards in marble and brass. Dipoenus and Scyllis were eminent carvers and sculptors, and opened a school of statuary, 568 b.c. — Pliny. See article Sculptures. CASH-PAYMENTS. The Bank, by an order of council, stopped its payments in cash, Feb. 27, 1797 ; and the Bank-restriction bill passed immediately afterwards. Pre- viously to this measure, many private banks had been ruined by the demand upon them for gold, the country being considerably drained of the precious metals, which found their way to Fi-ance and other states with whom we were at war. Notes of one and two pounds were issued March 7, 1797. Partial return to cash-payments, Sept. 22, 1817, when notes, which had been issued previously to January 1 in that year, were paid in gold. The restriction was taken off soon afterwards, and cash- payments resumed. CASHEL, SEE of. Cormac Ciiillinan, king and bishop of Cashel, is reputed to be either the founder or the restorer of the cathedral ; and until his time, a.d. 901, there are but few traces of the bishops of this see. In 1152, bishop Donat O'Lanergan was invested with the pall. See Pallium. Cashel was valued in the king's books, by an extent returned 29 Henry VIII., at 66/. 13s. 4d. Irish money. By the Church Temporalities act, 3 & 4 Will. IV. 1833, this see has ceased to be archiepiscopal ; and the see of Waterford and Lismore has been united to it. CASHMERE SHAWLS. The district from whence come these costly shawls is described as being " the happy valley, and a paradise in perpetual spring." The true Cashmere shawls can be manufactured of no other wool than that of Thibet. They were first brought to England in 1666 ; but they are well imitated by the spinning at Bradford, * The Carthaginians had two principal deities, whom they honoured more than any of the rest. The first was the Celestial Goddess, iu otlier words, the Moon. The second Moloch, or Saturn, to whom their infants were sacrificed. This idol was contrived with a hollow body, in which a fire was kindled, with arms and hands bent in a position for receiving the devoted victim. Into these hands, while the idol was of a glowing heat, the unhappy child was placed, and, m the struggle occasioned by the torture, it fell forward, through a hole in the base on which the idol sat, into the fire beneath. Tliese sacrifices were not always confined to children ; the Carthaginian generals, when the event of a battle seemed likely to be against them, made no scruple to offer their soldiers and prisoners to this destructive superstition. CAS 131 CAT aud the looms of Huddersfield. Shawls for the omrahs, of the Thibetian wool, cost 150 rupees each, about the year 1650. — Btrnier. CASTEL NUOVO. This place has several tmies suffered under the dreadful visitation of earthquakes. lu the great earthquake which convulsed all I>faples aud Sicily, in 1783, the town was almost obliterated. It is recorded that an inhabitant of Castcl Nuovo, being on a hill at no great distance, looking back, saw no remains of the town, but only a black smoke : 4000 persons perished ; and in Sicily and Naples, more than 40,000. CASTIGLIONE, BATTLE of. One of the most brilliant victories of the French arms, under general Bonaparte, against the main body of Austrians, commanded by general Wurmser : the battle lasted five days successively, from the 2nd to the 6th July, 1796. Bonaparte stated the enemy's loss in this obstinate conflict at 70 field pieces, all his caissons, between 12,000 and 15,000 prisoners, and 6000 killed and wounded. CASTILE. The most powerful government of the Goths was established hei-e about A.D. 800. Ferdinand, count of Castile, assumed the title of king in 1020. Ferdinand of Arragon married Isabella of Castile, and nearly the whole of the Christian dominions in Spain were vuiited in one monarchy, 1474. By degrees the kings of Castile brought the whole peninsula subject to their control. See Arragon and tipain. CiiSTILLON, BATTLE of, in Guienne. Between the armies of Henry VL of England, and of Charles VII. who was surnamed the Victorious, of France. The English were signally defeated ; and this battle put a period to the English dominion in France, Calais alone remaining to this country, July 7, 1453. "The earl of Shrewsbury was killed in the battle ; contrary to his own opinion, he attacked the French in their entrenchments, and though at first successful, yet his horse having been killed by a cannon-shot, and himself immediately after by a wound in the throat, his forces yielded." — Hcnault. CASTLEBAR, BATTLE of. Between a body of French troops which had landed at Killala, assisted by an insurgent Irish force, and the king's troops : the latter, after a sharp contest, were obliged to retreat, Aug. 28, 1798 : this was the period of the memorable i-ebellion. CASTLEPOLLARD. Fatal ag"ray here between some peasantry attending a fair, and a body of police, when thirteen persons lost their lives, and many, more than twice that number, were wounded. May 23, 1831. The coroner's jury returned a verdict of manslaughter against the chief constable, Blake, and eighteen of his men ; but the grand jury of the county (Westmeath) ignored the bills. CASTLES. Anciently British castles were tall houses, strongly fortified, and built on the tops of hills, with gates and walls. The castle of the Anglo-Saxon was a tower- keep, either round or square, and ascended by a flight of steps in front. There were eleven hundred castles built in England by the nobles, by permission of king Stephen, A.D. 1135 and 1154 : most of these were demolished by Henry II., who deprived the barons of such possessions, on his accession, in 1154. CATACOMBS. The early depositories of the dead. The name first denoted the tombs of Saints Peter and Paul at Rome, and afterwards the burial-places of all martyrs. They were numerous in Egypt ; and Belzoni, in 1815 and 1818, explored many cata- combs both in that country and Tiiebes, built 3000 years ago : among others, a chef- d'icwvre of ancient sculpture, the temple of Psammetichus the Powerful, whose sarco- phagus, formed of the finest oriental alabaster, exquisitely sculptured, he brought to England. Many other nations had their catacombs ; there were some of great extent at Rome. The Parisian catacombs were projected a. D. 1777. The bodies found in catacombs, especially those of Egypt, which ai'e better preserved, arc called mummies. See Embalmixg. CATAMARANS. Fire-machines, called also carcases, for destroying ships; invented and tried on the Boulogne flotilla destined by Bonaparte to invade England. Nearly 160,000 men were eucanqjcd on tlie coast, with an immense number of small craft in the harbour to convey them over. Sir Syrlucy Smith made a desperate attempt to burn the flotilla by means of these machines, but failed, Aug. 31, 1805. See Boulogne Flotilla. CATANIA, or CATANEA. At the foot of Mount Etna. Founded by a colony from Chalcis, 753 B.C. Ceres had a temple hero, in which none but women were permitted to appear. This auoient city is remarkable for the dreadful overthrows to which it has been subjected at various times from its vicinity to Etna, which has discharged, in some of its eruptions, a sti'eam of lava four miles broad and fifty feet deep, advancing K 2 CAT 132 CAT at the rate of seven miles in a day. Catania was almost totally overthrown by an eruption of Etna in 1669. By an earthquake which happened in 1693, Catania was nearly swallowed up, and in a moment more than 18,000 of its inhabitants were buried in the ruins of the city. An earthquake did great damage, and a number of persons perished here, Feb. 22, 1817. CATAPHRYGIANS. A sect of heretics, so called because they were Phrygians, who followed the errors of Montanus. They made up the bread of the eucharist with the blood of infants', whom they pricked to death with needles, and then looked upon them as martyrs. — Pardon. They baptized their dead, forbade marriages, and mingled the wine in the Lord's Supper with the blood of young children. — Harris. CATAPULT J3. Ancient military engines, of formidable construction, for throwing stones of immense weight, darts, and arrows ; invented by Dionysius, the tyrant of Syracuse, 399 B.C. — Josephus. They were capable of throwing darts, javelins, and other missiles of four and five yards length.— Pardon, CATEAU, PEACE of. Concluded between Henry II. of France, and Philip 11. of Spain ; to which latter country France ceded Savoy, Corsica, and nearly 200 foiis in Italy and the Low Countries, 1559. — Battle of Cateau, in which the allies under the prince of Coburg, defeated the French, whose loss amounted to 5000 killed, and 5 pieces of cannon, March 28, 1794. CATECHISM. A short one was published by the bishop of Winchester, a.d. 1552. The catechism used by Protestants originally contained no more than a repetition of the baptismal vow, the creed, and Lord's prayer ; but James I. ordered the bishops to enlarge it by adding an explication of the sacraments, 1612. It was increased subsequently by the doctrinal points of the established religion. CATHERINE. The order of knighthood instituted in Palestine, a.d. 1063. The order of nuns called Catherines was foimded in 1 373. An order of ladies of the highest rank, in Russia, was founded by Catherine, empress of Peter the Great, 1714. They were understood to be distinguished, as the name (from Kadapos, purus) implied, for the chastity and purity of their lives and manners. CATHOLIC MAJESTY. The title of Catholic was first given by Pope Gregory IIL to Alphonsus I. of Spain, who was thereupon surnamed the Catholic; a.d, 739. — Licenciado. The title of Catholic was also given to Ferdinand V. 1474. It was bestowed upon Ferdinand and his queen by Innocent VIII. on account of their zeal for the Roman Catholic religion, and their establishment of the inquisition in Spain. — Rahhe. See Spain. CATHOLICS OF THESE KINGDOMS. See article Poman Catholics. CATILINE'S CONSPIRACY. Sergius L. Catiline, a Roman of noble family, having squandered away his fortune by debaucheries and extravagance, and having been refused the consulship, secretly meditated the ruin of his country, and conspired with many of the most illustrious of the Romans, as dissolute as himself, to extirpate the senate, plunder the treasury, and set Rome on fire. This conspiracy was timely discovered by the consul Cicero, whom he had resolved to mui'der; and on seeing five of his accomplices arrested, he retired to Gaul, where his partisans were assembling an army. Cicero punished the condemned conspirators at home, while Petreius attacked Catiline's ill-disciplined forces, and routed them, and the conspirator was killed in the engagement, about the middle of December, 63 B.C. His character has been branded with the foulest infamy ; and to the violence he offered to a vestal, he added the murder of his own brother ; and it is said that he and his associates drank human blood to render their oaths more firm and inviolable. — Sallust. CATO, SUICIDE OF. Termed as the " era destructive of the liberties of Rome." Cato, the Roman patriot and philosopher, considered freedom as that which alone "sustains the name and dignity of man :" unable to survive the independence of his country he stabbed himself at Utica. By this rash act of suicide, independently of all moral considerations, Cato carried his patriotism to the highest degree of political phrensy ; for Cato, dead, could be of no use to his country ; but had he preserved his life, his counsels might have moderated Cassar's ambition, and have given a difi"erent turn to public afiairs. Feb. 5, 45 B.C. — Montesquieu. CATO-STREET CONSPIRACY. The mysterious plot of a gang of low and desperate politician.?, whose object was the assassination of the ministers of the crown, with a view to other sanguinary and indiscriminate outrages, and the overthrow of the government: the conspirators were arrested Feb. 23, 1820 ; and Thistlewood and his CAT 133 CAY four principal associates, Brunt, Davidson, Ings, and Tidd, after a trial commenced on April 17th, wliicli ended in their conviction, were executed according to the then horrid manner of traitors, on May 1 following. CATTLE. The importation of horned cattle from Ireland and Scotland, into England, was prohibited by a law, 16 Charles II. 1663 ; but the export of cattle from Ireland became and continues to be a vast and beneficial branch of the Irish trade with the sister country. From the inferior port of Waterford alone, the value of imported cattle and provisions amounted, in 1841, to nearly half a million sterling. By the act .5th and 6th Vict. c. 47, passed July 9th, 1842, the importation of horned cattle and other living animals was admitted into England from foreign countries at a moderate duty per head. The English markets have, in consequence, been since largely supplied from France, Holland, Germany, Spain, and even remoter countries. Various amendments have been made by subsequent acts. In the year 1846, the live imports from Ireland were, black cattle, 81,592 ; sheep, 100,366 ; swine, 381,744. The new coasting regulations and the free interchange of produce and m-inufactures between the two countries, have since that year interrupted the returns thence. CAUCASUS. A mountain of immense height, a continuation of the ridge of Mount Taurus, between the Euxine and Caspian seas, inhabited anciently by various savage nations, who lived upon the wild fruits of the earth. It was covered with snow in some parts, and in others was variegated with fruitful orchards and plantations : its people were at one time supposed to gather gold on the shores of their rivulets, but they afterwards lived without making use of money. Prometheus was tied on the top of Caucasus by Jupiter, and continually devoured by vultures, according to ancient authors, 1548 B.C. The passes near the mountain were called Caucasice Porta, and it is supposed that through them the Sarmatians, called Huns, made their way when they invaded the provinces of Rome a.d. 447. — Slrabo; Herodotus. CAULIFLOWER. Called the queen of vegetables, was first planted in these kingdoms about the year 1603 ; it came to England from the isle of Cyprus, but was not raised in sufficient perfection and abundance so as to be sold at market until the reign of Charles II. about 1670. Sixty years ago, cauliflowers were a usual present from England to Portugal ; but they are now largely produced in the Portuguese gardens. See Gardenivg. CAUSTIC IN PAINTING. The branch of the art so called is a method of burning the colours into wood or ivory. Gausias, a jiainter of Sicyon, was the inventor of this process. He made a beautiful painting of his mistress Glycere, whom he represented as sitting on the ground, and making garlands with flowers ; and from this circum- stance the picture, which was bought afterwards by Lucullus for two talents, received the name oi Stephanoplocon, 335 B.C. — Plinii Hist. Nat. CAVALIERS. This appellation was given as a party name in England to those who espoused the cause of the king during the unhappy war which brought Charles I. to the ."cafi'old. They were so called iu opposition to the Roundheads, or friends of the parliament, between 1642 and 1649. — Hume. CAVALRY. Of the ancient nations the Romans were the most celebrated for their cavalry, and for its discipline and efficiency. Attached to each of the Roman legions was a body of horse 300 strong, iu ten turmoe ; the commander was always a veteran, and chosen for his experience and valour. In the early ages, the Persians brought the greatest force of cavalry into the field: they had 10,000 horse at the battle of Marathon, 490 B.C.; and 10,000 Persian horse were slain at the battle of Issus, 333 B.C. — Plutarch. CAVALRY, BRITISH. Horse soldiery were introduced early into Britain. They were used by the Romans against the natives, and wore of large amount in the first wars in Wales. — Welsh Hist. In the late continental war they readied to 31,000 men. Our present cavalry force consists of regiments of various denominations; in 1840 it was, ranlc and file, viz, household troops, 1209; dragoons, hussars, and lancers, 9524; total, 10,733. See Horse Guards, f the great object of our faith, and Divine author of our religion. St. Clement, the earliest fathei', according to St. Epiplianius, fixes the birth of Christ on the 18th November, iu tlie 2Sth year of Augustus, /. e. two years before the Christian era as adopted in the sixth century. Ccrinthus was the fii-st Christian writer against the divinity of Christ, about a.d. 67. The divinity of Christ was adopted at the council of Nice, iu a.d. 325, by two hundred and ninety-nine bishops against eighteen. CHRIST'S HOSPITAL. A noble institution which is indebted for its establishment to the piety of Edward VI. 1552. A mathematical ward was founded by Charles II., and the city of London and community of England have contributed to render it a great, extensive, and richly endowed charity. Large portions of the edifice having fallen into decay, have been lately rebuilt ; in 1822 a new infirmary was completed, and in 1825 (Aj)ril 28) the late duke of York laid the first stone of the magnificent new hall. — On Sept. 24, 1854, the present master. Dr. Jacob, iu a sermon, in tlie church of the hospital, censured the system of education adopted in, aud the general administration of, the establishment. The agitation consequent upon this discourse L 2 CHR 148 CHR will doubtless result in many alterations, Dr. Jacob's views having received the approval of the majority of the governors. CHRIST'S-THORN. This shrub came hither from the south of Em-ope, before 1596. Supposed to be the plant from which Our Saviour's crown of thorns was composed. CHRISTIAN. This name was first given to the believers and followers of Christ's doctrines at Antioch, in Syria, Acts, xi. 26, in the year 38, according to Butler; in the year 40, according to Tacitus; and according to other authorities, in the year 60. The first Christians were divided into episcopoi, presbyteroi, diaconoi, pistoi, cate- chumens or learners, and energumens, who were to be exorcised. CHRISTIAN ERA. The era which is used by almost all Christian nations ; it dates from January 1st, in the middle of the fourth year of the 194th Olympiad, in the 753rd of the building of Rome, and 4714th of the Julian period. It was first introduced in the sixth century, but was not very genei-ally employed for some centuries after. We style the Christian era a.d. 1. It was first used in modern chronology in 516, by Dionysiusthe monk, surnamed the Little. CHRISTIAN KING ; Most Christian King; Christianissimus Rex. This title was given by pope Paul II. to Louis XI. of France in 1469; and never was a distinction more unworthily conferred. His tyranny and oppressions obliged his subjects to enter into a league against him ; and 4000 persons were executed publicly or privately in his merciless reign. — Henaidt ; Fleury. CHRISTIANITY. Founded by the Saviour of the world. The persecutions of the Christians commenced a.d. 64. See Persecutions. Christianity was first taught in Britain about this time; and propagated with some success in 156. — Bede. Lucius is said to have been the first Christian king of Britain, and in the world : he reigned in 179. But the era of Christianity in England commenced with the mission of St. Augustin in 596, from which time it spread rapidly throughout the whole of Britain.* Introduced into Ireland in the second century, but with more success after the arrival of St. Patrick in 432. Received in Scotland in the reign of Donald I. about 212, when it was embraced by that king, his queen, and some of his nobility. Constantine the Great made his solemn declaration of the Christian religion A.D. 312 Christianity was established in France under Clovis the Great . . . 496 In Helvetia, by Irish missionaries . . 643 In Flanders in the seventh century. In Denmark, luider Harold . . . 827 In Bohemia, under Borzivoi . . . 894 In Russia, by Swiatoslaf .... 940 In Poland, under Meicislaus I. . . . 992 In Hungary, under Geisa . . . 994 In Norway and Iceland, under Olaf I. . 1000 In Sweden, between 10th and 11th centuries. In Prussia, by the Teutonic knights, when they were returning from the holy wars a.d. 1227 In Lithuania, where Paganism was abo- Ushed, about 1336 In China, where it made some progress (but was afterwards extirpated, and thousands of Chinese Christians were put to death) 1575 In Greece, where it was once more re- established 1628 Christianity was propagated, in various parts of Africa, as Guinea, Angola, and Congo, in the fifteenth century ; and in America and India it made some progress in the sixteenth, and now rapidly gains ground in all parts of the world. CHRISTMAS-DAY. A festival of the Church, universally observed in commemoration of the nativity of Our Saviour. It has been denominated Christ-'/wass, from the appellative Christ having been added to the name of Jesus to express that he was the Messiah, or The Anointed. It was first observed as a festival a.d. 98. Ordered to be held as a solemn feast, and divine service to be performed on the 25th of Decembei-, by pope Telesphorus, about A.D. 137.+ In the eastern primitive church, Christmas and the Epiphany (ivhich see) were deemed but one and the same feast ; and to this day the Church universally keeps a continued feast within those limits. The holly and misletoe used at Christmas are remains of the religious observances of the Druids, and so with many other like customs. * It is said that Gregnry the Great, shortly before his elevation to the papal chair, chanced one day to pass through the slave-market at Rome, and perceivingsorae children of great beauty who were setup for sale, he inquired about their countiy, and finding they were English Pagans, he is said to have cried out, in the Latin language, " No7i Angli sed Angeli forent, si essent ChriMiani," that is, " they would not be English, liut angels, if they were Christians." From that time he was struck with an ardent desire to convert that unenlightened nation, and ordered a monk named Austin, or Augusdn, and others of the same fraternity, to undertake the mission to Britain in the year 590. — Goklsmith. t Diocletian, the Roman emperor, keeping hiscourtat Nicomedia, being informed thatthe Christians were assembled on this day in great multitudes to celebrate Christ's nativity, ordered the doors to be shut, and the church to be set on fire, and six hundred perished in the burning pile. This was the commencement of the tenth persecution, which lasted ten years, a.d. 303. CHR 149 CHU CHRISTMAS ISLAND. An island in the Pacific Ocean, so named by Captain Cook, who landed htre on Christmas-day, 1777. Captain Cook had passed Christmas-day at Christmas Sound, 1774. On the shore of Christmas Harbour, visited by captain Cook in 1776, one of his men found a piece of parchment with this inscription : •' Ludovico XV. (niUiarum reije, et d. Boynis rerji a secrelis ad res mantimas, annis 1772 et 1773." On the other side of the parchment captain Cook wrote : " Naves Resolution et Discovery de rege Magnce Britannice, Decembris, 1776 ;" and fixed the bottle in a safe and proper place. CHRONICLES. The earliest chronicles are those of the Chinese, Hindoos, Jews, and perhaps of the Irish. After the invention of writing, all well-informed nations appear to have kept chroniclers, who were generally priests or astrologers, and who mingled popular legends with their records. — Phillips. In Scripture history, wc have, in the Old Testament, two books under this name. CHRONOLOGY. The Chinese pretend to the most ancient, but upon no certain authority. The most authentic, to which all Europe gives credit, is the Jewish ; but owing to the negligence of the Jews, they have created abundance of difficulties in this science, and very little certainty can be arrived at as to the exact time of many memorable events. The earliest epoch is the creation of the world, 4004 B.C. Theophilus, bishop of Antioch, was the first Christian chronologist, about a.D. 169. See the different eras through the volume. CHIEF EPOCHS OF THE JEWS. Creation of Adam . . . b.c, 4004 Deluge '2348 Death of Abraham 1821 Drowning of Pharaoh .... 1491 Death of Joshua 1443 Death of David 1015 Division of the kingdom between the Ten Tribes and Two . . . B.C. 975 Dispersion of the Ten Tribes . . . 721 Captivity of the Two 606 Return of the Two from Babylon . . 536 Deatli of Judas Maccabeus . . . 161 United to the Roman Empire . . 63 CHUNAR, TREATY of. Concluded between the nabob of Oude, and governor Hastings, by which the nabob was relieved of all his debts to the East India Company, on condition of his seizing the property of the Begums, his mother and grandmother, and delivering it up to the English : this treaty also enabled the nabob to take possession of the lauds of Fyzoolla Khan, a Rohilla chief, who had escaped from a recent massacre, and had settled at Rampoor, under guarantee of the English. On this occasion the nabob made a present to Mr. Hastings of 100,000/., Sept. 19, 1781. See Hastings, Warren, Trial of. CHURCH. It is said that a church was built for Christian worship in the first century, and some will have it that one was built in England, a.d. 60. See Olastonhiiry. In the small island of Whitehorn, in Scotland, are the remains of an ancient church, which was the first place of Christian worship, it is believed, in that country, and supposed to have been built before the cathedral at Whitehorn, in Wigtonshire, where Ninian was bishop in the fourth century. The Christians originally preached in woods and caves, by candle-light, whence the practice of candle-light in churches?. Most of the early churches were of wood. The first church of stone was built in London, in 628 ; and a church of stone was built at Bangor, in Ireland, by St. Malachy, who was prelate in 1134. — Gordons Ireland. Church towers were originally parochial fortresses. Churchyards were permitted in cities in 742. CHURCH OF ENGLAND. Commenced with the Reformation, and was formally established in the reign of Henry VIII. 1534. This church consists of two arch- bishops and twunty-five bishops, exclusively of that of Sodor and Man. The othtr dignitaries are chancellors, deans (of cathedrals and collegiate churches), archdeacons, prebendaries, canons, minor canons, and priest vicars ; these, and the incumbents of rectories, vicarages,and chapelries, make the number of preferments of the Established Church, according to the last official returns, 12.327. The number of churches for Protestant worship in England was 11,742 in 1818; and the commissioners for building additional churches, report a large annual increase. The act for building and enlarging churches was passed 9 Geo. IV. 1828. The Church-building Amendment act passed 2 Vict. August, 1838. CHURCH OF IRELAND. Called, in connexion with that of England, the United Church of England and Ireland. Previously to the Church Temporalities act of William IV. in 1 833, there were four archbishoprics and eighteen bishoprics in Ireland, of which ten have since ceased ; that act providing for the union of sees, and for the abolition of certain sees, accordingly as the possessors of them died. There ai-e CHU 150 CIN 1659 places of Protestant worship, 2109 Roman Catholic chapels, 452 Presbyterian, and 414 other houses of prayer. See Bishops of Ireland. CHURCH OF SCOTLAND. Presbyterianisni is the religion of Scotland. Its distin- guishing tenets seem to have been first embodied in the formulary of faith attributed to John Knox, and compiled by that reformer in 1560. It was approved by the paiiiament, and i-atified in 1567 ; was finally settled by an act of the Scottish senate in 1696, and was afterwards secm-ed by the treaty of union with England in 1707. Previously to the abolition of episcopacy in Scotland in 1688, there existed two arch- bishoprics and twelve bishoprics, which were then dissolved ; but there were after- wards established several bishoprics, called Post-Revolution bishoprics, of which there are now seven, severally described in their places. The Church of Scotland is regulated by four courts — tlie General Assembly, the Synod, the Presbytery, and Kirk Session. See Preshyterians. CHURCH MUSIC. Introduced into the Christian Church by Gregory the Great, in A.D. 602. Choir service was first introduced in England, at Canterbury, in 677. Church organs were in general use in the tenth century. Church music was first jjerformed in English in 1559. See Choir; Chaunting. CHURCH-WARDENS. Officers of the parish church, appointed by the first canon of the synod of London in 1127. Overseers in every j^arish were also appointed by the same body, and they continue now nearly as then constituted. — Johnsons Canons. There are commonly two church-wardens to every parish, who direct and control its afiiiirs, summon the parishioners to meet, &c., and in whom is vested the parochial authority. CHURCHING OF WOMEN. It originated in the Jewish rite of purification, a.d. 214. Cliurching is the act of returning thanks in the church for any signal deliverance, and particularly after the delivery of women. — Wheatley. It was a Jewish law that a woman should keep within her house forty days after her lying in, if she had a son, and eighty if she had a daughter ; at the expiration whereof she was to go to the Temple, and offer a lamb with a young pigeon or tui-tle, and in case of poverty, two pigeons or turtles. See Purification. CIDER. Zider, German. Anciently this beverage, when first made in England, was called wine, about a.d. 1284. Wlien the earl of Manchester was ambassador in France^ he is said to have frequently passed ofi" cider upon the nobility of that country for a delicious wine. It was made subject to the excise regulation of sale in 1763 et seq. A powerful spirit is drawn from cider by distillation.' — Butler. CIMBRI, The war of the Cimbri, 113 B.C. They defeat the consul Marcus Silanus, 109 B.C. They defeat the Romans under Maulius, on the banks of the Rhine, where 80,000 Romans are slain, 105 B.C. The Teutones are defeated by Marius in two battles at Aqure Sextise (Aix), in Gaul, 200,000 are killed, and 70,000 made prisoners, 102 B.C. The Cimbri are defeated by Marius and Catullus, as they were again endeavouring to enter Italy ; 120,000 are killed, and 60,000 taken prisoners, 101 B.C. Their name afterwards sunk in that of the Teutones or Saxons. CINCINNATI SOCIETY. A society established in America soon after the peace of 1783 ; it arose among the army, and was advancing rapidly, but owing to the jealousy which it produced on tlie part of the pcoj^le, who had just accomplished their freedom, and who dreaded the influence of an army, the officers gave up the society. CINNAMON TRADE. The cinnamon tree is a species of laurel, and a native of Ceylon. The trade was commenced by the Dutch in 1506 ; but cinnamon had been known in the time of Augustus Caesar, and even long befoi-e. It is mentioned among the perfumes of the sanctuary, Exodus, xxx. 23 ; but it is imagined that the cinnamon spoken of in Scripture was of a kind different from that we have in use. Cinnamon was found in the American forests, by Don Ulloa, in 1736. The true tree of Ceylon was cultivated in Jamaica and Dominica by transplantation in 1788. CINQUE PORTS. They were originally five— Dover, Hastings, Hythe, Romney, and _ Sandwich; Winchelsea and Rye were afterwards added. Their jurisdiction was vested in barons, called wardens, for the better security of the English coast, these ports being the nearest points to France, and considered the kej's of the kingdom ; instituted by William I. in 1078. — Rapin. Tliey are governed by a particular policy, and are under a lord warden ; the duke of Wellington was lord warden when he died in 1852. He was succeeded by the earl now marquess of Dalhousie, who then held the ofifice of governor-general of India, which he resigned in 1855. ciN 151 cm CINTRA, CONVENTION of. The memorable and disgraceful convention concluded between the British army, under sir Hew Dalrymple, and the French under marshal Junot. By this compact the defeated French army and its chief were allowed to evacuate Portugal in British ships, carrying with them all their ill-gotten spoil ; signed the day after the battle of Vimcira, Aug. 22, 1808. A court of inquiry was held at Chelsea, Nov. 17 same year, and the result was a formal declaration by the king strongly condemning the terms of the convention. CIRCASSIA. The Circassians are descended from the Alanians. They continued unsubdued, even by the arms of the celebrated Timour ; but in the sixteenth century the greater part of them acknowledged the authority of the Czar, Ivan II. of Russia. About A.D. 1745, the princes of Great and Little Kabarda took oaths of fealty to that power. One branch of their trafllc is the sale of their daughters, famed thrcnighout the world for their beauty, and whom they sell for the use of the seraglios of Turkey and Persia ; the merchants who come from Constantinople to purchase these girls are generally Jews. — Klaproth's Travels in the Caucasiis and Georgia, The Circassians, under a native chief named Schamyl, have carried on a war of independence with great success against the whole power of Russia for above twenty years (1855). CIRCENSIAN GAMES. These were combats in the Roman circus, in honour of Census, the god of councils, instituted by Evander, and established at Rome 732 B.C. by Romulus, at the rape of the Sabiucs. They were in imitation of the Olympian games among the Greeks, and, by way of eminence, were called the great games, but Tarquiu called them the Circensian ; their celebration continued five days, beginning on the 15th Sept. — Virgil. CIRCUITS IN ENGLAND. They were divided into three, and three justices were appointed to each, 22 Hen. II. 1176. They were afterwards divided into four, with five justices to each division, 1180. — Rapin. The number and arrangement of circuits have been frequently altered.- — Camden. They are held twice a year in each county for the readier distribution of justice, the judges being commissioned each time by the king ; and tliis is called going the circuit. — Blackstone. CIRCULATING LIBRARY. The first in England, on a public plan, was opened by Samuel Fancourt, a dissenting minister of Salisbury, about 1740. He had little encouragement in the undertaking, which in the end failed. More success, however, attended similar institutions at Bath and in London, and in a short time they spread throughout the kingdom. — Fergusons Biog. No books can be taken from the British Museum except for judicial purposes, but the libraries of the Royal Society and the l)rincipal scientific societies arc circulating. The London (circulating) Library was founded in 1841, imder the highest auspices. It is of great value to literary men. Of the subscription libraries belonging to individuals, Mudie's, in New Oxford-street, is the most extensive, several hundreds of the newest works being always in circulation. CIRCULATION of the BLOOD. The continual motion of the blood, passing from the heart through the arteries, and returning through the veins to the heart. This motion of the heart in animals was confirmed experimentally by William Harvey, the celebrated English physician and anatomist, between 1619 and 1628. See article Blood. By the discovery, tlie medical and surgical art became greatly improved, to the benefit of mankind. — Freind's Hist, of Pliydc. CIRCUMCISION. A rite instituted 1897 B.C. It was the seal of the covenant made by God with Abraham. — Josephiis. Even to the present day many of the Turks and Persians circumcise, although not regarding it as essential to salvation ; but in some eastern and African nations it is rendered necessary by a peculiar conformation, and is used without any reference to a religious rite. — Bell. The festival of the Circum- cision was originally called the Octave of Christmas. The first mention found of it is in A.D. 487. It was instituted by the Church to commemorate the ceremony under the Jewish law to which Christ submitted on the eighth day of his nativity ; it was introduced into the Liturgy in 1550. CIRCUMNAVIGATORS. Among the greatest and most daring of human enterprises was the circumnavigation of the earth at the period when it was first attempted, a. d. 1519.* The following are the most renowned of this illustrious class of men ; their voyages woi"e undertaken at the dates affixed to their names. See Navigatws. * Tlic first ship that s.iiled round the earth, and hence detci-mincd its being globular, was Magellan's or Jlagolhaou's ; he w.as a native of Portugal, in the service of Spain, and by keeping a westerly course he returned to the same place he had set out from in lolQ. The voyage was completed in three years and tweuty-uiuc days ; but Magellau was killed ou Lis homewai'd passage, at the Pkilippines, iu 1521. —Mutter. ciR 152 cm CIRCUMNAVIGATORS, co^^^mM£c/. Magellan, a Portuguese, the fii-st who Cooke, an Euglishman . . a.d. 17*8 entered the Pacific ocean . . a.d. 1519 Clipperton, British .... 1719 Groalva, a Spanish navigator . . . 1537 Roggewein, Dutch 1721 Avalradi, a Spaniard .... 1537 Anson (afterwards lord) .... 1740 Mendana, a Spaniard 1567 Byron (grandfather to lord Byron) . . 1764 Sir Francis Drake, first English . . 1577 Wallis, British 1766 Cavendish, his first voyage . . . 1586 Carteret, an Englishman . . . . 1706 Le Maire, a Dutchman . . , . 1615 Cook, tlie illustrious captain . . . 1768 Quiros, a Spaniard 1625 On the death of captain Cook his last Tasman, Dutch 1642 voyage was continued by King . . 1779 Cowley, British 1683 , Bougainville, French .... 1776 Dampier, an Englishman . . . 1689 i Portlocke, British 1788 Several voyages have been since undertaken, and, among other nations, by the Russians, who are honourably distinguished for this species of enterprise. The early navigators, equally illustrious, such as sir Hugh Willoughby, sir Martin Frobisher, captain Davis, &c., are named elsewhere. See North West Passage. CIRCUS. There were eight (some say ten) buildings of this kind at Rome ; the largest of them was called the Circus Maximus, which was built by the elder Tarquin, 605 B.C. ; it was of an oval figure ; its length was three stadia and a half, or more than three English furlongs, and its breadth 960 Roman feet. This circus was enlarged by Csesar so as to seat 150,000 persons, and was rebuilt by Augustus. All the emperors vied in beautifying it, and Julius Csesar introduced in it large canals of v. ater, which on a sudden could be covered with an infinite number of vessels, and represent a sea- fight. — Pliny. CISALPINE REPUBLIC. Founded by the French in June, 1797- It was acknowledged by the emperor of Germany to be independent, by the treaty of Campo Formio (which see), Oct. 17 following. Received a new constitution in Sept. 1798. It merged into the kingdom of Italy in March, 1805 ; Napoleon was crowned king in May following, and was represented by his viceroy, Eugene Beauharncis. See Italy. CISTERCIANS. An order founded by Robert, a Benedictine, abbot of Citeaux, in France. (1092. — Renault. 1098. — Ashe.) From the founder this was also called the order of Citeaux, in the eleventh century. They became so powerful that they governed almost all Europe in spiritual and temporal concerns. They observed a continual silence, abstained from flesh, lay on straw, wore neither shoes nor shirts, and were most austere. — De Vitri. CITATE, BATTLE of. The Russian general Gortschakofi", intending to storm Kalafat, threw up redoubts at Citate, close to the Danube, which were stormed by the Turks under Omar Pacha, Jan. 6, 1854. The fighting continued on the 7th, 8th, and 9th, when the Russians were compelled to retire to their former position at Krajowa, having lost 1500 killed and 2000 wounded. The loss of the Tm-ks was estimated at 338 killed and 700 wounded. CITIES. The word city has been in use in England only since the Conquest, at which time even London was called Londonhurgh, as the capital of Scotland is still called Edinburgh. The English cities were very inconsiderable in the twelfth century. Cities were first incorporated a.d. 1079. Towns corporate were called cities, when the seat of a bishop's see and having a cathedral church. — Camden. The institution of cities has aided much in introducing regular governments, police, manners, and arts. — Robertson. CITIZEN. It was not lawful to scourge a citizen of Rome. — Livy. In England a citizen is a person who is free of a city, or who doth carry on a trade therein. — Camden. Various privileges have been conferred on citizens as freemen in several reigns, and powers granted to them. The wives of citizens of London (not being aldermen's wives, nor gentlewomen by descent) were obliged to wear minever caps, being white woollen knit three-cornered, with the peaks projecting three or four inches beyond their foreheads; aldermen's wives made them of velvet, 1 Eliz. 1558, — Stowe. The title of citizen only was allowed in France at the revolution, 1792 et seq. CIUDAp RODRIGO. This strong fortress of Spain was invested by the French, June 11, 1810 ; and it surrendered to them July 10, following, It remained in their pos- session until it was gallantly stormed by the British, commanded by lord Wellington, Jan. 19, 1812. The loss of the British and Portuguese amounted to about 1000 killed ^^"^ ,^°'^'^'^^^ ' '■^'^ loss of the garrison was the same, besides 1700 prisoners. — Sir Wm. P. P. Napier. CIV 153 CLA CIVIL LAW, Several codes come under this denomination of laws. A body of Roman laws, founded upon the laws of nature and of nations, was first collected by Alfrenus Varus, the civilian, who flourished about 66 B.C. ; and a digest of them was made by Servius Sulpicius, the civiliau, 53 B.C. The Gregorian laws were comjiiled a.d. 290 ; the Theodosiau in 435 ; and the Justinian, 529—534. Many of the former laws having grown out of use, the emperor Justinian ordered a revision of them, which was called the Justinian code, and this code constitutes a large part of the present civil law. Civil law was restored in Italy, Crermany, &c. 1127. — Blair. Civil law was introduced into England by Theobald, a Norman abbot, who was afterwards archbishop of Canterbury in 1138. It is now used in the sjjiritual courts only, and in maritime afi'airs. See Doctors' Commons, and Laws. CIVIL LIST. This comprehends the revenue awarded to the kings of England, partly in lieu of their ancient hereditary income. The entire revenue of Elizabeth was not more than 600,000/. and that of Charles I. was but 800,000/. After the Revolution a civil list revenue was settled on the new king and queen of 700,000/., the parliament taking into its own hands the support of the forces both maritime and military. The civil list of George II. was increased to 800,000/. ; and tliat of George III. in the 55th year of his reign, was 1,030,000/. By the act 1 Will. IV. 1831, the civil list of that sovereign was fixed at 510,000/. By the act of 1 Vict. Dec. 1837, the civil list of the queen was fixed at 885,000/ ; and prince Albert obtained an exclusive sum from parliament of 30,000/. per ann., 4 Vict. c. 1 & 2, Feb. 7, 1840. CLANSHIPS. These were tribes of the some race, and commonly of the same name, and originated in feudal times. See Feudal Laws. They are said to have arisen in Scotland, in the reign of Malcolm II., about 1008. Claushijjs and other remains of heritable jurisdiction were abolished in Scotland (where clans were taken to be the tenants of one lord), and the liberty of the English was granted to clansmen, 20 Geo. II. 1746. — Ruffhead. The following is a curious and I'ai-e list of all the known clans of Scotland, with the badge of distinction anciently worn by each. Name Buchanan Cameron Campbell Chisholm Colquhoun Cuiuiiiing Drummoiid Farquharsoii Ferguson Forbes Fraser . Gordon Graham Grant Gun Lam out M'AUistcr M- Donald M'Donuell M'Dougall M 'Farlaue M 'Gregor M 'lutosh ■^ The chief of each respective clan was, and is, entitled to wear two eagles' feathers in his bonnet, in addition to the distinguishing badge of his clan. — Chambers. CLARE, England. This town, in Suffolk, is famous for the great men who liave borne the title of earl and duke of it. Richard de Clare, earl of Gloucester, is said to have seated hero a monastery of tlie order of Friars Eremites, the first of this kind of mendicants who came to England, 1248. — Tanner. Lionel, third son of Edward III. becoming possessed of the honour of Clare, by marriage, was created duke of Clarence. The title has ever since belonged to a branch of the royal fauiilj'. CLARE, Ireland. The first place in Ireland for 140 years that elected a Roman Catho- lic member of parliament. This it did previously to the passing of the Roman Catholic Relief bill, in 1829, and in despite of then existing laws of the realm. See Roman Catholics. The memorable election was held at Eiiuis, the county town, and terminated in the return of Mr. Dimiel O'Coimell, July 5, 1828. CLARE, NUNS of ST. A sisterhood founded in Italy about a.d. 1212. This order settled in England, in the Minorics without Aldgate, London, about 1293. Blanche Bad/je. Name. Baifgc . Birch. M'Kay . . Bull-rush. . . Oak. M'Kenzie . . Deer grass. . Myrtle. M'Kinnon . St. John's wort. . . Alder. M'Lachlan . . Mountaiu-ash. . Hazel. M'Lean . Blackberry heath. . . Common Sallow. M'Leod . . Red Whortleberries. . Holly. M'Nab . Rose Blackberries. . . Purple Fo.xglove. M'Neil . . . Sea-ware. . Poplar. M'Phcrsou . Varieirated Box-wood. . . Broom. M 'Quarrie . . Blackthorn. . Yew. M'Rae . . Fir-club Mass. . . Ivy. Munro . . Eagles' feathers. . Laurel. Mcnzies . Ash. . . Cranberry heath. Murray . . Juniper. . Rosewort. Ogilvie . Hawthorn. . . Crab-apple tree. Ohphant . . . Great Maple. . Fivedcavcd heath. Robertson . Fern, or IBrechiuis. . . Bell heath. Rose . . Briar- rose. . Mountam heath. Ross . Bear-berries. . . Cypress. . Cloud-berry bush. Sinclair . . . Clover. Stewai t . Thistle. . . Pino. Sutherland . . Cat's-tail grass. . Box-wood. CLA 154 CLE queen of Navarre, wife of Edmund, earl of Lancaster, brother of Edward I. founded the abbey for those nuns on the east side of tlie street leading from the Tower to Aldgate ; they were called Minoresses (hence Miuoiies) ; and the order continued till the suppression, when the site was granted to the bishopric of Bath and Wells, 31 Hen. VIIL 1539.— Taimer. CLAREMONT. The residence of the late princess Charlotte (daughter of the prince regent, afterwards George IV.), and the scene of her death, Nov. 6, 1817. The ho\ise was originally built by sir John Vanbrugh, and was the seat of, successively, the earl of Clare, afterwards duke of Newcastle, of lord Clive, lord Galloway, and the earl of Tyrconnel. It was purchased of Mr. Ellis by government for 65,000^. for the prince and princess of Saxe-Coburg ; and the former, now king of Belgium, assigned it to prince Albert in 1840. The exiled royal family of France took up their residence at Ciaremont, March 4, 1848 ; and the king, Louis-Philippe, died at Claremont, Aug. 29, 1850. See France. CLARENCIEUX. The second king at arms here with us, so called, because formerly he belonged to the duke of Clarence ; his office was instituted to marshal and dispose of the funerals of all the lower nobility, as baronets, knights, esquires, and gentlemen, on the south side of Trent, from whence he is also called sur-roy or south-roy. CLARENDON, STATUTES of. These were statutes enacted in a parliament held at Clarendon, the object of which was to retrench the then enormous power of the clergy. They are rendered memorable as being the ground of Becket's quarrel with Heniy II. A number of regulations were drawn up under the title of the statutes or constitutions of Clarendon, and were voted without opposition, a.d. 1164. — Wamer''s Eccl. Hist. The enactments were sixteen in nvimber, viz. : — I. That all suits concerning advowsons should be determined in civil courts. II. That the clergy accused of any crime should be tried by civil judges. III. That uo person of any rank whatever should be permitted to leave the realm without the royal license. IV. That laics should not be accused in spiritual courts, except by legal and reputable promoters and witnesses. V. That no chief tenant of the crown should be excommunicated, or his lands put mider interdict. VI. That the revenues of vacant sees should belong to the king. VII. That goods forfeited to the crown should not be-protected iu churches. VIII. That the sons of villains should not be ordained clerks without the consent of their lord. IX. That bishops should be regarded as barons, and be subjected to the burthens belonging to that rank. X. That tlie churches belonging to the king's see should not be gi-anted in iserpetuity against his will. XI. That excommunicated persons should not be bound to give security for continuing in their abode. XII. That no inhabitant in demesne should be excommunicated for non-appear- ance in a spiritual court. XIII. That if any tenant in capite should refuse submission to spiritual courts, the case should be referred to the king. XIV. That the clergy should no longer pre- tend to the right of enforcing debts contracted by oath or promise. XV. That causes between laymen and eccle- siastics should be determined by a jury. XVI. Tliat appeals should be ultimately carried to the king, and no farther without his consent. These stringent statutes were enacted to prevent the chief abuses which at that time prevailed in ecclesiastical affairs, and put a stop to Church usurpations, which, gradually stealing on, threatened the destruction of the civil and royal power. — Hume. CLARION. This instrument originated, it is said by Spanish writers, with the Moors, in Spain, about a.d. 800. The clarion was at first a trumpet, serving as a treble to trumpets sounding tenor and bass. — Ashe. Its tube is narrower, and its tone shrille? than the common trumpet. — Pardon. CLASSIS. The name was first given by Tullius Servius (the sixth king of ancient Rome), iu making divisions of the Roman people. The fii-st of the six classes were called classici, by way of eminence, and hence authors of the first rank came to be called classics, 573 B.C. — Mortimer. Tullius Servius, too, was the first who introduced coin or stamped money into Rome. — Idem. CLAVICHORD. A musical instrument in the foi-m of a spinnet (called also a manichord) ; it had 49 stops, and 70 strings, which bore upon five bridges, the first being the highest, and the others diminishing in proportion. The chords were covered with cloth, which rendered the sound sweeter, and deadened it so, that it could be heard only at a small distance. It was much in use in the nunneries of Spain. This instrument is of much older date than the harpsichord. — Panlon. CLEMENTINES. Apocryphal pieces, fable and error, attributed to the primitive father, Clemens Romauus, a contemporary of St. Paul ; some say he succeeded Peter as bishop CLE 155 CLE of Rome. He died a.d. 102. — Niceron. Also the decretals of pope Clement V. who died 1314, published by bis successor.— Boivyer. Also Augustine monks, each of whom has been a superior nine years, then merged into a common monk. CLEMENTINES and URBANISTS. Parties by whom Europe was distracted for several years. The Urbanists were the adherents of Pope Urban VI., the others those of Robert, sou of the Count of Geneva, who took the title of Clement VII. All the kingdoms of Christendom, according to their various interests and inclinations, were divided between these two pontilfs ; the court of France, Castile, Scotland, &c. adhering to Clement, and Rome, Italy, and England declaring for Urban. This contention was consequent upon the death of Gregory XI. 1378. — Hume. CLERGY. In the first century the clergy were distinguished by the title of presbyters or bishops. The bishops in the second century assumed higher functions, and the presbyters represented the inferior priests of the Levites. This distinction was still further promoted in the third century ; and, under Constantino, the clergy attained the recognition and protection of the secular power. CLERGY IN ENGLAND. They increased rapidly in number early in the seventh cen- tury, and at length controlled the king and kingdom. Drunkenness was forbidden among the clergy by a law, so early as 747, a.d. The first-fruits of the then clergy were assigned by parliament to the king, 1534. The clergy were excluded from parliament in 1536. The conference between the Protestant and Dissenting clei-gy was held in 1604. See Conference. Two thousand resigned their benefices in the Church of England, rather than subscribe their assent to the book of Common Prayer, including the Thirty-nine articles of religion, as enjoined by the Act of Uniformity, 1661-2. The Irish Protestant clergy were restored to their benefices, from which they had been expelled, owing to the state of the kingdom under James II. 1689. The Clergy Incapacitation act passed, 1801. See Church of England. CLERGY, BENEFIT of. Privilegium Clericale. The privilege arose in the pious regard paid by Christian princes to the Church in its infant state, and consisted of— 1st, an exemption of places consecrated to religious duties from criminal arrests, which was the foundation of sanctuaries ; 2nd, exemption of the persons of clergymen from criminal process before the secular judge, in particular cases, which was the original meaning of the privilegium clericale. In the course of time, however, the hcncjit of clergy extended to every one who could read, for such was the ignonmce of those periods, that this was thought a great proof of learning; and it was enacted, that from the scarcity of clergy in the i-ealm of England, there shoidd be a prerogative allowed to the clergy, that if any man who could read were to be condemned to death, the bishop of the diocese might, if he would, claim him as a clerk, and dispose of him in some places of the clergy as he might deem meet; but if the bishop would not demand him, or if tlie prisoner could not read, then he was to be put to death, 3 Edw. I. 1274.— Benefit of clergy was abolished by stat. 8 Geo. IV. 1827. CLERGYMEN'S WIDOWS' and ORPHANS' CORPORATION. Established in England 1670, and incorporated 1678. William Assheton, an eminent theological writer, was the first proposer of a plan to provide for the families of deceased clergy. — Watts s Life of Assheton. The festival of the " Sons of the Clergy" is held annually at St. Paul's cathedral : the charity called the 'Sons of the Clergy" was incorporated in 1678. CLERK. The clergy were first styled clerks, owing to the judges being chosen after the Norman custom from the sacred order ; and the oflFicers being clergy : this gave them that denomination, which they kcej) to this d^j.—Blackst one's Coram. "As the Druida," says Pasquier, "kept the keys of their religion and of letters, so did the priests keep both these to themselves ; they alone made profession of letters, and a man of letters was called a clerk, and hence learning went by the name of clerkship." This is still the appellation of clergymen ; and the clergymen of our Cliurch distinguish themselves by adding " clerk " to their name. — Pardon. In 992, the distinction obtained in France. — llcnaidt. CLEHKKNWELL, a parish near Loudon, so called from a well {fons clericorum) in liay-street, where the parish clerks occasionally acted mystery-plays; once before Richard II. in 1 391. Hunt's political meetings in 1817 were held in Spa-fields, in this parish. In St. John's parish are the remains of the priory of the knights of St. John of Jerusalem. Clerkeuwell prison was built in 1615, in lieu of the noted prison called the Cage, which was taken down in 1614 ; it was erected, the then Bridewell having been found insuflicient. The piison called the House of Detention, erected in 1775, was rebuilt iu 1818; again, 1844. At Clerkeuwellclose formerly stood the CLE 156 CLO house of Oliver Ci-omwell, where some suppose the death-warrant of Charles I. was signed, Jan. 1649. CLERMONT, COUNCIL of. The celebrated council in which the first crusade against the infidels was determined upon, and Godfrey of Bouillon appointed to command it, in the pontificate of Urban II. 1095. In this council the name of pope was first given to the head of the Roman Catholic Church, exclusively of the bishops, who used until this time to assume that title. Philip I. of France was (a, second time) excommunicated by this assembly. — Hcnault. CLIMACTERIC. The term applied by the ancient astrologers and physicians to certain periods of time in a man's life (multiples of 7 or 9), in which they affirmed several notable alterations in the health and constitution of a person happened, and exposed him to imminent dangers. Cotgrove says, " every 7th or 9th or 63rd year of a man's life, all very dangerous, but the last most." Hippocrates is said to have first noticed these alterations in human life, 383 B.C. Much misemployed erudition has been expended on this subject. CLIO. The initials, C. L. I. 0., forming the name of the muse of history, were renderet Auflralia. Ceded by France. 1763 Settlement, in . 1666 Capitulation, Feb. 1797 Settlement, iu , Settlement, iu 1803 1848 1850 . 1666 COLOSSUS OF RHODES. A brass statue of Apollo, seventy cubits high, erected at tlie port of Rhodes iu honour of the sun, and esteemed one of the wonders of the world. Built by Chares of Lindus, 290 B c. It was thrown down by an eartlKpiake 224 b.c. • and was finally destroyed by the Saracens on their taking Rhodes in a.d. 672. The figure stood upon two moles, a leg being extended on each side of the harbour, so that a vessel iu full sail could enter between. A winding staircase ran to the top, from Only tuider the protection of the British goverumcnt. M 2 COM 164 COM which could be discerned the shores of Syria, and the ships that sailed on the coast of Egyfjt. This statue had lain in ruins for nearly nine centuries, and had never been repaired ; but now the Saracens pulled it to pieces, and sold the metal, weighing 7"20,900 lb. to a Jew, who is said to have loaded 900 camels in transporting it to Alexandria. — Dwfresnoy. COMBAT, SINGLE, in ENGLAND. It commenced with the Lombards, a.d. 659.— Baronius. This method of trial was introduced into England and was allowed in accusations of treason, if neither the accuser nor the accused could produce evidence of the charge, or of innocence, 9 Will. II. 1096. The first battle by single combat was that fought before the king and the peers between Geoffrey Baynai'd and William, earl of Eu, who was accused by Baynard of high treason ; and Baynai-d having con- qvxered, Eu was deemed convicted. The last combat proposed was between lord Iteay and David Eamsay, in 1631, but the king prevented it. See article Ilir/h Constable. COMBAT, SINGLE, in IRELAND. The same method of trial had also existence in Ireland. A trial was appointed between the prior of Kilmainham and the earl of Ormond, the former having impeached the latter of high treason ; but the quarrel having been taken up by the king, was decided without fighting, 1446. Remarkable combat in Dublin castle, before the lords justices and council, between Connor Mac Cormack O'Connor and Teig Mac-Gilpatrick O'Connor; in which the former had his head cut off, and presented to the lords justices, 1553. COMEDY. Thalia is the muse of comedy and lyric poetry. Susarion and Dolon were the inventors of theatrical exhibitions, 562 B.C. They performed the first comedy at Athens, on a waggon or movable stage, on four wheels, for which they were rewarded with a basket of figs and a cask of ifime.—Arundelian Marbles. Aristophanes was called the prince of ancient comedy, 434 B.C., and Menauder that of new, 320 B.C. Of Plautus, 20 comedies are extant ; he flourished 220 B.C. Statins Crccilius wrote upwards of 30 comedies ; he flourished at Rome 180 B.C. The comedies of Lajlius and Terence were first acted 154 B.C. The first regular comedy was performed in England about A.D. 1551. It was said of Sheridan that he wrote the best comedy (the School for Scandal), the best opera (the Duenna), and the best afterpiece (the Cntic), in the English language. See Drama. COMETS. The first that w^as discovered and described accurately was by Nicephorus. At the birth of the great Mithridates two large comets appeared, which were seen for seventy-two days together, whose splendour eclipsed that of the mid-day sun, and which occupied forty-five degrees, or the fourth part of the heavens, 135 B.C. — Justin. A remarkable one was seen in England, 10 Edw. III. June 1337. — Stowe. These phenomena were first rationally explained by Tycho Brahe, about 1577. A comet which terrified the people from its near approach to the earth, was visible from Nov. 3, 1679, to March 9, 1680. The orbits of comets were proved to be ellipses by Newton, 1704. A most brilliant comet appeared in 1769, which passed within two millions of miles of the earth.* One still more brilliant appeared in Sept , Oct. and Nov. 1811, visible all the autumn to the naked eye. Another brilliant comet appeared in 1823. See the three next articles. Mr. Hinde, in his little work on Comets, gives a chrono- logical list. COMET, BIELA'S. This comet has been an object of fear to many on account of the nearness with which it has api^roached, not the earth, but a point of the earth's path : it was first discovered by M. Biela, an Austrian officer, Feb. 28, 1826. It is one of the three comets whose re-appearance was predicted, its revolution being performed in six years and thirty-eight weeks. Its second appearance was in 1832, when the time of its perihelion passage was Nov. 27. Its third appearance was of course in 1839, and its fourth in 1845. COMET, ENCKE'S. First discovered by M. Pons, Nov. 26, 1818, but justly named by astronomers after professor Encke, for his success in detecting its orbit, motions, and perturbations ; it is, like the preceding, one of the three comets which have appeared according to prediction, and its revolutions are made in three years and fifteen weeks. * This beautiful comet, moving with immen.se .swiftness, was seen in London ; its tail stretched across the heavens, like a prodigious luminous arch, thirty-six millions of miles in length. The lirilliant plienomenon that accompanies a comet, and which we call the tail, is a vast stream of light. The computed length of that \thich appeared in ISll, and which was so remarkably conspicuous, was, .lU October 1-5, according to the late Dr. Herschcl, ui)vs'avds of one Imndi-ed millions of miles, and its apparent greatest breadth, at the same time, fifteen millions of miles.— i'/ttiw. Trans. Roijal Soc. for 1S12. COM 165 COM COMET, HALLEY'S. This is the celebrated comet named after one of the greatest astronomers of England. He first proved that many of the appearances of comets were but the periodical returns of the same bodies, and he demonstrated that the comet of 1GS2 was the same with the comet of 145(), of 1531, and 1607, deducing this fact from a miuuto observation of tlie first-mentioned comet, and being struck by its wonderful rosomblance to the comets described as having appeared in those years : Halley, therefore, first fixed the identity of comets, and first predicted tlieir periodical returns. — Vince's Astronomy. The revolution of Halley 's comet is performed in about seventy-six years : it appeared in 1759, and came to its perihelion on March 13 ; and its last appearance was in 1835. COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. This rank in the British army has been very frequently vacant, and sometimes for several years consecutively. When the duke of Wellington resigned the office, on becoming minister, in 1828, his grace's successor, lord Hill, assumed the rank of commander of the forces, or general commanding in chief. CAPTAINS-GENERAL. Duke of Albemarle .... 1600 Duke of Monmouth . . ... 1078 Duke of Marlborough .... 1702 Duke of Ormond 1711 Duke of Marlborough, ag.iiu . . . 1714 Duke of Cumberland 1744 Duke of York 1709 COMMANDERS-IN-CUIEF. Duke of Monmouth Duke of iMarlborough Duke of Sehoinberg . Duke of Ormoud . Earl of Stair Field-Marshal Wade Lord Ligouier Marquess of Grauby 1674 1090 1691 1711 1744 1745 1757 1766 Lord Amherst, general ou the staff . . 1778 Hon. general Seymour Conway . . 17S2 Lord Amlierst, again 1793 Frederick, duke of York . . . 1795 Sir David Dundas . . March 25, 1809 Frederick, duke of York, again May 29, 1811 Duke of Wellington . . Jan. 22, 1827 GENERAL COMMANDING IN CHIEF, OB GENERAL ON THE STAFF. Lord Hill .... Feb. 25, 1823 COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. Duke of Wellington again . Dec. 28, 1842 GENERAL COMMANDING IN CHIEF. Viscount Hardinge, the present (1855) general commanding in chief, Sept. 28, 1852 COMMERCE. Flourished in Arabia, Egypt, and among the Phoenicians in the earliest ages. In later times it was spread over Europe by a confederacy of maritime cities, a.D. 1241. See Hanse Towns. The discoveries of Columbus, and tlic enterprises of the Dutch and Portuguese, enlarged the sphere of commerce, and led other nations, particularly England, to engage extensively in its pursuit. See tlie various articles connected ivith this subject throii,rjh the volume. COMMERCIAL TREATIES. The first treaty of commerce made by England with any foreign nation was entered into with the Flemings, 1 Edw. I. 1272. The second was with Portugal aad Spain, 2 Edw. II. 1308. — Anderson. See Treaties. COMMON COUNCIL of LONDON. Its formation commenced about 1208. The charter of Henry I. mentions tlie folk-mote, this being a Saxon appellation, and whicli may fairly be rendered the court or assembly of the people. The general place of meeting of the folk-mote was in the open air at St. Paul's Cross, in St. Paul's church- yard. It was not discontinued till after Henry III.'s reign ; when certain representatives were chosen out of each ward, who, being added to the lord mayor and aldermen, constituted the court of Common Council. At first only two were returned for each ward ; but it being afterwards considered that the number was insufficient, it was enlarged in 1347, aud since. This council soon became the parent of other similar institutions tliroughout the realm. COMMON LAW of ENGLAND. Custom, to which length of time has given the force of law, or rules generally received and lield as law, called lex non scripla in contra- distinction to the written law. Common law derives its origin froui Alfred's body of laws (which was long supposed to be lost), a.d. 890. See Custom. Laws. The process, practice, and mode of pleading in the superior courts of common law, were amended by 15 & 16 Vict. c. 76 (June 30, 1852), aud 17 & 18 Vict. c. 125 (Aug. 12, 1854). COMMON PLEAS, COURT op, in ENGLAND. This court in ancient times was kept in tlie king's own palace, distinct from that of the King's Bencli. But on the confirmation of Magna Charta by king John, in 1215, it was fixed at Westminster, where it still continues. In it are debated all controversies, in matters civil, between subject and subject, according to law. Hero real actions are pleadable ; aud this court may grant prohibitions, as the court of King's Bench doth. In pei-sonal aud mixed actions it has a concurnnt jurisdiction with that court; but no cognisance of pleas of the crown. — Blackstone. COM 166 COM COMMON PLEAS, COURT op, in ENGLAND, continued. CHIEF JUSTICES OF THE COMMON PLEAS OF ENGLAND. From the reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1558. 1559. 1582. 1605. 1606. 1613. 1626. 1631. 16:-i4. 1639. 1610. 1648. 1660. 1668. 1675. 10S.3. 1686. 16S7. 1689. 1692. 1701. 1714. 1725. 1736. Sir Anthony Browne, knt. Sir James Dyer, knt. Sir Edmund Anderson, knt. Sir Francis Gawdy, knt. Sir Edward Coke, knt. afterwards to K.B. Sir Henry Hobart knt. Sir Tliomas Richardson, knt. after- wards to K.B. Sir Robert Heath, knt. Sir John Finch, .knt. Sir Edward Lyttleton, knt. Sir John Bankes, knt. Oliver St John, esq. Sir Orlando Bridgmau, bart. afterwards lord keeper. Sir John Vaughan, knt. Sir Francis North, knt. afterwards lord Guilford, and lord keeper. Sir Francis Pembcrton, knt. Sir Thomas Jones, knt. Sir Henry Bedingfield, knt. Sir Robert Wright, knt. Sir Edward Herbert, knt. Sir Henry Pollexfen, knt. Sir George Treby, knt. Sir Thomas Trevor, knt. afterwards lord Trevor. Sir Peter King, aftei-wards lord King, and lord chancellor. Sir Robert Eyre, knt. Sir Thomas Reeve, knt. 1737. Sir John Willes, knt. 1761. Sir Charles Pratt, knt. afterwards lord Camden, and lord chancellor. 1766. Sir John Eardley Wilmot, knt 1771. Sir William de Grey, afterwards lord Walsingham. 1780. Alexander Wedderbume, created lord Loughboi-ough, afterwards lord chan- cellor, and earl of Rosslyn. 1793. Sir James Eyre, knt. 1799. Sir John Scott, afterwards lord chan- cellor ; created lord Eldon, and, sub- quently, carl of Eldon. 1801. Sir Richard Pepper Arden, created lord Alvanley, May 22. 1804. Sir James Mansfield, knt. April 21. 1814. Sir Vicary Gibbs, knt. Feb. 24. 1818. Sir Robert Dallas, knt. Nov. 5. 1824. Sir Robert Gifford, Jan. 9 ; created lord Gifiord ; master of the rolls, April, same year. — Sir W^illiam Draper Best, afterwards lord Wynford, April 15. 1829. Sir Nicolas Conyngham Tindal, June 9 ; died, Jidy, 1846. 1846. Sir Thomas Wilde, July 11 ; created lord Truro, and made lord chancellor, July, 1850. 1850. Sir Joim Jervis, July 16. The present (1855) Chief Justice of the Common Pleas of England. In England, no barrister under the degree of a serjeant could plead in the court of common pleas; the serjeants-at-law enjoying the exclusive right. The act 9 & 10 Vict. c. 54, passed August 18, 1846, extended the privilege to barristers of any degree practising in the superior courts at Westminster. All barristers, however, were pre- viously at liberty to move or show cause against a rule for a new trial. COMMON PLEAS, COURT of, in IRELAND. The Court of Common Pleas in Ireland is similarly constituted with the court in England ; but in Ireland it always was, as it still is, open to the profession at large. CHIEF JUSTICES OP THE COMMON PLEAS IN IRELAND. From the Period of the Revolution. 1691. Richard Pyne, Jan. 5. 1695. Sir John Holy, May 10. 1701. Sir Richard Cox, May 4. 1703. Robert Doyne, Dec. 27. 1714. John Forster, Sept. 30. 1720. Sir Richard Leviuge, Oct. 13. 1724. Thomas Wjmdham, Oct. 27. 1726. Wihiam Whitshed, Jan. 23. 1727. James Reynolds, Nov. 8. 1740. Henry Singleton. May 11. 1754. Sir William Yorke, Sept. 4. 1761. William Aston, May 5. Richard Clayton, Feb. 21. Marcus Patterson, June 18. Hugh Carleton, afterwards viscount Carleton, April 30. 1800. Jolm Toler, afterwards lord Norbury, Oct. 22. Lord Plunket, June 18. John Doherty, Dec. 23. 1850. James Heni-y Moiiahan, Sept. 23. The present (1855) Chief Justice of the Common Pleas in Ireland. 1765. 1770. 1787. 1827. 1830 COMMON PRAYER. The Book of Common Prayer was ordered to be published in the Engli^i language by the authority of parliament in 1548. In the time of the civil war, the Common Prayer was voted out of doors, by parliament, and the Directory {which sec) set up in its room in 1644. A proclamation was issued against it, 1647. Other books of worshijj experienced the same fate. — Salmon. COMMONS, HOUSE op. The great representative assembly of the people of Great Britain. It originated with Simon de Montfort, carl of Leicester, who ordered returns to be made of two knights from every shire, and deputies from certain boroughs to meet the barons and clergy who were his friends, with a view thereby to strengthen liis own power in opposition to that of his sovereign Henry III. This was the first confirmed outline of a house of commons, and the first commons were summoned to meet the king in parliament, 42 & 43 Hen. III., 1258. — Goldsmith. Stotoe. According to other authorities, the first parliament formally convened was the one summoned 49 Hen. III., Jan. 23, 1265; and writs of the latter date are the earliest CO.M 167 COM extant. Some historians date the first regularly constituted parliament from the 22nd of Edward I., 1294. The first recorded speaker, duly chosen, was Petre de Montfort in 1260; he was killed at the battle of Evesham in 1265. The city of London first sent members to parliament in the reign of Henry III., while West- minster was not represented in that assembly until the latter end of Henry VIII. 's life, or rather in the first House of Commons of Edward VI. The following is the constitution of the House of Commons since the passing of the Reform Bills {which see) in 1832 :— EsGLiSH. — County members Universities Cities and boroughs Welsh. — County membei-s Cities and boroughs English and Welsh 14-1 4 3'21— 4C9 1 If) 14- -29 • 498 English and Welsh . . . 498 Scotch. — County members . . 30 Cities and boroughs . . .23 — 53 Irish. — County members . . . C4 University 2 Cities and boroughs . . . 39 — 105 Total (see Parliament). . . 656 The number of English and Welsh members in 1852 was 500. In that year (June 17) an act was passed, disfranchising the borough of St. Alban's, on the ground of bribery and corruption, and that borough having previously returned two members, the aggregate number of English members was consequently reduced, from 471 to 469 ; and the aggregate number of the house of commons, from 658 members to 656. COMMONWEALTH of ENGLAND. This was the interregnum between the death of Charles I. and the restoration of Charles II. The form of the government was changed to a republic on the execution of Charles I., Jan. 30, 1649. Instead of the oaths of allegiance and supremacy, a new oath called the " Engagement " was framed, which the people were obliged to take.* — Salmon. Oliver Cromwell was made Protector, Dec. 12, 1653. Richard Cromwell was made Protector, Sept. 4, 1658. Monarchy was restored in the person of Charles II., May 29, 1660. See England. COMMONWEALTH of ROME. See Rome. The greatest and most renowned republic of the world. It dates from 509 B.C., when the government of kings ceased with the expulsion of Tarquinius Superbus, the seventh and last king of Rome, and the election of consuls. After this revolution, Rome advanced by rapid strides towards universal dominion. The whole of Italy received her laws. Sicily, Sardinia, Spain, Carthage, Africa, Greece, Asia, Syria, Egypt, Gaul, Britain, "and even a part of Germany, were successively subdued by her arms : so that in the age of Julius Ctcsar this re])ublic had the Euphrates, Mount Taurus, and Armenia for boundaries in the east ; ^Ethiopia, in the south ; the Danube, in the north ; and the Atlantic Ocean, in the west. The republic existed under consuls and other magistrates imtil the battle of Actium, from which we commonly date the commencement of the Roman empire, 31 B.C. COMMUNION. It originated in the Lord's Supper, and was practised early in the pi'imitive Church. Communicating under the form of bread alone, is said to have had its rise in the West, under Pope Urban II. 1096. The fourth Lateran council, 1215, d-?crced that every believer shall receive the communion at least at Easter. The cup was first denied to the laity by the council of Constance, 1453. The communion service, as now performed in the Ciiurch of England, was instituted by the authority of council, 2 Edw. VI. l^ii.—Hume. COMPANIES. — Among the earliest commercial companies in England may be named the Steel-yard Society, established a.d. 1232. The second company was the merchants of St. Thomas il Becket, in 1248. — Stoioe. The third was theMerchant Adventurers, incorporated by Elizabeth, 1564. The following are the city companies of London, in the order of precedence, with the dates of their institution or incorporation by charter or by act of parliament. Of these there are ninety-one ; the first twelve ai"e the chief, and are styled " the Honourable : " — LONDON CITY COMPANIES. 8. Haberdashers . . 144r 16. Pewterers . . . 1474 1. iMercers . .a.d. 1303 9. Salters . . 1558 17. Uarber Surgeons . l:!OS 2. Grocers . . . I.j45 10. Ironmongers . 14C4 IS. Cutlers . . . 1417 3. Pr.ipcrs . . . 1430 11. Vintners . . 1437 19. Bakers . 1307 4. Fishmongers . . 13S4 12. Clothworkers . . 1482 20. Wax-elmndlcr.s . . 14S4 5. Goldsraitlis . . 13'.'7 13. Dyers . 14i;.9 21. Tallow-chandlers . 1463 6. Skinnei-a . . . 1 i'JT 14. Ilrewers . 143S 22. Armourers and Bra- r. Merchant Tailoi-s . 146G 15. Leather-sellers . 1442 ziers . . . . 1463 * By this oath they sworo to be true and faithful to the commonwealth, without king or house of lords. Tlic statues of Charles were ne.\t day demolished, particularly tliat at the Royal K.Kchange, and one at the west end of St. Paul's, and in their room the following inseri|)tion was conspicuously set up:— "JS'.ri^ T^raymus Rej this celebrated league, the minor Gei-man princes collectively engaged to raise 258, OoO troops to serve in case of war, and they established a diet at Frankfort, July 12, 1800. This league was terminated with the career of Bonafiarte. See Germanic Confederation. CONFERENCE, The GREAT. The celebrated religious conference held at Hampton Court palace, between the prelates of the Church of England and the dissenting ministers, in order to effect a general union, at the instance of the kinsr. 2 James [. 10o4. This conference led to a new translation of the Bdde, which was executed in l()(l7-n, and is that now in general use in England and the United States ; ann, rallier than by a minute examination into its several parts. Other nations have endeavoured, but vainly, to .adopt it. France tried, among the rest, to .accommodate its ]>rinciples to her own state, but couUi not. Tlie French people had not grown with it, and were not prepared for tlie real liberty which it dift'used. and had not the temper for it, in which it could .alone endure. The British Constitution, in any other country tliau that to which it is so aptly litted, would seem a pile of aiiouialies and contradictious, the very contrary of what it is." CON 174 COO and by foreign powers with each, other, respective places througli the volume : — ■ Of Closterseven . . . Sept. 10, 1757 Of Armed Neutrality . . July 9, 17S0 Of Piluitz .... July 20, 1791 Of Paris (Freucli national) instituted Sept. 17, 1792 Of Cintra (which sec) . . Aug. 30, 1808 Of Berlin Nov. 5, 1808 Of Peterswaldeu . . . July 8, 1813 Of Paris April 23, 1814 Of the Dutch with England Aug. 13, 1814 Of Vienna ; Saxony placed under the control of Prussia . . Sept. 28, 1814 Of Zurich, signed . . . May 20, 1815 Of Capua, with Murat . May 20, 1815 Of St. Cloud, between Davoust, and Wel- lington and Blucher . . July 5, 1815 Of Paris, with the allies . April 25, 1818 Of Aix-la-Chapelle . . Oct. 9. 1818 Of Austria with England ; the latter agrees to accept 2, 500,000^. as a compo- They are more fully described in their sition for claims on Austria, amounting to 30,000,(00/. sterling . . . .1824 Of England with Russia . Feb. 28, 1825 Of England and United States Nov. 2(3, 1826 Of Spain, for satisfying the claims of British merchants . . June 2(5, 1828 Of the Viceroy of Egypt and Sir Edward Codriugton, for restoring the Greek captives, &c Aug. 0, 1828 Of France with Brazil . . Aug. 14, 1828 Convention between Holland and Bel- gium, signed in London . April 19, 1839 Of England with Austria, Russia, Prussia, and Turkey, for the settle- ment of the eastern question July 15, 1810 Of France and England, respecting the Slave Trade .... May 29, 1845 Of England with the Argentine republic, Oct. 24, 1849 See Treaties. CONVENTS. They were first founded, according to some authorities, in a.d. 270. The first in England was erected at Folkstoue, by Eadbald, in 6S0.— Camden. The first in Scotland was at Coldingham, where Ethelreda took the veil, in 670. They were founded earlier than this last date in Ireland. Convents were suppressed in England in various reigns, particularly in that of Henry YIII. and comparatively few now exist in Great Britain. More than 3000 have been suppressed in Europe within the last few years. Tlie emperor of Russia abolished 187 convents of monks, by an ukase dated July 31, 1832. The king of Prussia followed his example, and secularised all the convents in the duchy of Posen. Don Pedro put down 800 convents in Portugal in 1831, and Spain has abolished 1800 convents. CONVICTS. The first arrival of transported convicts at Botany Bay was in 1788. On the 20th of January in that year, governor Phillip, the first governor, with about 800 convicts under sentence of transportation, took possession of this settlement, but he subsequently removed to Sydney, denominated from lord Sydney, Sydney Cove, Convicts were sent to Van Diemen's Land, Norfolk Island, &c. ; and many thousands of them are transferred to Penitentiaries, and set to labour in the hulks in several ports of the realm. See New South Wales, and Ih-ansportation. CONVOCATION or the CLERGY. A general assembly of all the clergy in the nation convened by the sovereign's writ, to consult on the affairs of the Church, and directed to the archbishop of each jn'ovince, requiring him to summon all the bishops, deacons, archdeacons, &c. The convocation is divided into two houses, called the upper, consisting of the bishops ; and lower, consisting of the deans, prebendaries, arch- deacons and clergy. The first summoned to meet by writ of the king was 23 Edvv. I. 1295. The power of the convocation was limited by a statute of Henry VIII. in , whose reign the convocation was re-organised. The two houses of convocation were depiived of various privileges in 1716. Formal meetings of the clergy in convoca- tion are held annually, and attempts were made in 1853 and 1851 to introduce discus- sion on ecclesiastical afiairs but without efi'ect. CONVOLVULUS. The Canary Convolvulus (Convolridus CanaHcnsis) came to England from the Canary Isles, 1690. The many-flowered Convolvulus, in 1779. There are various beautiful specimens of this flower, which are justly esteemed, and although at first rare, now grow in profusion iu our gardens. COOK'S VOYAGES. The illustrious captain Cook sailed from England in the Endeavour on his first voyage, July 30, 1768 ; * and returned home after having circumnavigated the globe, arriving at Spithead, July 13, 1771. Sir Joseph Banks, afterwards the * A memorial was presented to the king by the Royal Society in 1768, setting forth the advantages which would bo derived to science if an accurate observation of the then approacliing transit of Venus over the sun were taken iu the South Sea. The ship Endeavour was, in consequence, prepared for that purpose, and the command of her given to lieutenant James Cook. He sailed iu July, 1708, touched at Madeira and Rio de Janeiro, doul)led Cape Horn, and after a pros])erous voyage reached Otaheite, the place of destination, in April, 1709. By a compaiiscn of the observations made on this transit (June 3, 1709) from the various parts of the globe, on which it was viewed by men of science, the system of the imiverse lia.s, in some particulars, been better undeistood ; the distance of the sun from the earth, as calculated by this and the transit in 1761, is now settled at 108,000,000 miles, instead of the comuiouly received computation of 95,000,000.— iJuiftr. coo 175 COP illustrious president of the Royal Society, accompanied captain Cook in this voyage. Captain Cook again sailed to explore the southern hemisphere, July 1772, and returned in July 1775. In his third expedition, this great navigator was killed by the savages of 0-why-hee, at 8 o'clock on the morning of Feb. 14, 1779. His ships, the Ecsolidion and Discovery, arrived home at Sheerness, Sept. 22, 1780. COOPERAGE. This art must be coeval with the dawn of history, and seems to have been early known in evexy country. It must have been suggested for preserving wine iu the earliest ages, as many household utensils are known to have been of wood as well as pottei-y. Tlie earliest writers speak of coopers. The coopers of London were incorporated in 1.501. COPENHAGEN. Distinguished as a royal residence, a.d. 1443. In 1728, more than seventy of its streets and 3785 houses were burnt. Its famous palace, valued at four millions sterling, was wholly burnt, Feb. 1794, when 100 persons lost their lives. In a fire which lasted forty-eight hours, the arsenal, admiralty, and fifty streets were destroyed, 1795. Copenhagen was bombarded by the English under lord Nelson and admiral Parker; and iu then* engagement with the Danish fleet of twenty-three ships of the line, eighteen were taken or destroyed by the British, April 2, IsOl. Again, after a bombardment of three days, the city and Danish fleet surrendered to admiral Gambler and lord Cathcart, Sept 7, 1807. The capture consisted of eighteen sail of the line, fifteen frigates, six brigs, aud twenty-five gun-boats, and immense naval stores. See Denmark. COPERNICAN SYSTEM. The system of the world wherein the sun is supposed to be iu the centre aud immoveable, and the earth and the rest of tlie {ilauets to move round it in elliptical orbits. The heavens and stars are here imagined to be at rest, aud the diurnal ti.otion wiiicli they seem to have from east to west, is imputed to the earth's motion from west to east. The system was published at Thorn, a.d. 1530 ; and may in many points be regarded as that of Pythagoras revived. — Gassendtis. COPPER. It is one of the six primitive metals. Its discovery is said to have preceded that of iron. We read in the Scriptures of two vessels of fine copper, precious as gold. — Ezra viii. 27. The great divisibility of this metal almost exceeds belief; a grain of it dissolved in alkali, as pearl ashes, soda, &c. will give a sensible colour to more than 500,000 times its weiglit in water; and when co[i2jer is in a state of fusion, if the least drop of water touch the melted ore, it will fly about like shot from a gun. — Boyle. Tiic mine of Fahlun, iu Sweden, is the most surprising artificial excavation in the world. In England, copper-mines were discovered in 1501, and copper now forms an immense branch of British trade: there ai-e upwards of fifty mines in Cornwall, where mining has been increasing since the reigu of William III. COPPER-MONEY. The Romans, prior to the reign of Servius TuUius, used rude pieces of copper for money. Sec Coin. Iu England, copper money is of extensive coinage. That proposed by sir Robert Cotton was brought into use in 1(309. Copper was extensively coined in l(Jt)5. It was again coined by the Crown, 23 Car. II. 1672. Private traders had made them px'eviously to this act. Iu Ireland, copper was coined as early as 1339; iu Scotland iu 140(3; iu France in 1580. Wood's coiuage in Ireland {ichich see) conunencod in 1723. Penny aud two-penny pieces were exten- sively issued 1797. The half-farthing was coiued iu 1843 ; but seems disused. Sec Fartliiwj. COPPER-PLATE PRINTING. This species of printing was first invented iu Germany, about A.D. 1450. Rolling-presses for working the plates were invented about 1545. Messrs. Perkins, of Philadelphia, invented iu 1819 a mode of engraving on soft steel which, when hardened, will nmltiply copper-plates aud tine impressions iudcfiuitely. Sec Enfjravinf). COPPERAS. A vitriolic kind of mineral, found in copper mines, commonly of a green or blue colour. It was first produced in England by Cornelius da Vos, a merchant, in 1587. COPYRIGHT. Decree of the Star-chamber regarding it, a.d. 155(3. Every book and publication ordered to be licensed, 1585. Ordinance forbidding the printing of any work without the consent of the owner, 1G49. Copyright further secured by a statute enacted 8 Anne, 1709. Protection of copyright in prints and engravings, 17 Geo. III. 1777. Copyright Protection act, 54 Geo. III. 1814. Dramatic authors' protection act, 3 Will. IV. c. 15, June 1833. The act for preventing the publication of lectures without consent, G Will. IV. c. G5, Sept. 9, 1835. The act of the 17th COP 176 COR Geo. III. extended to Irelaud, 7 Will. IV. c. 59, Aug. 1.% 1836. Interuational copy- right bill, 1 Vict. 1838. Copyright of designs for articles of manufactiii-e protected, 2 Vict. c. 13, June 4, 1839. Act to cany iuto effect a convention with France relating to copyright, 15 Vict. c. 12, passed May 28, 1852. For the important act of 1842 regarding literary property, see LUen-ary Property. The important question of a foreigner possessing a copyright in this country was finally decided in the negative by the House of Lords, in August, 1854, which i-eversed the decision of the Court of Exchequer on an appeal by the defendtvnt in the case of Boosey v. Jeffrey. In 1831 Mr. Boosey purchased the copyright of Bellini's opera La Sonnambida from which Mr. Jeffrey published a cavatiua. Six of the judges were for protecting foreign copy- rights and seven of a contrary opinion. COPYRIGHT, IXTERNATIOXAL. In 1838 an act was passed to secure to authors in certain cases the benefits of international cojjyright (1 & 2 Vict. c. 59), and conven- tions have in consequence been entered iuto with France. Prussia, &c. In Feb. 1854, a treaty for the same purpose was signed by the representatives of this country and the United States ; but in consequence of opposition in the latter country it has not yet been ratified. CORDAGE. The naval cordage in early ages was, probably, merely thongs of leather; and these primitive ropes were retained by the Caledonians in the third century, and by some northern nations m the ninth. Cordage of weed and of horse-hair was also used anciently before that made of hemp. See Hemp. Chain-cables (which also see) are now in use in the British navy and merchant service. CORDELIERS. Friars of the order of St. Francis and the same with the MLnoiites. They are clothed in coarse grey cloth, with a small cowl and cloak of the same material, having a girdle of cord or rope, tied with three knots, and hence the name, which was fii-st given to them by St. Louis of Fiance, about a.d. 1227. They once had the degree of doctor in the university of Paris, and in that city were all Scotists, CORFU. Celebrated in mythology and poetry ; capital of the island of the same name. The island of Corfu was placed under British administration, by the treaty of Paris, November 20, 1815. It is the chief of the Ionian Isles, over which a British governor presides. The other islands are Crphalonia, Zante, St. Maura, Ithaca, Cerigo, and Paxo. Sir Thomas Maitland was first high commissioner, May 7, 1816. CORINTH. This city was built in 1520, and the kingdom founded by Sisyphus in 1376 B.C. In 146 B.C. the capital was destroyed by the Romans, but was rebuilt by Julius Csesar ; and was among the first cities of Greece that embraced the Christian religion. It was defended by a fortress called Acrocorinth, on a summit of a high mountain, surrounded with strong walls. The situation of this citadel was so advantageous, that Cicero named it the Eye of Greece, and declared, that of all the cities kuown to the Romans, Corinth alone was worthy of being the seat of a gi-eat empire. Coriuth built on the ruins of Ephyra (Abbe Upglet) . . . . B.C. 1520 Rebuilt by the king of Sicyon, and first called by its name 1410 Sisyphus, a public robber, seizes upon the city (idtm) 137( The Pythian games instituted, it is said by Sisyphus 1375 The reign of Bacchis, whose successors are called Bacchidai, in remembi-ance of the equity of his reign . . . 935 The Corinthians invent ships called triremes; vessels consisting of three benches of oars TS6 Thelestes deposed, and the government of tlie Prytanes instituted : Automenes is tlie first on whom this dignity is conferred 757 A colony goes to Sicily and they build Syracuse b.c. 732 Sea-fight between the Corinthians and Corcyreans 664 Pei-iander i-ules, and encourages genius and learning 629 Death of Periauder 5S5 The Corinthians fonn a republic . . 5S2 War with the Corcyre.ans . ... 439 The Coruithian war (ichich see) . . 3y5 Acrocorinth (citadel) taken by Aratus . 242 The Roman ambassadors first appear at Corinth 228 Corinth destroyed by Lucius Mummius, wlio sends to Italy the first fine paint- ings there seen, they being part of the spoil (Livi/) 146 The history of Corinth may be divided into five periods. The first, as already observed, includes nearly 250 years, under Sisyphus, and his successors called t^isyplddte; most of this epoch, particularly the early part of it, is obscure; of the kings, little is known beyond their names. The second jieriod includes about 320 years, under the Hei-aclidse, called also Bacchidee, from Bacchis, the fourth king of this i-ace. The third epoch comprehends 202 years, under the Piytanes and tyrants. The fourth period exhibits the Corinthians in their most flourishing state as a free republic, and includes the history of 430 yeai-s. In the fifth epoch the Corinthians ai-e seeu tiuder the dominion of Rome. COR 177 COR CORINTHIAN ORDER. The finest of all the orders of ancient architecture, aptly called, by Scamozzi, the virginal ordci", as being expressive of the delicacy, tenderness, and beauty of the whole composition. This order is designed for palaces and other buildings of show and magaificenee, being enriched with all the nicety that the art of carving can embellish it with. Its invention is attributed to Callimachus, 540 B.C. See Abacus. CORINTHIAN WAR. The war which received this name, because the battles were mostly fought in the neighbourhood of Corinth, was begun B.C. 395, by a confederacy of the Athenians, Thebaus, Corinthians, and Argives, against the Lacedajmoniaus. The most famous battles were at Coronea and Leuctra, which see. ■ CORK. Built in the sixth century. The principality of the M'Cartys was converted into a shire by king John, as lord of Ireland. A chapter was granted to the city by Henry III. in 1242 ; its great charter was granted by Charles I. A large part of the town was consumed by an awful fire in 1621. The earl of Marlborough besieged and took Cork from king James's army, in 1690, when the duke of Grafton, a natural son of Charles II., was slain. The cathedral was built by the produce of a coal duty, between the years 1725 and 1735. Explosion of gunpowder here, Nov. 10, 1810. One of three colleges, endowed by government pursuant to act 8 & 9 Vict. c. 66, passed July 31, 1845, was inaugm-ated in this city, Nov. 7, 1849. Sec OoUer/es in Ireland. Cork Industrial Exhibition was opened, June 10, and closed Sept. 11, 1852. CORK, SEE OF. Its foundation is ascribed to St. Barr, or Finbarr, early in the seventh century. About 1431, this see and that of Cloyne were canonically united ; but ou the death of bishop Synge, in 1678, they were separated, the see of Ross having been added to Cork about a century before, a.D. 1582. No valuation is returned of this see in the king's book ; but in a manuscript in Marsh's library, it is taxed 31 Eliz. at 40/. sterling ; and in a MS. in the College library, at 251. The sees of Cork and Cloyne have been again united by act 3 & 4 Will. IV. 1833. See Bisho2is. CORK-TREE. Called the Quercus sulcr, and resembling the holm ; it is a species of the oak ; its fruit is an acorn, and its bark when burned makes the cork used for stopping bottles, casks, and other articles. Coi'k was in use amongst the ancients. The Egyptians made cofiins of cork, which, being lined with a resinous composition, pre- served dead bodies uucorrupted. Tlie tree grows in great abundance ou the Pyrencan mountains, and in other parts of Spain, in France, and in the north of New England. The cork-tree was brought to England before 1690. CORN. The origin of its cultivation is attributed to Ceres, who, having taught the art to the Egyptians, was deified by them, 2409 B.C. — Arundclian Marbles. The art of husbandry, and the method of making bread from wheat, and wine from rice, is attributed by the Chinese to Ching Noung, the successor of Fold, and second monarch of Cliina, 1998 B.C. —Univ. Ill^t. But corn provided a common article of food from the earliest ages of the world, and baking bread was known in the patriarchal ages. See Exodus, xii. 15. Wheat was introduced into Britain in the sixth century by Coll ap Coll Frewi. — Roberts' Hist. Anc. Britons. The first importation of corn, of which we have a note, was in 1347. Ijouuties were granted on its importation into England in 1686. Its importation from Ireland into England has long formed a vast branch of trade. The new Loudon Corn Exchange, Mark-lane, London, was opened June 24, 1828, and was erected at an expense of 90,000/. CORN BILLS. Among the many enactments regulating the importation of corn, the most important recent acts have been : A bill to permit the exportation of corn passed in 1814. Act to permit its importation when wheat shall be at ciglity shillings per quarter, was passed in 1815. During the discussions on this latter bill, mobs assembled in London, and many of the houses of its supporters were damaged, Jan. 28,1815; and a riot in Westminster continued sevei-al days, and occasioned much mischief, March 21, et seq. same year. The memorable Corn Bill, after passing in the commons, was defeated m the house of loi-ds by a clause, proposed by the duke of Wellington, being carried by a majority of four, Jime 1, 1 827. Tlie act whereby wheat was allowed to be imported on payment of a duty of 1/. 5s. Sd. per quarter, whenever the average price of all England was under 62». ; from 62.'!. to 6'3s. ll. is. Sd.; and so gradually reduced to Is., when the average price was 73s. and upwards, was passed July 15, 1828; this act was designated as the " Sliding-scale." The act 5th Vict. c. 14, passed 29th April, lft42, also called the "Sliding-scale act," regulated the duty on wheat as follows ; with sliding duties, also, on other articles of corn. We preserve this scale as an historical record : N COR 178 COR CORN BILLS, continued. Average per quarter. Shillings. Shillings under 51 51 and under 52 52 and under 55 55 and under 56 56 and under 57 57 and under 58 58 and under 59 Duty. £ «. ■ 1 19 18 17 16 15 14 Averageper quarter. Shillings. Shillings. 59 and under GO 60 and under 61 61 and under 62 62 and under 63 63 and under 64 64 and under 65 65 and under 66 Out!/. 1 1 .* 8. d. 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 Average per quarter. Shillings. Shillings. 66 and under 69 69 and imder 70 70 and under 71 71 and under 72 72 and under 73 73 and upwards. Duty. d. The Corn Importation bill (the great popular measure of sir Robert Peel), granting a free trade in corn, 9 & 10 Vict. c. 22, passed 26th June, 1846. By this act the duty on wheat was reduced to 4s. when imported at or above 53s. until 1st Feb. 1849; after which day the duty became Is. per quarter only, on all kinds of grain imported into the United Kingdom, at any prices. CORN-LAWS. ANTI-CORN-LAW LEAGUE. From metropolitan and provincial anti- com-law associations sprung the league, headed by Mr. Cobden and others. Meetings were held in various places in March and April, 1841. A meeting of a disturbed character was held at Manchester, May 18, same year. A Bazaar held at Manchester, at which the league realised 10,000^. Feb. 2, 1842. About 600 deputies connected with provincial associations assembled in London, and held meetings from Feb. vmtil Aug. 1842. The League, at Manchester, proposed to raise 50,000^. to depute lecturers throughout the country, and to print pamphlets, Oct. 20, same year. Meetings commenced at Drury-lane Theatre, March 15, 1843. Series of Monthly meetings at Covent-garden commenced Sept. 28 ; and great free-trade meeting at Manchester, Nov. 14, same year. Again, Jan. 22, 1845. Bazaar at Covent-garden opened. May 5, 1845. Great Manchester meeting, at which the League proposed to raise a quarter of a million sterling, Dec. 23, same year. The Corn Importation bill having passed, the League was formally dissolved, July 2, 1846; and Mr. Cobden was rewarded by a national subscription, amounting to nearly 80,000Z.* CORNWALL. Originally called Kemou, a term connected with the Latin Cornu, a horn, in allusion to its numerous promontories or projecting points. On the retreat of the ancient Britons, Cornwall was formed into a kingdom, which existed for many years under different princes, among whom were Ambrosius Aurelius, and the celebrated Arthur. It was erected into a dukedom by Edward III. in 1336, and the heir to the crown of England, if a prince, is born duke of Cornwall, but is immediately afterwards created prince of Wales. CORONATION. The first coronation by a bishop was that of Majocianus, at Constan- tinople, in A.D. 457. The ceremony of anointing at coronations was introduced into England in 872, and into Scotland in 1097. The coronation of Henry III. took place, in the first instance, without a crown, at Gloucester, Oct. 28, 1216. A plain circle was used on this occasion in lieu of the crown, which had been lost with the other jewels and baggage of king John, in passing the marshes of Lynn, or the Wash, near Wisbeacli. — Matthew Paris; Rynier. At the coronation of William and Mary, the bishop of London put the crown on the king's head, as Dr. Sancroft, archbishop of Canterbury, would not take the oaths to their majesties. George IV. was crowned July 19, 1821. William IV. crowned, with his queen, Sept. 8, 1831 ; and Victoria, June 28, 1838. CORONATION CHAIR. In the cathedral of Cashel, formerly the metropolis of the kings of Munster, was deposited the Lia Fail, or Fatal Stone, on which they were crowned. In A.D. 513, Fergus, a prince of the royal line, having obtained the Scottish throne, procured the use of this stone for his coronation at DunstafiFnage, where it continued until the time of Kenneth II., who removed it to Scone; and in 1296, it was removed by Edward I. from Scone to Westminstei'. Edward wishing to annex Scotland to his own dominions, dethroned John Baliol, ravaged the country, and seized this stone, among other monuments of Scottish history. CORONATION FEASTS, and OATH. The oath was first administered to the kings of England by Dunstan (the archbishop of Canterbury, afterwards canonised), to Ethelred II. in 979. An oath, nearly corresponding with that now in use, was administered in 1377 : it was altered in 1689. The fetes given at coronations com- menced with Edward I. king in 1272. That at the coronation of George IV. rivalled the extravagancies and sumptuousness of former times. * On the appointment of the Derby ministry, a revival of the anti-corn-law league was proposed at a meeting held at Manchester, March 2, 1852, and a subscription for the purpose was opened, which produced witliin half an hour 27,5202. But subsequently, the reconstruction of the league was deemed to be unnecessary. COR 179 COR CORONEA, BATTLE of. Fought in the first year of the Corinthian war. The Athenians, Thebans, Argives, and Corinthians having entered into a league, offensive and defensive, against Sparta, Agesilaus, after diffusing the terror of liis arms, from his many victories, even into Upper Asia, engaged the alUes at Coronea, a town of Boeotia, and achieved a great victory over them, 394 B.C. — Corn. Nepos. CORONERS. They were officers of the realm in a.d. 925. Coroners for every county in England were first appointed by statute of Westminster, 4 Edw. I. 1276. — Stowe. Coroners were instituted in Scotland in the reign of Malcolm II. about 1004. By an act passed in the 6 & 7 Vict, coroners are enabled to appoint deputies to act for them, but only in case of illness, Aug. 22, 1843. CORONETS. The caps or inferior crowns, of vai'ioiis forms, that distinguish the rank of the nobility. The coronets for earls were first allowed by Henry III. ; for viscounts by Henry VIII. ; and for barons by Charles II. — Bahcr. But authorities conflict- Sir Robert Cecil, earl of Salisbury, was the first of the degree of carl who wore a coronet, 1604. — Beatson. It is uncertain when the coronets of dukes and marquesses were settled. — Idem. CORPORATIONS. They are stated by Livy to have been of very high antiquity among the Romans. They were introduced into other countries from Italy. These political bodies were first planned by Numa, in order to break the force of the two rival factions of Sabinos and Romans, by instituting separate societies of eveiy manual trade and profession. — Plutarch. CORPORATIONS, MUNICIPAL, in ENGLAND. Bodies politic, authorised by the king's charter to have a common seal, one head ofiicer, or more, and members, who are able, by their common consent, to grant or receive, in law, any matter within the compass of their charter. — Cowel. Corporations were formed by charters of rights gi'anted by the kings of England to various towns, first by Edward the Confessor. Henry I. granted charters, a.d. 1100 : and succeeding monarchs gave corporate powers, and extended them to numerous large communities throughout the realm, subject to tests, oaths, and conditions. — Blackstone. The Corporation and Test Act Repeal bill passed 9 Geo. IV. c. 17, May, 1828. The Corporation Reform bill for the regulation of municipal corporations in England and Wales passed 5 & 6 Will. IV. c. 76, Sept. 9, 1835. The Irish Municipal Corporation bill, altering the entire structure of corporations in Ireland, passed 4 Vict. c. 108, Aug. 10, 1810. — Statutes. CORPULENCY. The most extraordinary instances of coi'pulency occur in England, where many persons are loaded with flesh or fat. — Comaro. In Germany .some fat monks have weighed eighteen stone. — Bender. Of modern instances known in this country, was Mr. Bright, a tallow-chandler and gi'ocer, of Maiden, in Essex, who died in the 29th year of his ago. Seven persons of the common size were witli ease enclosed in his waistcoat ; and a stocking, which when sent home to him was found too little, was large enough to hold a child of four years old. Mr. Bright was buried in the ehurcli of All Saints, Maiden, Nov. 12, 1750. Daniel Lambert, supposed to have been the heaviest man that ever lived, died in his 40th year, at Stamford, in Lincolnshire, weighing ten stone more than Mr. Ih-ight, June 21, 1809. CORREQIDOR. An ofificcr of justice in Spain, and in the countries subject to the Spanish government, acting as the chief judicial minister in a town or pi-ovince ; the office existed before the name, which is referred to the fifteenth century. A similar fiuictioiiary heads the police magistracy in Portugal. CORROSIVE SUBLIMATE. A preparation of quicksilver which, when impregnated with acids and sublimed to the top, is called corrosive sublimate, from its deadly eating, and corrodinsx nature. — Ifisl. Physic. A compound, in chemistry, which is 200 of mercury and 72 of chlorine ; this preparation is said to have been known to the Arabians so early as the tenth century. — Ashe. COllSICA. Called by the Greeks Cynios. The ancient inhabitants of this island were savage, and bore the character of robbers, liars, and atheists, accoi-ding to Seneca when he lived among them. It Wiis hold by the Carthaginians ; and was conquered by the Romans, 231 B.C. In modern times, Corsica was dependent upon the republic of Genoa, until 1730 ; and was sold to France in 1733. It was erectecl into a kingdom under Theodore, its first and only king, in 1736. He came to England, wliere ho was imprisoned in the Kin,''s Bencli prison for debt, and for many ye.ars subsisted on the benevolence of private friends. Having been released by an act of insolvency in 1756, he gave in his schedule the kingdom of Corsica as an estate to his creditors, and died N 2 COR 180 COS the same year, at his lodgings in Soho. The earl of Oxfoi'd wrote the following epitaph, ou a tablet near his grave, in St. Anne's church, Deau-street : — " The grave, great teacher ! to a level brings Heroes ami beggars, galley-slaves and kings. But Theodore this moral learn'd ei'e dead ; Fate pour'd its lesson on his living head, Bestow'd a kingdom and denied him bread." The celebrated Pascal Paoli was chosen for their general by the Corsicans, in 1753. He was defeated by the count de Vaux, and fled, to England, 1769. The people acknovpledged Geo. III. of England for their king, June 17, 1794, when Sir Gilbert Elliott was made viceroy, and he opened a parliament in 1795. A revolt was sup- pressed in June, 1796 ; and the island was relinquished by the British, Oct. 22, same year, when the people declared for the French. CORTES OF SPAIN. A deliberative assembly under the old corrstitution of Spain ; several times set aside. The cortes were newly assembled after a long interval of years, Sept. 24, 1810 ; and they settled the new constitution, March 16, 1812. This constitution was set aside by Ferdinand VII. who banished many members of the assembly in May, 1814. The cortes or states-general were opened by Ferdinand VII. 1820, and have since been regularly convened.— See Spain. CORUNNA, BATTLE of. The British army, under the command of Sir John Moore, amounting to about 15,000 men, had just accomplished a safe retreat when they were attacked by the French, whose force exceeded 20,000 : the enemy were completely repulsed, but the loss of the British in the battle was immense. The illustrious and honoured hero in command was struck by a cannon-ball, which carried away his left shoulder and part of the collar-bone, leaving the arm hanging by the flesh ; he died in the arms of victory, universally lamented. In the evening of the day of battle, the remains of the army hastily embarked at Corunna, Jan. 16, 1809. CORYBANTICA, FESTIVALS of. Held at Gnossus, in Crete, in commemoration of the Corybantes, piiests of Cybele : they first inhabited Mount Ida, and from thence passed into Crete, where they are said to have secretly educated Jupiter. — Horace. In the celebration of these festivals they beat their cymbals in the dance, and acted as if delirious, 1546 B.C. — Thucydides. CORYPHEUS. The name given to the principal of those who compose the chorus in the ancient tragedy; and now a general name for a chief or principal of any company. — South. This appellative occurs in describing the choruses taught by Tysias, after- wards named Stesichorus, on account of his having been the first who instructed the chorus to dance to the lyre, 556 B.C. COSMETICS. Preparations for improving beauty were known to the ancients, and some authorities refer them even to mythology, and others to the Grecian stage. The Roman ladies painted ; and those of Italy excelled in heightening their charms arti- ficially, by juices and colours, and by perfumes. Rouge has always been in disrepute among the virtuous and well ordered women of England, though some simple cosmetics are regarded as innocent and are in general use. — Ashe. The females of France and Germany paint more highly than most other nations. — Richardson. A stamp was laid on cosmetics, perfumery, and such medicines as i-eally or supposititiously beautify the skin, or perfume the person, and the venders were obliged to take out licences, 25th Geo. in. 1786. COSMOGRAPHY. The science which teaches the structure, form, disposition, and relation of the parts of the world, or the manner of representing it on a plane. — Selden. It consists of two parts, astronomy and geography : the earliest accounts of the former occur 2234 B.C. — Blair. The first record of the latter is from Homer, who describes the shield of Achilles as representing the earth. — Iliad. See the articles on Astronomy and Geography respectively. COSSACKS. The warlike people inhabiting the confines of Poland, Russia, Tartary, and Turkey. They at first lived by plundering the Turkish galleys and the people of Natolia : they were formed into a regular army by Stephen Batori, in 1576, to defend the frontiers of Russia from the incursions of the Tartars. In the late great war of Europe against France, a vast body of Cossacks formed a portion of the Russian armies, and fought almost invincibly. COSTUME. See Dress. Accounts of magnificent attire refer to very remote antiquity. The costume of the Grecian and Roman ladies was comely and graceful. The women CO'i 181 COU of Cos, whose country was famous for the silkworm, wore a manufacture of cotton and silk of so beautiful and delicate a texture, and their garments, which were always white, were so clear and thin, that their bodies could be seen through them. — Ovid. As relates to costume worn on the stage, JEschylus the Athenian was, it is said, the first who erected a regular stage for his actors, and ordered their dresses to be suited to their characters, about 436 B.C. — Parian Marbles. COTTAGES IN ENGLAND. The English cottage is, perhaps, the happiest dwelling on the earth, and its cleanly hearth and general aspect and economy indicate the social order of its inmates; even though homely it is full of comforts and the abode of con- tentment. — Richardson. The home of the husbandman has considerably improved in England in the last century. — Hall. The term cottage originally applied to a small house without land, 4 Edward I. 1275. "No man may build a cottage, except in towns, unless he lay four acres of land thereto," &c. 31 Eliz. 1589. This statute was repealed, 15 Geo. III. 1774. By returns to the Tax office, in 1786, the number of cottages was 284,459. The number in 1800 was 428,214 ; the number in 1840 was about 770,000. There are no data to show the amount since. COTTON. The method of spinning cotton formerly was by the hand ; but about 1767, Mr. Hargreaves, of Lancashire, invented the spinning-jenny with eight spindles ; he also erected the first carding-machine with cylinders. Sir Richard Arkwright obtained a patent for*a new invention of machinery in 1769 ; and another patent for an engine in 1775. Crompton invented the mule, a further and wonderful improvement in the manufacture of cotton, in 1779; and various other improvements have been since made. The names of Peel and Arkwrighb are eminently conspicuous in connexion with this vast source of British industry ; and it is calculated that more than one thousand millions sterling have been yielded by it to Great Britain. Cotton manu- facturers' utensils were prohibited from being exported in 1774. There have passed of late years many important acts regulating cotton factories, and particularly relating to the employment of children ; among these are the acts of 6 Geo. IV. 1825; 2 Will. IV. 1831 ; 4 Will. IV. Aug. 1833, and 7 Vict. June, 1844. COTTONIAN LIBRARY. Formed by great labour, and with great judgment by sir Robert Cottf)n, a.d. 1600 et scq. This vast treasury of knowledge, after having been with difficulty rescued from the fury of the republicans during the protectorate, was secured to the public by a statute, 13 Will. III. 1701. It was removed to Essex- house in 1712 ; and in 1730 to Deau's-yard, Westminster, where, on Oct. 23, 1731, a })art of tlie books sustained damage by fire. The library was removed to the British Museum in 1753. COUNCILS. An English council is of very early origin. The wise Alfred, to whom we are indebted for many excellent institutions, so arranged the business of the nation, that all resolutions passed through three councils. Tlie first was a select council, to which those only high in the king's confidence were admitted ; here were debated all affairs that were to be laid before the second council, which consisted of bishops and nobles, and resembled the present privy council, and none belonged to it but those whom the king was pleased to appoint. The thii'd was a general council or asseuibly of the nation, called in Saxon, Wittenagemot, to which quality and offices gave a right to sit, independent of the king. In these three councils we behold the origin of the cabinet and privy councils, and the antii|uity of parliaments ; but the term Cabinet Council is of a much more modern date, according to lord Clarendon. See Cabitiet Council, Common Council, Privy Council, &c. COUNCILS OF THE CHURCH. The following are among the most memorable Christian councils, or councils of the Church of Rome. Most other councils (the list of which would make a volume) either respected national churches or ecclesiastical government. Sir Harris Nicolas enumerates 1604 councils. Of the Apostles .at JcTOsalcm . . a.d. 50 Of the western bishops at Aries, in France, to sujiprcss the Don.atlsta ; three fathera of the Knglish church attended . . 314 The fii-st CEcumenicalor General Nicene, held iit Nice, Coustiintino the Great presided ; Arius and Eusel>ius con- demned for heresy. Tliis council com- posed the Nicene creed . . . 325 At Tyre, when tlie doctrine of Athaua- sivis was canvassed 335 The first held at Constantinople, when the Arian lierosy gained ground . 337 At Rome, concerning Ath.auasius, which lasted eighteen months . . a.d. At Sardis ; 370 bishops attended . . Of Rimini; 400 bishops .attended, and Con.stantiue obliged them tosign a new confession of faith .... The second General at Constantinople : 350 bisliops attended, and pope Dama- sius presided The third at Ephesus, when pope Celes- tine presided Fourth at Clialcodon : the emperor Mar- cian and his empi-ess attended 342 347 359 3S1 431 451 cou 182 COU COUNCILS OP THE CHURCH, continued. The fifth at Coustantiuople, when pope Vigilius presided . . . . a.o. 553 The sixth at Constantmople, when pope Agatho presided 6S0 Authority of the six general councils re-established by Theodosius . . 715 The second Nicene council, seventh General : 350 bishops attended . . 7S7 Of Constantinople, eighth General : the emperor Basil attended . . . 869 Of Clermont, in Prance, convened by Urban II. to authorise the crusades; 310 bishops attended . ... 1094 The first Lateran, the ninth General : the right of iuvestitui-es settled by treaty between pope Calixtus II. and the emperor Henry V. ... 1122 The second Lateran, tenth General ; In- nocent II. presided : the preservation of the temporal ties of ecclesiastics, the principal subject, wliich occasion- ed the attendance of 1000 fathers of the church 1139 The third Lateran, eleventh General : held against schismatics . . . 1179 Fourtli Lateran, twelfth General : 400 bishops and 1000 abbots attended : In- nocent III. presided . . . . 1215 Of Lyons, the thirteenth General, under poi)e Innocent IV. . . . A.n. 1245 Of Lyons, the fourteenth General, under Gregory X 1274 Of Vienue in Dauphine, the fifteenth General : Clement V. presided, and the kings of France and Aragon attended. The order of the Knight-Templars suppressed .... Of Pisa, the sixteenth General : Gregory XII. and Benedict XIII. deposed, and Alexander elected Of Constance, the seventeenth General : Martin V. is elected pope ; and John Huss and Jerome of Prague con- demned to be burnt . . . . Of BasU, the eighteenth General . The fifth Lateran, tlie nineteenth Gene- ral : begun by Julius II. ... Continued under Leo X. for the suppres- sion of the Pragmatic sanction of France, against the council of Pisa, &c. till Of Trent, the twentieth and Iq^t General council, styled ODcumenical, as regard- ing the aflairs of all the Christian world : it was held to condemn the doctrines of the reformers, Luther, Zuinglius, and Calvin. — AbU Lenglet . 1545 . 1311 1409 1-114 1431 1512 1517 COUNCILS, FRENCH REPUBLICAN. The council of Ancients was an assembly of revolutionary France, consisting of 250 members, instituted at Paris, Nov. 1, 1795, together with the council of Five Hundred : the executive was a Directory of five. Bonaparte dispersed the council of Five Hundred at St. Cloud, Nov. 9, 1799, declaring himself, Roger Ducos, and Si^yes, consuls provisoires. See France. COUNSEL. See Barristers. Counsel are supposed to be coeval with the curia regis. Advocates are referred to the time of Edward I. but earlier mention is made of them. Counsel were certainly employed in the previous reigu. Counsel who were guilty of deceit or collusion were punishable by the statute of Westminster, 13 Edw. L 1284. Counsel were allowed to persons charged with treason, by act 8 Will. III. 1696. Act to enable pei'sons indicted for felony to make their defence by counsel, 6 & 7 Will. IV. c. 114, passed Aug. 1836. COUNTIES. The division of this kingdom into counties began, it is "said, with king Alfred ; but some counties bore their present names a century before. The division of Ireland into counties took place in 1562. County courts were instituted in the reign of Alfred, 896. Counties first sent members to parliament, before which period knights met in their own counties, 1285. See Commons, and Parliament. COUNTY DEBT-COURTS.* These are courts first instituted for the recovery of debts under 201., superseding courts of requests. The counties of England and Wales are divided into sixty districts, each district having a county court, and a bai-rister as judge, and juries sworn when necessary. Established under act 9 & 10 Vict, c, 95, Aug. 1846. These courts having been found to work well, their jurisdiction was extended by 13 & 14 Vict. c. 61, Aug. 1850, to sums not exceeding 50Z. and their proceedings facilitated by 15 & 16 Vict. c. 54, June 30, 1852, and 17 & 18 Vict. c. 16, June 2, 1854. In 1850, the number of plaints entered at the courts of the sixty circuits, was 306,793, for 1,265,115^. ; the number of causes tried was 217,173, and of these 4297 were for sums between 20^. and 501. — Official Returns. COURIERS, OR Posts. Xenophon attributes the first couriers to Cyrus; and Herodotus says that they were common among the Persians. But it does not appear that the Greeks or Romans had regular couriers till the time of Augustus, when they travelled in cars, about 24 B.C. Couriers or posts are said to have been instituted in France by Charlemagne, about a.d. 800. The couriers or posts for letters were established in the early part of the reign of Louis XI. of France, owing to this monarch's extraordinary eagerness for news. They were the first institution of the kind in Europe, a.d. 1463. — Uenault. J^°Y'^''y,'°°urts, or schyremotes, are of such remote antiquity that their origin is lost. In the time ot the .Saxons tliey were the most important tribunals in this country. Alfred divided England into counties, and counties into liuudreds ; but the county courts, the creation of which is generally attributed to him, would seem to liave existed at a period long anterior to his reign, and to have been an essential part of the Saxon judicial system. COU 183 GOV COURT PARTY— COUNTRY PARTY. The latter was usually directly opposed iu eentimeut and opiuions to the former, aud was a class of politicians of very fluctuating numbers, aud varyiug power, iu the parliaments of England. The countiy party took its rise as early as 1620, and became cousiderable during the disputes of the king and commons. At the end of the 17th century, they embodied the high toryism and high church principles of the day, with a strenuous maintenance of the assumed rights of " the land," as opposed to the innovations of Whiggism and the corruptions of the trading or moneyed interests. These afterwards, our first Hanoverian kings, George I. and 11. were supposed to favour too much. The most distinguished states- man of the Country Party was sir Thomas Hanmer (the Montalto of Pope's Satires), who died in 1746. — Aslie. COURTS. Courts of justice were instituted at Athens, 1507 B.C. See Areopagita. There were courts for the distribution of justice in Athens, iu 1272 B.C. —Blair. They existed under various denominations in Rome, and other countries. For courts of justice in these realms, see Cliancery, Common Pleas, Exchequer, King's Bench, &c. The citizens of London were privileged to plead their own cause in the courts of judicature, without employing lawyers, except in pleas of the crown, 41 Hen. III. 12.57. — Stowe's Chron. The courts of law of England and Ireland were separated by a British act of parliament, in Aj)ril, 1783. COURT BARON. An ancient court which every lord of a manor may hold by prescrip- tion, and which he may keep in some part of the manor. The court baron is supposed to have originated with the distinction of uobilitj'. In this court, duties, heriots, and customs are received, and estates and surrenders are passed. COURT OF HONOUR. In England, the court of chivalry, of which the lord high chancellor was a judge, was called Curia Militaris, in the time of Henry IV. and sub- eequeutly the Court of Honour. In the States of Bavaria, in order to prevent duelling, a court of honour was instituted in April, 1819. In these countries, Mr. Joseph Hamilton for many years ai'dently laboured to establish similar institutions. COURT LEET. A court of record, belonging to a hundred, instituted for punishing encroachments, nuisances, and fraudulent weights and measui'cs, and also offeuces against the crown. The stewai'd is the judge, and all persons residing within the hundred (peers, clergymen, &c. excepted), are obliged to do suit within this court. COURT OF REQUESTS. This court, which is also called a Court of Conscience, was first instituted in the reign of Henry VII. 1493, aud was remodelled by a statute of Henry VIII. in 1517. — Stowe. Established for the summary recoveiy of small debts under forty shillings, but in the city of London, the jurisdiction extends to debts of five pounds. — Ashe. There were courts of requests in tlie principal corporate towns throughout the kingdom, until 1847, when they were suijerseded (those of the city of London only excepted) by the County Debt-Courts, wliose jurisdiction, extending at first to 20Z. was enlarged in 1850 to 50Z. See County Courts. COVENANTERS. The name which was particularly applied to those persons who in the reign of Charles I. took the solemn league and covenant, thereby mutually engaging to stand by each other in opposition to the projects of the king ; it was entered into in 1638. The covenant or league between I'lugland and Scotland was formed iu 1643 ; and was declared to be illegal by parliament, 14 Chas. II., 1662. COVENT GARDEN. So called from having been formerly the garden of St. Peter's convent. The square was built about 1 633, and its noble piazza on the north side was designed by Inigo Jones. The shops, stalls, and stores of the fruit and vegetable markets were rebuilt in 1829-30 from the designs of Mr. Fowler. They occujiy about three acres of ground, belonging to the duke of Bedford. COVENT GARDEN THE.\TRE. This theatre sprung out of the celebrated one in Liucoln's-iun-fields, and is indebted for its origin to a patent granted 14 Chas. II. 1662, to sir William Davenant, whose company was denominated the duke's servants as a compliment to the duke of York, afterwards James II. The theatre which pre- ceded the present, was fii-st opened by the celebrated Rich, about 1732, but after undergoing several alterations, w;is destroyed by fire, Sept. 20, 180iS. The new theatre was erected during tlie ensuing year, the first stone having been laid by the duke of Sussex, Dec. 31, 1808, and it opened Sept. 18, 1809, with Macbeth. Tiie memorable O.P. riot, on account of the increased prices of admission, commenced on the first night, and did not terminate until Dec. 10 following. The Covent Garden Theatrical Fund was instituted in 1765. This theatre was opened as an Italian opera-house April 6, 1847. See Drama, Tlieatrcs, &c. COV 184 CRA COVENTRY. Leofric, earl of Mercia, was the lord of Coventry, about A.D. 1040, who is said to have relieved it from heavy taxes, at the intercession of his wife Godiva, on condition of her riding naked through the streets, about 1057. A parliament was held here in the reign of Henry IV. called parliamentum indoctuin, or the unlearned parliament, because lawyers were excluded ; and in the reign of Henry VI. another senatorial congress took place at Coventry, which was afterwards called parliamentum diabolicum, from the acts of attainder passed against the duke of York and others. The town was well built, and was surrounded with strong walls, three miles in cir- cumference, and twenty-six towers, which were demolished by order of king Charles II. in 1662. COVENTRY ACT. Sir John Coventry, K.B. and a member of parliament, was attacked, wounded, and maimed in the streets of London, and his nose slit, by sir Thomas Sandys and others, his adherents, on Christmas-day, Dec. 25, 1670. This outi-age caused a bill, named the Coventry act, to be passed on March 6 following, to prevent malicious maiming and wounding, 22 Charles II. 1671. — Salmon. COVENTRY, BISHOPRIC of. Founded by Oswy, king of Mercia, a.d. 656. This see had the double name of Coventry and Lichfield, which was reversed by the later bishops. It was so extremely wealthy, that king Ofia, by the favour of pope Adrian, made it archiepiscopal ; but this title was laid aside on the death of that king. In 1075 the see was removed to Chester ; in 1102, to Coventry ; and afterwards to its original foundation, Lichfield, but with great opposition from the monks of Coventry. The dispute was finally settled in a manner nearly similar to that mentioned between Bath and Wells, and afterwards the see was called that of Lichfield and Coventry. But Coventry has lately altogether merged into the bishopric of Lichfield. See Lichfield. Coventry has given three saints to the Church of Rome. — Beatson. COW-POCK INOCULATION. See Inoculation, Sm.all Pox, Vaccination. CRACOW. The Poles elected Cracus for their duke, and he built Cracow with the spoils taken from the Franks, a.d. 700 et seq. Cracow taken by Charles XII. in 1702. Taken and retaken several times by the Russians and confederates on the one side, and the patriotic people on the other. The sovereign was crowned at Cracow until 1764. Kosciusko expelled the Russians from the city, March 24, 1794; but it surrendered to the Prussians, June 15 same year. Cracow was formed into a republic in 1815. Occupied by 10,000 Russians, who followed here the defeated Poles, Sept. 1831. Its independence extinguished ; seized by the emperor of Austria, and incorporated (as before 1809) with the Austrian empire, Nov. 16, 1846.* A dreadful fire laid the greater part of the city in ashes, July 18, 1850. CRANES. They are of very early date, for the engines of Archimedes may be so called. The crane is used for lifting goods out of or into a ship, or a warehouse, when the latter is above the level of the gi'ound. To Archimedes also belong the theory of the inclined plane, and the invention of the pulley, &c. 220 B.C.— Zivy. CRANIOLOGY. The science of animal propensities. Dr. Gall, a German, started this new doctrine respecting the brain, in 1803. Dr. Spurzheim followed; and (visiting Paris in 1805, and afterwards lecturing in EngLiud, Scotland, and Ireland,) gave, by his expositions, a consistency to the science, which seems to be rapidly gaining ground. It has now many professors, and in almost all countries craniology is countenanced by learned and enlightened men. The science assigns the particular locations of certain organs, or as many different seats of the most prominent oi^erations of the mind. See Pkrenolof/y. CRANMER, LATIMER, and RIDLEY. Illustrious names in the list of English martyrs of the reformed religion. Ridley, bishop of London, and Latimer, bishop of Worcester, were burnt at Oxford, Oct. 16, 1555 ; and Cranmer, archbishop of Canter- bury, March 21, 1556. His love of life had induced Cranmer, some time previously, in an unguarded moment, to sign a paper wherein he condemned the Reformation; and when he was led to the stake, and the fire was kindled round him, he stretched forth his right hand, with which he had signed his recantation, that it might be consumed before the rest of his body, exclaiming from time to time, " This unworthy hand ! " Raising his eyes to heaven, he expired with the dying prayer of the first martyr of the Christian Church, " Lord Jesus, receive my spirit ! " — See Martyrs. * This annexation was subsequently protested against bj' England, France, Sweden, and Turkey ; ■ and soon afterwards the kingdom of Poland was incorporated with the liussian enijiirc, and made henceforth a Russian province. CRA 185 CRE CRANON, BATTLES of. The Macedonians under Antipater and Craterus were victorious over the confederated Greeks, whom they defeated twice by sea, and once by land, near Cranou. The Athenians demanded peace, and Antipater, the conqueror, put their orators to death. Among them was Hyperides, who, tliat he might not betray the secrets of his country when under torture, cut out his tongue, 322 B.C. — Dufresnoy. CRAPE. A light kind of stuff like gauze, made of I'aw silk gummed and twisted on the mill. Its manufacture is of very early date, and it is said some crape was made by St. Badour, when queen of France, about a.d. 680. It was first made at Bologna, and in modern times has been principally used for mourning. CRAVANT. John Stuart, Earl of Buchan, with a French army, was besieging this place in 1423, wheu it was relieved by the earl of Salisbury with an army of English and Burgundiaus after a severe contest ; the French were totally defeated. CRAYONS. Substances of all colours, made into paste, and dried into pencils, to draw upon paper. — Pardon. They were known in France before a.d. 1422; and were improved by L'Oriot, 1748. CREATION OF THE WORLD. It is placed by Usher, Blair, and Dufresnoy, 4004 B.C. Josephus makes it 4658 years. — Wkiston. The first date agrees with the common Hebrew Text, and the vulgate Latin translation of the Old Testament. There are about 140 difffrent dates assigned to the Ci'eation ; some place it 3016 years before the birth of our Saviour. Plato, in his dialogue entitled Critias, asserts his celebrated Atalcmtis to have been buried in the ocean about 9000 years before the ago in which he wrote. The Chinese represent the world as having existed some hvmdreds of thousands of years ; and we are told that the astronomical records of the ancient Chaldeans carried back the origin of society to a period of no less than 473,000 years. CREATION, ERA of the. In use by many nations. This era would be found con- venient, by doing away with the difhculty and ambiguity of countiug before and after any particular date, as is necessary when the era begins at a later period ; but, unfor- tunately, writers are not agreed as to the right time of commencing. The epoch is fixed by the Samaritan Pentateuch at 4700 B.C. The Septuagint makes it 5872. The authors of the Talmud make it 5344 ; and different chronologers, to the number of 120, make it vary from tlie Septuagint date to 3268. Dr. Hales fixes it at 5411 ; but the Roman Catholic Church adopted the even number of 4000, and subsequently, a correction as to the birth of Christ adds four years : therefore, it is now generally considered as 4004 years, which agrees with the modern Hebrew text. CREED. The Apostles' Creed is supposed to have been wi-itten a great while after their time. — Pardon. It was introduced formally into public vvorsliip in the Greek Cluu-ch at Antioch, and subsequently into the Roman Church. Tiiis creed was translated into the Saxon tongue, about a.d. 746. The Nicene Creed takes its name from the council by whom it was composed, in a.d. 325. The Athauasian Creed is supposed to have been written about 340. See Apostles, Nicene, and other creeds. CRESSY, OR CRECY, BATTLE of. Edward III. and his son, tlie renowned E-hvard the Black Prince, obtain a great and memorable victory over Philip, king of France, Aug. 26, 1346. This was one of the most glorious triumphs ever achieved by English arms. John, duke of Bohemia; James, king of Majorca; Ralph, duke of Lorraine (sovereign princes) ; a number of French nobles, togetlier with 30,000 private men, were slain, while the loss of the English was very small. The crest of the king of Boheuiia, ttiree ostrich feathers, with the motto " leh Dicn," in Engli.sh, '' I serve," lias, in memory of this victory, since been adopted by the heirs to the crown of Eugland. — Froijssarl, Carte, Hume. CRESTS. The ancient warriors wore crests to strike terror into their enemies by the sight of the spoils of tlie animals they had killed. The origin of crests is ascribed to tlie Curians. In English heraldry are several representations of Richard I. 1189, with a crest on the helmet rescmbiiug a plume of fcatliers ; and after his reign most of the English kings have crowns above their helmets ; that of Richard II. 1377, was surmounted by a Uon on a cap of dignity. In later reigns the crest was regularly borne as well on the helmets of the kings, aa on tiie head-trappings of their horses. See Cress;/. Alexander III. of Scotland, 1249, had a plume of feathers, by way of crest; and the helmet of Robert I. was surmounted by a crown. 1306; and that of James I. by a lion, 1424. From this period crests a)ipear to have been very generally borne both in England and Scotland. In tlie fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the CRE 186 CRI palmy days of heraldry, the crest was described to be, as it still is, a figure placed upon a wreath, coronet, or cap of maintenance. — Gwillim. CRETE. Now Candia, which see. This island was once famous for its hundred cities, and for the laws which the wisdom of Minos established about 1015 B.C. Some authors reckoned the Labj^riiith of Crete as one of the seven wonders of the world. Ci'ete became subject to the Roman empire, 68 B.C. It was conquered by the Sara- cens, A.D. 808 ; taken by the Greeks, 961 ; passed into the hands of the Venetians, 1194 ; and was taken fi-om them by the Turks in 1669. — Priestley. CRIME. " At the ^jresent moment," observes a popular periodical writer, " a one- fifteenth part of the whole population of the United Kingdom is subsisting by the lowest and most degrading prostitution ; another fifteenth have no means of support but by robbery, swindling, pickpocketing, and every species of crime; and five- fifteenths of the people are what is denominated poor, living from hand to mouth, and daily sinking into beggary, and as an almost nece.ssary consequence, into crime." A comparative view of foreign countries with Great Britain demonstrates the efiects of poverty and ignorance on the great mass of the population. In North America pauperism is almost unknown, and one-fourth of the people are educated ; pre- meditated murder is alone capital ; imprisonment for debt has, in several states, been abolished, and crimes, particularly of enormity, are exceedingly i-are. The Dutch, who possess a competency, and are generally educated, are comparatively free from grave offences ; and France affords a i-emarkable illustration in the same way. But in the United Kingdom, the difi"erence is painfully exemplified : — Instruction of the people Criminals among the jieople Scotland. 1 in 11 1 in 5093 England. 1 in 20 . 1 iu 920 . Ireland. 1 in 35 1 in 468 We have recently had a salutary revision of our criminal code, and several acts have been passed calculated to reduce the amoimt of crime, and mitigate the severity of its punishment, but crime still continues to be of fearful amount ; — NUMBER OF PERSONS COMMITTED JFOR TRIAL IN THE UNITED KINGDOM, IN THE TEAR 1850. ENGLAND AND WALES. Offences against the person . Offencesagst. property with violence Ditto without violence . Malicious offences against property Korgery & offences ags t. the currency Other offences Total IRELAND. Offences against the person . Offences agst. property with violence Ditto without violence . Malicious offences against property Forgery & offencesagst. the currency Other offences Total SCOTLAND. Offences against the person . Offences ag.st. property with violence Ditto without violence . Malicious offences against property Forgery & offencesagst. thecm-rency Other offences ..... Total Offences. CoNTICIIOKS. Acquitted and dis- charged. Exe- cuted. Death. Trans- portatiou for various periods. Imprison- ment and all lighter punish- ments. Insane. 1,880 2,014 21,253 236 680 744 33 15 1 131 719 1,502 62 82 22 1,105 824 15,025 25 501 430 19 17 1 1 598 456 4,649 147 97 291 6 26,813 49 2,578 17,910 38 6,238 6 4,202 2,224 16,737 462 250 7,451 15 2 55 .391 1,255 133 19 96 1,.540 066 10,001 95 105 2,735 9 3 2 1 2, .083 1,107 5,478 230 126 4,619 8 31,326 17 1,949 15,042 15 14,203 8 1,192 676 2,150 49 170 231 3 33 104 340 1 24 3 845 307 1,320 31 102 160 8 5 8 2 1 303 170 482 17 42 67 O 4,468 3 595 2,765 24 1,081 2 An act for improving the criminal law of England, passed 8 Geo. IV. 1827. An act for consolidating and revising the laws relating to crime, conformably with Mr. Peel's digest, passed 9 Geo. IV. 1828. Hanging criminals in chains was abolished by statute cm 187 CRO 4 Will. IV. 1834. Various statutes have since passed or been amended in relation to the crimiual laws of the United KJngdom. CRIMEA, OR CRIM TARTARY, a peninsula in the Euxino or Black Sea, the ancient Taurica Chersonesus. Colonised by the Greeks about B.C. 550. The Milesians founded the kingdom of Bosporos, now Kertch, which eventually formed part of the domi- nions of Mithridates king of Pontus, whose descendants continued to rule the country under Roman protection till the irruption of the Goths, Huns, &c. About a.d. 1237, it fell into the hands of the Mongols under Genghis Khan ; soon after the Venetians established commercial stations, with a lucrative trade ; but wore supplanted by the Genoese, who were permitted to rebuild and fortify Kaffa. In 1475 Mahomet II. expelled the Genoese, and subjected the peninsula to the Ottoman yoke ; permitting the government to remain in the hands of the native Khans, but closing the Black Sea to Western Europe. In 1774, by the intervention of the empress Catherine II. the Crimea recovered its independence : but on the abdication of the Khan in 1783, the Russians, with a large army, took possession of the country, which was secured to them, after a war with Turkey, by a treaty of peace in 1791. The Crimea, now Taurida, was divided into eight governments, in 1802. War having been declared by England and France against Russia, March 28, 1854, large masses of troops were sent to the East, which, after remaining some time at Gallipoli, &c. sailed for Varna, •where they disembarked May 29th. The expedition against the Crimea having been determined on, the allied British, French, and Turkish forces, amounting to 58,000 men (25,000 British), commanded by Lord Raglan and Marshal St. Arnaud, sailed from Varna, Sept. 3, and landed on the 14th, 15th, and 16th, without opposition, at Old Fort, near Eupatoria, about 30 miles from Sebastopol. On the 20th they attacked the Russians, between 40,000 and 50,000 strong, (under Prince Menschikoff,) entrenched on the heights of Alma, supposed to be unassailable. After a sharp contest the Russians were totally routed. See Alma and Russo-Turkish War. CRIMl'ING-HOUSES. These were houses in London and other towns, used for the pui'pose of entrapping persons into the army; and hence the name of "crimp Serjeant." In a riot in Loudon, some of these receptacles were destroyed by the populace, in consequence of the death of a young man who had been enticed into one of them, and who was killed in his endeavours to escape from it, Sept. 10, 1794. They were again attacked in London by large mobs the next year; but they were saved by the military. CRIPPLEGATE, ^.ONDON. This well-known locality was so called, from the lame beggars who sat there, so early as the year 1010. The gate was new-built by the bi'ewers of London, in 1244 ; and was pulled down and sold for uiuety-oue pounds, in July, 1700. See article London Gates. CRISPIN. Crispin and Crispianus were two legendary saints, born at Rome, from whence, it is said, they travelled to Soissons, in France, about a.d. 303, to propagate the Christian religiou ; and because they would not be chargeable to others for their maintenance, they exercised the trade of shoemakers ; but the governor of the town discovering them to be Christians, ordered them to be beheaded. On this account, the shoemakers, since that period, have made choice of them for their tutelar sainta. CRITICS. The first society of them was formed 276 B.C. — Blair. Of this class were Varro, Cicero, ApoUonius, and many distinguished men. In modern times, the Journal des S<^avans was the earliest work of the system of periodical criticism, as it is now known. It was originated by Denis de Sallo, ecclesiastical counsellor in the parliament of France, and was first published at Paris, May 30, 1665, aud continued for nearly a century. The first work of this kind, in I^ngland, was called tlie Rcriew of Daniel Defoe (the term being invented by himself) published iu Feb. 17t)3. The Wales of Literature WA^ commenced in 1714, and was discontinued in 1722. Tlie Monthly Review, which may bo said to have been the third work of this nature in this country, was published in 1749. The Critical Review appeared in 1756; the Ldinbimjh Revieiv, in 1802; and Quarterli/, in 1809. The legality of fair criticism was estabhshed iu the English courts, in Feb. 1794, when an action, that excited great attention, brought by an author against a reviewer for a severe critique upon his work, was determined in favour of the defendant, on the principle that criticism, however sharp, if just, and not malicious, is allowable. — See Reviews. CROCKERY-WARE. In use, and made mention of, as produced by the Egyptians and Greeks, so early as 1390 B.C. The Romans excelled ia this kind of ware, many of their domestic articles being of earthen manufacture. Ci-ockery, of a fine kind, in CRO 188 CRO various household utensils, was made at Faenza, in Italy, about a.d. 1310 ; and it is still called fayencc in French. See Earthenware. CROPREDY-BRIDGE, BATTLE of. Fought in the civil war between the forces of Charles and those of the parliament, June 6, 1644. We believe that this engagement led to no decisive success on either side ; for we find the victory claimed by some accounts for the royal army, and by others for the parliamentarians. CROSIER. A staff surmounted by a cross, borne before an archbishop. The pastoral staff, or bishop's staff, with which it is often confounded, was in the form of a shepherd's crook, intended to admonish the prelate to be a true .spiritual shepherd. The custom of bearing a pastoral staff or crosier before ecclesiastical dignitaries is very ancient, as appears from the life of St. Cscsarea of Aries, who lived about a.d. 500. A religious order is so called, because they carry a staff with a cross at the end. — Pardon. CROSS. That on which the Redeemer suffered on Mount Calvary, was said to have been found at Jerusalem, deep in the ground, by St. Helena, May 3, a.d. 328. Three crosses were found; and certain writers affirm that that of Our Saviour was distinguished ft'om those of the thieves by a sick woman being immediately cured upon touching it. It was carried away by Chosroes, king of Persia, on the plundering of Jeru- salem; but was recovered by the emperor Heraclius (who defeated him in battle), Sept. 14, 615, and that day has been since commemorated as a festival. It is asserted by Church writers that a shining cross, two miles in length, was seen in the heavens by Constantine, and that it led him to adopt it on his standards, with the inscription, "In hoc signo vinces ;" "In this sign thou sbalt conquer." With these standards he advanced under the walls of Rome, where he vanquished Maxentius, driving his army into the Tiber, Oct. 27, 312.— Lenglet. CROSS, SIGN OF THE, &c. First practised by the Christians, thereby to distinguish themselves from the Pagans, about a.d. 110. The Exaltation of the Holy Cross {Exaltatio Crucis), a feast held on the 14th Sept. was instituted on the restoration of the cross to Mount Calvary, in 642. Maids of the Cross were a community of young women who made vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, instituted in 1265. The Order of the Cross was instituted by the empress Eleonora de Gonzagna, queen of Leopold I. being an order of the higher rank, founded in 1668. CROSSES. Painted crosses in churches and chambers were introduced about the year 431. Crosses were first set up on steeples in 568. They were erfected in England in honour of queen Eleanor, in the places where her hearse rested : she died in 1296, and these monuments were set up between that date and 1307. Crosses and idolatrous pictures were removed from churches, and crosses in the streets demolished, by order of parliament, 17 Charles I. 1641. CROW, The. The well-known ravenous bird, the carrion crow, was anciently thought to be a bird of bad omen. " Its croaking forebodes rain." Virgil. An act^was passed for the destruction of crows in England (which breeds more of them, it is said, than any other country iu Europe), 24 Hen. VIII. 1532. Crows were anciently employed as letter-bearers, as carrier pigeons are now. CROWN. "The ancientest mention of a royal crown is in the holy story of the Amalekites bringing Saul's crown to David." — Selden. The first Roman who wore a crown was Tarquin, 616 B.C. The crown was first a fillet tied round the head ; after- wards it was formed of leaves and flowers, and also of stuffs adorned with jewels. The royal crown was first worn in England by Alfred, in a.d. 872. The first crown or papal cap was used by pope Damasius II. in 1053 ; John XIX. first encompassed it with a crown, 1276 ; Boniface VIII. added a second crown in 1295; and Benedict XII. formed the tiara, or triple crown, about 1334. The pope previously wore a crown with two circles. — Rainaldi. CROWN OF ENGLAND. That of Alfred had two little bells attached ; it is said to have been long preserved at Westminster, and may have been that described in the parliamentary inventory taken in 1649. The crown worn by Athelstan resembled a modern earl's coronet, 929. William I. wore his crown on a cap, adorned with points, 1066. Richard III. introduced the crosses, 1483. Henry VII. introduced the arches, 1485. The crown of Charles II. made in 1660, is the oldest existing in our day. The crown and other royal valuables were stolen from the Tower by Blood, m 1673. See Blood's Coiispiraci/. The crown and regalia of England were pledged CRO 189 CRY to the city of London by Richard II. for 2000/. in 1386. " See the king's receipt on redeeming them." — llijmcr. CROWNS AND HALF-CROWNS. These were coined in England very near to the present standard in the last year of Edward VI. by whom the coinage (which had been very much alloyed and debased by Henry VUI.) was in some degree restored and purified, 1553. Crowns and half-crowns have, since that time, been coined in almost every reign. — Fleetwood' a Citron. Pretlos. CRUCIFIXION. A mode of execution common among the Syrians, Egyptians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, and Jews, and esteemed the most dreadful on account of the shame attached to it : it was usually accompanied by other tortures. Among earlj^ accounts may be mentioned, that Ariarathes of Cappadocia, when vanij^uished by Perdiccas, was discovered among the prisoners ; and by the conqueror's orders, the unhappy monarch was flayed alive, and then nailed to a cross, with his princi[>al officers, in the eighty-first year of his age, 322 B.C. Crucifixion was ordered to be discontinued by Coustantine, a.d. 330. — Lenglet. See Death, Punishment of. CRUELTY TO ANIMALS. See Animals. CRUELTY TO ANIMALS, SOCIETY for the PREVENTION op. "Every beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle upon a thousand hills." — Psalm 1. 10. This society, which has lately received the distinction of Royal, is held at Exeter-hall, and was instituted iu 1824. Through its most praiseworthy exertions several hundreds of cases of cruelty are annually prosecuted to conviction. — RejJort of the Society. CRUSADES OR HOLY WARS. (In French Croisades.) Undertaken by the Christian powers to drive the infidels from Jerusalem, and the adjacent countries, called the Holy Land.* They were projected by Peter Gautier, called Peter the Hermit, an enthusiast, and French officer of Amiens, who had quitted the military profession and turned pilgrim. Having travelled to the Holy Land, he deplored, on his return, to pope Urban II. that infidels should be in possession of the famous city where the author of Christianity first promulgated his sacred doctrines. Urban convened a Council of 310 bishops at Clermont iu France, at which the ambassadors of the chief Christian jiotentates assisted, and gave Peter the fatal comuiissit)n to excite all Europe to a general war, a.d. 1094. The first crusade was published ; an army of 300,000 men was raised, and Peter had the direction of it, and Geoffrey de Bouillon the command, 1095. — Voltaire. The holy warriors wore a red cross upon the right shoulders, with the name of Croisds, Crossed, or Crusaders ; their motto was Volont6 de Dieu, " God's will." The epidemical rage for crusading now agitated Europe, and, in the end, these unchristian wars against the rights of mankind cost the lives of 2,000,000 of men. — Voltaire. The second crusade was excited by the preaching of St. Bernard, 1147. The third (which Richard I. of England joined) was in 1191. CRYOPHORUS, The. This is an instrument wherewith is demonstrated the relation between evapoi'ation at low temperatures and the production of cold. It was invented and so named by Dr. Wollaston, about the year 1778. The invention of the Cryophorus has led to much scientific research. See article Cold. CRYSTAL PALACE, Hyde Park, London, built for the great Exhibition of 1851. Its length was 1851 feet, corresponding with the year ; the width 408 feet, with an additional projection on the north side, 93(3 feet long by 48 wide. The central portion was 120 foet wide and 64 feet high, and the great avenues ran east and west through the building, with, near the centre, a transept, 72 feet wide and 108 feet high. The entire area was 772,784 square feet, or about nineteen acres. Four galleries ran lengthways, and others round the transept. The ground-floor and galleries coutaiued 1,000,000 square feet of flooring ; there were altogether 4000 tons » The crusaders took Jerusalem by assault, July 15, 1099, after a siege of five weeks. Impelled by rago, tlioy put the immerous fjarrisou and inhabitants to the sword without distinction. Neither arms dct'onded the valiant nor submission the timid ; no ago or sex was spared ; infants on tlic breast were pierced by the same blow witli their mothers, who implored for mercy; even a multitude to the uunil)cr of 10,0(1:1, wlio liad surrendered themselves {irisouers, and were promised quarter, were butchered iu cold blood by these ferocious conquerors. The streets of Jerusalem were covered with dead bodies ; and the triumphant warriors, after every enemy was subdued and slaughtered, imme- diately turned themselves with sentiments of humiliation towards the holy sepulchre ! They threw away their arms still streamuig with blood : tliey .advanced with reclined bodies, and naked feet and hands, to that sacred monument ; they sung anthems to their Saviour, wlio had there purchased their siilvatiou by his death and agony ; and their devotion so overcame their fury, that they dissolved in tears, and bore the appearance of evei-y soft and tender sentiment. So inconsistent is human nature with itself! and so easily does superstition ally, both with the most heroic courage and with the fiercest barbarity ! — Abbi! Vcrtot ; Hume. CRY 190 cm of iron in the stinicture, and seventeen acres of glass in the roof, besides about 1500 vertical glazed sashes. The palace, with the exception of the flooring and joists, waa entirely of glass and iron. It was designed by Mr. Paxton, and the contractors were Messrs. Fox & Henderson, with whom it was agreed to pay them 79,800?., or 150,000?. if the building were permanently retained. The iirst column was fixed Sept. 26, 1850 ; the exhibition was opened May 1, 1851 ; and was closed to the public, Oct. 11, same year. See Exhibition of 1851. CRYSTAL PALACE, .Sydenham. The building described in the preceding article having been surrendered to Messrs. Fox & Henderson on Dec. 1, 1851, the materials were sold for 7O,O00Z. to a company (formed by Mr. Leech), who (soon after) com- menced erecting the Crystal Palace, with vast alterations and improvements, on its present site, near Sydenham in Kent, (300 acres having been purchased for the purpose,) under the direction of Sir Joseph Paxton, Messrs. Owen Jones, Digby Wyatt, and other gentlemen engaged in the erection of the preceding structure. The proposed capital of 500,000?. (in 100,000 shares of 5?. each) was increased in Jan. 1853 to a million pounds. During the progress of the works as many as 6400 men were engaged at one time. By the falling of scaffolding, Aug. 15, 1853, twelve men were unfor- tunately killed. On Dec. 31, 1853, a dinner was given to Professor Owen and a party of savans, in the interior of the model of the Iguanodon constructed by Mr. Water- house Hawkins. — The first column was raised by S. Laing, Esq. M.P. Aug. 5, 1852. In addition to the permanent exhibition, there are extensive promenades, gardens, with magnificent fountains, &c. combining illustrations of Zoology, Geology, Botany, Ethnology, &c. The Crystal Palace was opened by the Queen, June 10, 1854. At the half-yearly meeting, July 20, 1854, Mr. Laing stated that 300,000?. would be required to comj)lete the works in contemplation. On Oct. 28, 1854, a grand musical fete took place on behalf of the Patriotic Fund ; and on April 20, 1855, the palace was visited by the Emperor and Empress of the French, &c. CUBA. Discovered by Columbus on his first voyage, in 1492. It was conquered by Velasquez, in 1511, and settled by the Spaniards. The Buccaneer Morgan took the Havannah in 1669. See Buccaneers. The fort here was erected by Admiral Vernon, in 1741. The Havannah was taken by admiral Pococke and lord Albemarle, in 1762, but was restored at the peace in 1763. A marauding expedition undertaken by general Lopez and a large body of Americans with the view of wresting this island from the dominion of Spain, landed at Cuba, May 17, 1850; but it ended in defeat and disaster. The president of the United States had previously (Aug. 11, 1849) published a strong proclamation denouncing the object of the invaders. Cuba was again invaded by general Lopez and his followers, Aug. 13, 1851, despite a second proclamation of the American president. They were defeated and taken, and, in the end, fifty of the latter were shot, and their leader, Lopez, was garrotted at Havannah, Sept. 1, following. See Lone Star. On May 31, 1854, the president of the United States again issued a proclamation against an intended expedition against Cuba. CUBIT. This was a measure of the ancients, and is the first measure we read of; the ark of Noah was made and measured by cubits. — Holden. The Hebrew sacred cubit was two English feet, and the great cubit eleven English feet. Originally it was the distance from the elbow, bending inwards, to the extremity of the middle finger. — Cdlniet. CUCUMBERS. They grew formerly in great abundance in Palestine and Egypt, where, it is said, they constituted the greater part of the food of the poor and slaves. This plant is noticed by Virgil and other ancient poets. It was brought to England from the Netherlands, about 1538. English culture has much improved the cucumber, of which the frame-gvo-wn is most prized for its flavour. CUDDALORE, INDIA. On the coast of the Carnatic. This place was possessed by the English in 1681. It was reduced by the French in 1758, but was recaptured two years afterwards by sir Eyre Coote. Again taken in 1781. It underwent a destructive siege by the British under general Stuart, in 1783, which was continued until news arrived of peace having been signed. Cuddalore also suffered in the subsequent wars with Hyder Ali. See India. CUIRASS. This part of armour was that most in use by the Greeks and Romans. — Tacitus. First, from the skins of beasts, and afterwards from tanned leather, was formed the cuirass of the Britons until the Anglo-Saxon era. In process of time it was made of iron and brass, and covered the warrior from neck to waist before and CUL 191 CUR behind, as a protection against the spear and arrow. The cuirass was worn by the heavy cavalry in the reign of Henry III. 1216 et seq* CULDEKS. Monks in Scotland and Ireland iu the early ages of Christianity, of simple and peaceful lives. — Bishop Lloyd. They had their principal seat at St. Andrew's ; and iu Tipf)erary was a Culdean abbey whose monks were " attached to simple truth and pure Christian worship, and had not yet conformed to the reigning superstition," in A.D. 1185. — Ledwich. CULLEN'S-WOOD, MASSACRE at, tx Ireland. This was a horrible slaughter of the English by the Irish at a village near Dublin, on Easter or Black Monday, so called from this massacre, A..D. 1209. The English were a colony from Bristol, inhabiting Dublin, whence they went to divert themselves at Cullen's-wood, when the O'Byrnes and O'Tooles, mountain enemies, fell upon them, and destroyed 500 men, besides women and children — one of the most unprovoked massacres on record. CULLODEN, BATTLE of. The English, under William, duke of Cumberland, defeated the Scottish rebels headed by the young Pretender, the last of the Stuarts, near Inverness, April 16, 1746. The Scots lost 2500 men in killed upon the field, or in the slaughter which occurred in the pursuit, while the loss of the English did not far exceed 200. The duke's army pi'actised great cnielties upon the vanquished, as well as upon the defenceless inhabitants of the adjacent districts after the battle. — Smollett. Immediately after the engagement. Prince Charles sought safety by flight, and continued wandering among the wilds of Scotland for six mouths, while 30,000Z. were offered for taking him, and the troops of the conqueror were constantly in seai'ch. He at length escaped from the Isle at Uist to Morlaix, and died at Rome, in 1788. CUL VERINS. Ordnance, so called from the French coidevrine, introduced into England from a French model m 1534. It was originally five inches and a quai'ter diameter in the bore, and carried a ball of eighteen pounds. — Bailey. CUMBERLAND, MERCHANT SHIP. Memorable and valorous achievement of Captain Barrett of this ship, who, with twenty-six men, defeated four privateers, taking 170 men who had boai-ded the Cumberland, Jan. 16, 1811. This gallant action of British seamen in the merchant service is eminently deserving of record in our naval annals. CUNNERSDORF, BATTLE of. The king of Prussia with 50,000 men, attacked the Austrian and Russian army of 90,000 in their camp, and at first gained considerable advantages ; but pursuing them too far, the Austrians and Russians rallied, and gained a complete victory. The Prussians lost 200 pieces of cannon and 20,000 men in killed and wounded, Aug. 12, 1759. CURACOA, ISLAND op. In the Caribbean sea, seized by Holland, in 1634. In ISOO, the French having settled on part of this island, and becoming at variance with the Dutch, the latter surrendered the island to a single British frigate. It was restored to the Dutch by the peace of 1802, and taken from them by a British squadron, in 1807, and again restored by the peace of 1814. CURATES. They wei'e of early appointment as coadjutors in the Romish Church, and are mentioned in England iu the seveuth century, though perhaps there were thcu but few. Several acts have passed in the latter reigns for the relief and protection of this laborious class of the clergy, among which are the 12th Anne, 1713, and 36th and 68th (xeo. III. Among the more recent laws for their better maintenance wore the 53rd Geo. III. 1813, and the beneficent act 2 Will. IV. Oct. 1831. It appears by the late Parliamentary Reports on Ecclesiastical Revenues, that there are 5230 curates in England and Wales, whose stipends amount to 424,695/. ; but the numbers in some benefices have not been returned to the commissioners. The greatest number of curates in one diocese is in that of Lincoln, 629; and the smallest is in that of St. Asaph, 43. — Pari. Rep. CURFRW BELL. From the French couvrefeu. This was a Norman institution, intro- duced into England in the reign of Will. I. a.d. 1068. On the ringing of the curfew at eight o'clock in the evening, all fires and caudles were to be extinguished, uuder a severe penalty. — Rapin. The curfew was abolished 1 Hen. I. a.d. 1100. CURRANTS. From Corinthns, whence, probably, this pleasant fruit was first brought to us. — Dr. Johnson. A small and smart pleasant fruit, of the grape kind, brou^-ht * The use of oiirassea and helmets, as well as the use of bows and an-ows, which had boon hardly known under the first race of our kings (of France) became a military law under the second race (Capit. of Cliarlem.). Chivalry at this time began' to bo introduced ; the knight, who was called Afilcs, held a rank in the army, independently of his military rank. Rcigu of Louis V. year OSL—IIenauU. ' i CUS 192 CYN" from the Levant. — Pardon. They were brought from Zante, and the tree planted in England, 1533. The hawthorn currant tree {Ribes oxyacanthoides) came from Canada in 1705. CUSHEE PIECES. The invention of the bold and heroic Richard Leake, the master- gunner of the Royal Prince uiau-of-war, whose signal bravery on board that ship in the engagement with the Dutch admiral, Van Tromp, has given him an imperishable renown. The cushee piece was invented in 1673. CUSTOM. This is a law, not written, but established by long usage and consent. By lawj'ers and civilians it is defined lex non scripta, and it stands opposed to lex scripta, or the written law. It is the rule of law when it is derived from a.d. 1189 down- wards. Sixty years is binding in civil law, and forty years in ecclesiastical cases. CUSTOM-HOUSE. That of London is of early institution (see Billingsgate), as customs were collected in a regular manner in the tenth century. A custom-house was erected on a large scale, a.d. 1304; and another on a yet larger scale was erected in 1559. This last was burnt down in 1666, and a new one was built by Charles II. Again burnt down in 1718, and again rebuilt. The custom-house once more became a prey to fire, Feb. 12, 1814, when it was totally burnt down, and immense property and valuable records were destroyed. The present edifice was opened May 12, 1817. The Dublin custom-house was commenced in 1781, and was opened in 1791. The eastern wing of its warehouse was destroyed by fire, with property to the amount of 400,000^. Aug. 9, 1832. CUSTOMS. They were collected upon merchandise in England, under Ethelred II. in 979. The king's claim to them by grant of parliament was established 3 Edw. I. 1274. The customs were farmed to Mr. Thomas Smith for 20,000Z. for several years, in the reign of Elizabeth. — Stowe. They were farmed by Charles II. for 390,000^. in the year 1666. — Davenant. In 1580 they amounted to . . £14,000 ^ '■ • . 50,000 148,000 . . 168,000 500,000 . . 1,555,000 . 2,000,000 . . 9,973,240 . 11,498,762 The customs in Ireland were, in the year 1224, viz., on every sack of wool Sd. ; on every last of hides, 6d. ; and 2d. on every barrel of wine. — Annals of Dublin. Custom- house officers, and officers of excise, were disqualified from voting for the election of members of parliament, by statute 22 Geo. III. 1782. Tlie customs' business of Ireland was transferred to the London Board, Jan. 6, 1830. 16 & 17 Vict. c. 106, was passed to consolidate the Customs' Duties acts, Aug. 20, 1853 ; it contains a new tariff. This was modified by 17 & 18 Vict. c. 28, 29 (July 1854), and c. 122 (Aug. 1854). See Revenue. CYCLE. That of the sun is the twenty-eight years before the days of the week return to the same days of the month. That of the moon is nineteen lunar years and seven intercalary months, or nineteen solar years. The cycle of Jupiter is sixty years, or sexagenary. The Paschal cycle, or the time of keeping Easter, was first calculated for the period of 532 years, by Victorius, A.D. 463. — Blair. CYCLOPEDIA. Cyclopaedias were written late in the fifteenth, and some were pub- lished in the sixteenth century ; but the principal and most comprehensive work of this kind was that of Alstedius, in 1620, of which many copies, much prized, are extant. The earliest attempt in England to arrange the whole compass of human knowledge in an alphabetical form was the Dictionary of Ephraim Chambers (which may be said to be the foundation of all others since), printed in two large folio volumes in 1728. See Encyclopcedia. CYMBAL. The oldest musical instrument of which we have certain record. It was made of brass, like a kettle-drum, and some think in the same form, but smaller. Xenopbon makes mention of the cymbal as a musical instrument, whose invention is attributed to Cybele, by whom, we are told, it was used in her feasts, called the mysteries of Cybele, about 1580 B.C. The festivals of Cybele were introduced by Scamander, with the dances of Corybantes, at Mount Ida, 1546 B.C. CYNICS. The sect of philosophers founded by Antisthenes, 396 B.C. — D'log. Laert. He lived in the ninety-fourth Olympiad. — Pardon. These philosophers valued themselves In 1592 ditto In 1614 ditto In 1622 ditto . In 1642 ditto In 1720 ditto . In 1748 ditto In 1808 ditto . In 1823 ditto In 1830 United Kingdom . . £17,540,323 In 1835 ditto . . 18,612,906 In 1840 ditto . . 19,915,296 In 1845 ditto . . 20,196,8.56 In 1850 ditto to Jan. 5 . 20,995,132 In 1851 ditto to Jan. 5 . . 20,442,170 In 1852 ditto to Jan. 5 . 20,615,337 In 1853 ditto to Jan. 5 . . 20,551,541 In 1854 ditto to Jan. 5 . 20,902,134 CYP 193 DAM for contemning all worldly things, and even all sciences, except morality ; they were very free in reprehending vice, and did all their actions publicly, and practised the greatest obscenities without blushing.— /de»i. Diogenes was one of this sect. They generally slept on the ground. — Diog. Laert. CYPRESS. Cupressus sempervirens. A tree whose wood is of an agreeable smell, and tliat scarcely ever decays, or takes the worm ; it was originally found in the Isle of Cyprus. It w;i8 used by the ancients as a token of sorrow. Some are of opinion that the wood gophir, of which Noah's ark was made, was cypress ; and the Athenians buried their heroes in coffins made of this wood, of which many of the Egyptian mummy-chests were also fabricated. The cypress was brought to England about A. D. 1441. The deciduous cyin-ess, or Cupressus d/ser 16, 1802, wlion their treason was discovered, wliich caused the greatest cousternatiou at tlie time. DIA 204 Die reached Portsmouth in July. Its original weight was nearly 800 carats, but it was reduced by the uuskilfulness of the artist, Hortensio Borgese, a Venetian, to its present weight, 279. A general idea may be formed of its shape and size, by conceiving it as the pointed half (rose-cut) of a small hen's egg. The value is scarcely computable, though two millions sterling have been mentioned as a justifiable price, if calculated by the scale employed in the trade. This diamond was re-cut in London in 1852. A diamond termed the Star of the South, has been recently brought from Brazil, weighing 254^ carats, half of which it will lose by cutting. DIAMONDS, INFLAMMABILITY of. Boetius de Boot conjectured that the diamond was inflammable, 1609. — Hist, of Gems. It was discovered that when exposed to a high temperature, it gave out an acrid vapour, in which a part of it was dissipated, lij^^.^Boyle. Sir Isaac Newton concluded, from its great refracting power, that it must be combustible, 1675. — Newton's Optics. The celebrated Averani demon- strated, by concentrating the rays of the sun upon it, that the diamond was exhaled in vapour, and entirely disappeared, while other precious stones merely grew softer, 1695. It has been ascertained by Guy ton, Davy, and others, that although diamonds are the hardest of all known bodies, they yet contain nothing more than pure charcoal, or carbon. In 1848 diamonds were charred by the intense heat of the voltaic battery, by M. Dumas, in Paris, and Professor Faraday, in London. DIANA, TEMPLE of, at EPHESUS. One of the seven wonders of the world, built at the common charge of all the Asiatic States. The chief architect was Ctesiphon ; and Pliny says that 220 years were employed in completing this temple, whose riches were immense. It was 425 feet long, 225 broad, and was supported by 127 columns (60 feet high, each weighing 150 tons of Parian marble), furnished by so many kings. It was set on fire on the night of Alexander's nativity, by an obscure individual named Eratostratus, who confessed on the rack, that the sole motive which had prompted him to destroy so magnificent an edifice was the desire of transmitting his name to future ages, 356 B.C. The temple was rebuilt, and again burnt by the Goths, in their naval invasion, a.d. 256. — Vniv. Hist. DICE. The invention of dice is ascribed to Palamedes, of Greece, about 1244 B.C. The game of Tali and Tessera among the Romans was played with dice. The use of dice is of very early date in this country. Stowe mentions two entertainments given by the city of London, at which dice were played.* Act to regulate the license of makers, and the sale of dice, 9 Geo. IV. 1828. DICTATORS. These were supreme and absolute magistrates of Rome, instituted 495 B.C., when Titus Lartius Flavus, the first dictator, was appointed. This office, respect- able and illustrious in the first ages of the Republic, became odious by the perpetual usurpations of Sylla and J. Caesar ; and after the death of the latter, the Roman senate, on the motion of the consul Antony, passed a decree, which for ever forbade a dictator to exist in Rome, 44 B.C. DICTIONARY. A standard dictionary of the Chinese language, containing about 40,000 characters, most of them hieroglyphic, or rude representations somewhat like our- signs of the zodiac, was perfected by Pa-out-she, who lived about 1100 B.C. — Morrison. The oldest Greek dictionaiy is the Onomastikon, of Julius Pollux, written about B.C. 120 ; a Latin one was compiled by Varro, born B.C. 116. Cyclopsedias were compiled in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The first dictionary of celebrity, perhaps the first, is by Ambrose Calepini, a Venetian friar, in Latin ; he wrote one in eight languages, about a.d. 1500. — Niceron. The Lexicon Hejitaglotton was pubhshed by Edmund Castell, in 1659. Bayle's Dictionary was published in 1696, "the first work of the kind in which a man may learn to think." — Voltaire. Chambers' Cyclopajdia, the first dictionary of the circle of the arts, sciences, &c., was published in 1728. The great dictionary of the English language, by Samuel Johnson, who was truly called the " Leviathan of Literature," appeared in 1755. Francis Grose's * The kings of Scotland, France, and Cyi)rus being in England on a visit to Edward III. a gi-eat tournament was held in Smithfield, and afterwards the mayor kept his hall for all comers who were willing to play at dice and hazard. The Lady Margaret, his wife, kept her chamber to the same effect. Shortly afterwards they entertained the Princess of Wales, her son, Prince Richard, and their attendants, with a grand masquerade on horseback, the procession beginning at Newgate and ending at Keunington. Being arrived at the palace, one of the masques produced a pair of dice, and proposed to play with the prince. The dice were so artfully contrived that when the prince threw he was sure to win, and having thrown three times his royal highness won a bowl, a cup, and a ring, all of gold ; and having given the princess and each of the nobUity attending the like opportunity to win each a gold ring, they were highly pleased. — Stowe. DIB 205 DIR Dictionaiy of the Vulgar Tongue was compiled ia 1768 ; and from this period numerous dictionaries have been added to our store of literature. DIEPPE, France. This town was bombarded by an English fleet, under admiral Russell, and laid in ashes, July 1694. It has not been so considerable since that time. In 1794 it experienced a similar calamity. It was again bombarded, together with the town of Granville, by the British, Sep. 14, 1803. DIET OF THE GERMAN EMPIRE. The supreme authority of this empire may be said to have existed in the assemblage of princes under this name. The diet, as composed of three colleges, viz. — the college of electors, the college of princes, and the college of imperial towns, commenced with the famous edict of Charles IV. 1356. See Golden Bull. Diets otherwise constituted had long previously been held on important occasions. Tlie diet of Wurtzburg, which proscribed Henry the Lion, was held in 1179. The celebrated diet of Worms, at which Luther assisted in person, was held in 1521. That of Spires, to condemn the Reformei-s, was held in 1529; and the famous diet of Augsburg, in 1530. In the league of the German princes, called the Confederation of the Rhine, they fixed the diet at Frankfort, July 12, 1806. Ger- many is now governed by a diet of 38 members having votes varying from four to one each. But from the unsettled state of Germany much change may be produced in the constitution of this assembly. " DIEU DONNE." The name given in his infancy to Zoitfs Ze Cca^id, king of France, because the French considered him as the gift of Heaven, the queen, his mother, having been barren for twenty -three years previously, a. D. 1638. — Voltaire. One of the popes of Rome, who obtained the tiara in 672, was named Adeodatus, or God's gift; he had the character of a pious and charitable pontiff. DIEU ET MON DROIT. " God, and my right." This was the parole of the day, given by Richard I. of England to his army at the battle of Gisors, in France. " It was used by Richard to show that he held his kingdom of no mortal, but God only." — Pardon. In the battle (w/ticA «ee) the French army was signally defeated; and in remembrance of this victory, Richard made " Dieii et mon droit " the motto of the royal arms of England, and it has ever since been retained, A.D. 1198. — liymer's Fcedera. DIGEST. The first collection of Roman laws under this title was prepared by Alfrenus Varus, the civilian of Cremona, 66 B.C. — Quiutil. Inst. Oral. Other digests of Roman laws followed. The Digest, so called by way of eminence, was the collection of laws made by order of the emperor Justinian : it made the first part of the Roman law, and the first volume of the civil law. Quotations from it are marked with a ft'. — Pardon. DIGITS. Arithmetical figures were known to the Arabian Moors about a.d. 900. Tlioy were inti'oduced from thence into Spain in 1050, and into England about 1253. The digit is any whole number under 10 — -as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, which are called the nine digits ; also a measure containing three quarters of an inch. In astronomy, the digit is also a measure used in the calculation of eclipses, and is the twelfth part of the luminary eclipsed. See article Figures. DIOCESE. The first di\nsion of the Roman empire into dioceses, which were at that period civil governments, is ascribed to Constantino, a.d. 323 ; but Strabo remarks tbat the Romans had the departments called dioceses long before. — Strabo, lib. xiii. In England these circuits of the bisliops' jurisdiction are coeval with Christianity ; there are twenty-four dioceses, of which twenty-one are suffi-agan to Canterbury, and three to York. See the Bishoprics severally. DIOCLETIAN ERA. Called also the era of Martyrs, was used by Christian writers until the introduction of the Christian era in the sixth centuiy, .and is still employed by the Abyssiiiians and Copts. It dates from the day on which Diocletian was proclaimed emperor at Clialcedon, 29th August, 284. It is called the era of Martyrs, on account of the persecution of the Christians in the reign of Diocletian. DIORAMA. This species of exhibition, which had long previously been an object of wonder and delight at Paris, was first opened in London, Sept. 29, 1823. The diorama differs from the panorama in this respect, that, instead of a circular view of the objects represented, it exhibits the whole picture at once in perspective, and it is decidedly superior both to the panorama and the cosmorama in the fidelity with which the objects are depicted, and in the completeness of the illusion. DIRECTORY, the CHURCH. The book so called was published in England at the period of the civil war. It was drawn up at the instance of the parliament, by an assembly DIR 206 DIV of divines at Westminster, with the object that the ministers might not be wholly at a loss in their devotions after the suppression of the Book of Common Prayer. There were some general hints given, which were to be managed with discretion ; for the Directory prescribed no form of prayer, nor manner of external worship, nor enjoined the people to make any responses, except Amen. The Du'ectory was established by an oi'dinance of the parliament in 1644. — Bishop Taylor. DIRECTORY, FRENCH, The French Directory was installed at the Little Luxembourg at Paris, under a new constitution of the government, Nov. 1, 1795, and held the executive power four years. It was composed of five members, and ruled in connexion with two chambers, the Council of Ancients and Council of Five Hundred, 2vhich see. Deposed by Bonaparte, who, with Cambacer^s and Si^yes, became the ruling power of France, the three governing as consuls, the first as chief, Nov. 9, 1799. See Bonaparte. DISCIPLINE, THE BOOK op. Drawn up by an assembly of ministers in Scotland, in a.d. 1650. In this book the government of the Church by prelates was set aside. The followers of the Presbyterian sect were called Disciplinarians from their clamour about discipline. — Sanderson. DISPENSATIONS. Ecclesiastical dispensations were first granted by pope Innocent III. in 1200. These exemptions from the law and discipline of the Church led eventually with indulgencies, absolutions, and the remission of sins, to the Reformation in Germany in 1517, and subsequently to that in England, in 1534 et seq. DISPENSING POWER of the CROWN. This was a power unconstitutionally asserted by James II. in 1686. Most of the judges were dismissed by that infatuated monarch for refusing to allow the legality of this power, 1687. Since this period the same power has been on certain occasions exei'cised, as in the case of embargoes upon ships, the restraint upon corn leaving the kingdom, &c., without the previous concurrence of parliament. See Indemnity. DISSENTERS. They arose early in the Reformation, contending for a more complete departure from the Romish models of Church government and discipline. They were reproached with the name of Puritans, on account of the purity they proposed in religious worship and conduct ; and the rigorous treatment they endured under Elizabeth and James I. led multitudes of them to emigrate in those reigns. The first place of worship for Dissenters in England was established at Wandsworth, a village near London, Nov. 20, 1572; and now, in London alone, the number of chapels, meeting-houses, &c. for all classes of Dissenters, amounts to more than 200. The great act for the relief of Dissenters fi-om civil and religious disabilities, was the statute passed 9 Geo. IV. c. 17. By this act, called the Corporation and Test Repeal Act, so much of the several acts of parliament of the preceding reigns as imposed the neces- sity of receiving the sacrament of the Lord's Supper as a qualification for certain oSices, 4c. was repealed, May 9, 1828. Sevei'al other acts of ameliorating effect have been since passed. DISTAFF. The staff to which hemp, flax, wool, or other substances to be spun is fastened. The art of spinning with it, at the small wheel, first taught to English women by Anthony Bonavisa, an Italian, 20 Hen. VII. 1505. — Slowe. The distaff is used as an emblem of the female sex. — Howell. The distaS" formerly occupied the place in the drawing-room or boudoir of the English ladies that the harp or piano does now. DISTILLATION, and the various chemical processes dependent on the art, are generally believed to have been introduced into Europe by the Moors about a.d. 1150 ; their brethren of Africa had them from the Egyptians. The distillation of spirituous liquors was in practice in these countries in the sixteenth century. — Burns. DIVINATION. In the Scriptures we find mention made of different kinds of divination ; and it is mentioned by most of the ancient authors. It was retained in the hands of the priests and priestesses, the magi, soothsayers, augurs, and other like professors, till the coming of Christ, when the doctrines of Ciiristianity and the spirit of philosophy banished such visionary opinions. The oracles of Delphi began 1263 B.C. Augurs were instituted by Numa at Rome, 710 B.C. See Augury, Magi, Witchcraft, iio)t), Jan. 1, 1801 Einmett's Insurrection . July 23, 1803 Hibernian Bible Society .... 1806 Bank transferred to College-green . . 1808 Dubhn Institution founded . . . 1811 Riot at the theatre . . Dec. 16, 1814 Visit of George IV .. . . Aug. 12, 1821 The " Bottle Conspiracy " . Dec. 14, 1822 Hibernian Academy . . Aug. 16, 1823 Dublin lighted with gas . . Oct. 5, 1825 Great Custom-house fire . Aug. 9, 1833 Railroad to Kingstown . . Aug. 17, 1834 DUBLIN INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION. The building for this exhibition, which owed its existence to Mr. Dargan, who advanced 80,000^. for the purpose, was erected by- Mr. (now sir) John Benson, in the Dublin Society's grounds near Merrion-square. It consisted of one large and two smaller halls lighted from above. It was opened by earl St. Germain's, the lord-lieutenant, May 12, 1853, and visited by the Queen and Prince Albert, Aug. 30, and finally closed on Nov. 1. The exhibition was eminently successful. DUBLIN, ARCHBISHOPRIC of. United to the see of Glendelagh, or Glendalagh, in A.D. 1214. It is supposed that the bishopric of Dublin was founded by St. Patrick, in 448. Gregory, who succeeded to the prelacy in 1121, afterwards (in 1152) became archbishop ; and (George Browne, an Augustine friar of London (deprived by queen Mary in 1554), was the first Protestant archprelate of this see. Dublin has two cathedrals, Christ Church, and St. Patrick's, both in the city, a most rare thing. The revenue was valued, in the king's books, 30 Hen. VIII. at 5MI. 15s. 2d. Irish. Kildare, on its last avoidance, was annexed to this see under the provisions of the Church Temporalities' act, passed in 1833. See Bishops. DUCAT. First coined by Longinus, governor of Italy. — Procopius. First struck in the duchy of Apulia. — Bw Canrje. Coined by Robert, king of Sicily, in a.d. 1240. The ducat is so called because struck by dukes. — Johnson. It is of silver and gold, the value of the first being 4s. Qd. and that of the gold 9s. 6cZ. The ducatoon, an Italian silver coin of the value of 4s. St/. — Pardon. DUELLING AND KNIGHT-ERRANTRY. Took their rise from the judicial combats of the Celtic nations. The first duel in England, not of this character, took place A.D. 1096. Duelling in civil matters was forbidden in France, 1305. The present practice of duelling arose in the challenge of Francis I. to the emperor Charles V. 1527. The fight with small swords was introduced into England, 29 Eliz. 1587. Proclamation that no person should be pardoned who killed another in a duel, 30 Charles II. 1679. Duelling was checked in the army, 1792. See Battel, Wager of ; and Combat. DUE 215 DUE DUELLING AND KNIGHT-ERRANTRY, continued. LATE MEMORABLE DUELS. Between the duke of Hamilton and lord Mohun, fought .... a.d. 1712 [This duel ivas fought with smallswords in Hyde-park. Lord Mohun was killed upon the spot, and the duke expu'ed of his wounds as he was being carried to his coach. *J Captain Pepjiard and Mr. Hayes ; the latter killed 1728 Mr. Hamilton and Mr. Morgan; the for- mer killed 1748 Mr. S. Martin and Mr. Wilkes, M.P. . ITUii Lord Townshcnd and lord Bollaniont; lord BcUamont wounded . Feb. 1, 1773 The count d'Artois and the duke of Bourbon . . . March 21, 17VS Charles James Fox and Mr. Adam ; Mr. Fox wounded . . . Nov. .30, 1779 Mr. Donovan and captain Hanson ; the latter killed .... Nov. 13, 1779 Colonel FuUerton and lord Shelburuo ; the latter wounded . Marcli 22, 1780 Rev. Mr. Allen and Lloyd Dulany ; the latter killed . . . June 18, 1782 Colonel Thomas of the Guards and col. Gordon ; col. Thomas killed Sept. 4, 1783 Lord Macartney and major-gen. Stuart ; the former wounded . . June S, 1786 Mr. Harrington and Mr. M'Kenzie; (the formerkilledon the grouua by general Gillespie, the second of the latter) . 17S8 Mr. M'Keon and George Nugent Rey- nolds; the latter murdered by the former .... Jan. 31, 1788 Mr. Purefoy and colonel Roper ; the lat- ter killed .... Dec. 17, 1788 Duke of York and colonel Lenox, after- wards duke of Richmond . May 27, 1789 Sir George Ramsay and captain Macrca; sir George killed 1790 Mr. Curran and major Hobart April 1, 1790 Ml-. Macduflf and Mr. Prince ; the latter killed Juno 4, 1790 Mr. Harvey Aston and lieut. Fitzgerald ; the former severely wounded June 25, 1790 Mr. Stevens and Mr. Anderson; the former killed . . . Sept. 20, 1790 Mr. Graham and Mr. Julius ; tlie former killed .... July 19, 1791 Mr. John Kemble and Mr. Aiken ; no fatahty .... March 1, 1792 Earl of Lonsdale and captain Cuthbert ; uo fatality .... June 9, 1792 M. de Chauvigny and Mr. Lameth ; the latter wounded . . . Nov. 8, 1792 Mr. Carpeuterand Mr. Pride; the former killed Aug. 20, 1796 Lord Norbury and Mr. Napper Tandy (an affair ; no meeting) . Aug. 21, 179G Lord Valentia and Mr. Gawler; the former wounded . . . June 28, 1796 Rt. hou. William Pitt and Mr. George Tierncy May 27, 1798 Rt. l\on. Isaac Corry and rt. hou. Henry Grattan .... Jan. 1.5, 1800 Lieut. Willis and major Impey ; the major killed . . . Aug. 2i), 1801 Rt. hon. (Jeorgc Ogleand Bernard Coylo (eii/lilDlinls.iwjalalil!/) . . . 1802 Sir kichartl Musgrave and Mr. Todd Jones ; sir Richard wounded Juno 8, 1S02 Colonel Montgomery and captain Mac Namani; the former killed April 0, 1803 Gen. Hamilton and col. Burr ; the gen. killed, greatly lamented . .a.d. 1804 Lord Camelford and captain Be.st ; lord Camelford killed . . March 10, 1804 Surgeon Fi^hcr and lieut. Torrens ; the latter killed . . . March 22, 1806 Baron Hompesch and Mr. Richard- son ; the latter severely wounded Sept. 21, 1S06 Sir Francis Burdett and Mr. Paull ; the former wounded . . . May 5, 1807 Mr. Alcock and Mr. Colclough ; the latter killed (the survivor soon after lost his reason) June 8, 1807 M. de Granpree and M. Le Pique, in balloons, near Paris, and the latter killed May 3, 1808 Major Campbell and captain Boyd; the latter murdered . . . June 23, 1808 Lord Paget and captain Cadogan ; neither wounded .... May 30, 1809 Lord Castlereagh and Mr. George Can- ning ; the latter wounded Sept. 22, 1809 Mr. George Payne and Mr. Clarke ; the former killed . . . Sept. 6, 1810 Captain Boardman and ensign de Balton; the former killed . . March 4, 1811 Lieut. Stewart and lieut. Bagnal ; the latter mortally wounded . Oct. 7, 1812 Mr. Edward Maguire and lieut. Blundell; the latter killed . . . July 9, 1813 Mr. Hatchell and Mr. Morley Feb. 12, 1814 Capt. Stackpole (Statira) and lieut. Cecil; the captain killed . April, 1814 Mr. O'Conuell and Mr. D'Esterrc ; Mr. D'Esterre killed . . . Feb. 1, 1815 Col. Quentin and col. Palmer . Feb. 7, 1815 Mr. O'Conuell and Mr. Peel (an aftair ; no meeting) . . . Aug. 31, 1815 Major Greene and Mr. Price in America; the latter killed, greatly lamented . 1816 Captain Fottrell and colonel Ross ; five shots each, but no fatality . Dec. — , 1817 Lieut. Hindes and lieut. Gilbert Conroy ; the former killed . . March 6, 1817 Mr. John Sutton and Major Lockyer; the former kiUed . . Dec. 10, 1817 Mr. O'Callaglian and lieut. Baylcy ; the latter killed . . . . Jan. 12, 1818 Mr. Grattan and the earl of Clare, Jime 7, 1820 Mr. Henshaw and Mr. Hartinger ; both desperately wounded . Sept. 18, 1820 Mr. Scott and Mr. Christie ; the former killed Feb. 10, 1821 M. Manuel and Mr. Beaumont April 9, 1821 Sir Alexander Bo.swell and Mr. James Stuart ; the former killed March 26, 1822 The duke of Buckingliam and the duke of Bedford; no fatality . . May 2, 1822 General Pepo and general Carascosa ; the latter wounded . . . Feb. 28, 1823 Mr. Westall iind captain Gourlay ; the latter killed 1824 Mr. Beaumont .and Mr. Lambton, July 1, 1826 Mr. Brie, barrister, and Mr. Hayes ; the former killed . . . Dec. 26, 1826 Rev. Mr. Hodson and Mr. Grady ; the latter wounded . . . Aug. 1827 Major Edgeworth and Mr. Henry Grat- ton (an affair ; no meeting) Sept. — , 1827 Mr. Long Wellesley and Mr. Crespigny ; neither wounded 1828 Duko of Wellington and the earl of Wiuehilsea . . . March 21, 1829 * The duko was attended by colonel Hamilton, and lord Mohun by lieutenant-general Macartney. Colonel Hamilton wa.s wounded in the foot, and .surrendered liiraself on the 22nd of November one week after the duel, which tako of Slceris constructed . . 1938 The patriarcli Abraham visits Egypt to avoid the famine in Canaan . . . 1921 Syphoas introduces the use of the com- mon letters (f/.sAer) .... 1891 Menmon invents the Egyptian letters (Blair, Leiujht) 1822 Amenophis I, is acknowledged the king oi n.\lEgy],t(Lin(ilct) . . . . 1S21 Josepli the Israelite is sold into Egypt as a8lave(i.n;//,7) IVog He interprets the king's dreams . .171") His father and brethren settle here . . 1700 Sesostris reigns : he extends hisdominiou by conquest over Arabia, Peraia, India, and Asia JIinor(£) . A revolt under Inarus (Blair) ... 971 825 781 737 600 647 610 609 526 524 524 487 403 * The epoch of the reign of Sesostris is very uncertain ; Blair makes it to fall 133 years later. As to the achievements of this monarch they are supposed to have been the labours ©f several kings attri- buted by the Egyptian priests to Sesostris alone, whose vciy existence, indeed, is doubted. Q 2 EGY 228 ELE EGYPT, continued. Successful revolt under Amyrtaeus, who is proclaimed king ( iefig'ift; . .B.C. 414 Egypt again reduced by Persia, and its temples pUlaged ( f/.'/ter) . . . . 350 Alexander the Great enters Egypt, wrests it from the Persians, and builds Alex- andria (£iair) 332 PhUadelphus completes the Pharos of Alexandria (£tair) 283 The Septuagint version of the Old Tes- tament made about this time . • 283 The famous library of Alexandria also dates about this period (Blair) . . 283 Ambassadors first sent to Rome . . 269 Ptolemy Euergetes overruns Syria, and returns laden with rich spoils and 2500 statues and vessels of gold and silver, which Cambyses had taken from the Egyptian temples (Blair) . . . 246 Reign of Philometer and Physcon . . 151 At the death of Philometer, his brother Physcon marries his queen, and on the day of his nuptials murders the infant son of Philometer in its mo- ther's arms 145 He repudiates his wife, and marries her daughter by his brother (Blair) . . 130 His subjects, wearied with his cruelties and crimes, demolish his statues, set fire to his palace, and he flies from their fmy (Blair) 129 He murders his son by his new queen ; also his son by her mother, sending the head and limbs of the latter as a present to the parent on a feast-day B.C. 129 Yet, defeating the Egyptian army, he recovers his throne ; and dies . . 128 Pestilence from the putrefaction of vast swarms of locusts; 800,000 persons perish in Egypt 128 Revolt in Upper Egypt ; the f imous city of Thebes destroyed after a siege of thi'ee years (Diod. Siculus) ... 82 Auletes dying, leaves his kingdom to his eldest son, Ptolemy, and the fa- mous Cleopatra (Blair) . . . . 51 During a civil war between Ptolemy and Cleopatra, Alexandria is besieged by Caesar, and the famous library nearly destroyed by tire (Blair) ... 47 Ctesar defeats the king, wbo, in crossing the Nile, is drowned ; and the younger Ptolemy and Cleopatra reign . . . 46 Cleopatra poisons her brother (only 14 years of age) and reigns alone . . 43 She appears before Marc Antony, to answer for this crime. Fascinated by her beauty, he follows her into Egypt 40 Antony defeated by Octavius Caesar at the battle of Actiuna (Blair) . . . 31 Octavius enters Egypt ; Antony and Cleopatra kill themselves ; and the kingdom becomes a Roman province 30 For subsequent and modem annals, see Syina. The history of Egypt may be divided into three epochs : 1st, From the foundation of the empire to its conquest by Cambyses : the kings wlio reigned in this period are designated by the title of Pharaoh, siguifying, in the ancient Egyptian language, " Great King." 2ndly. From the Persian Conquest to the death of Alexander the Great. Srdly. The reign of the Ptolemies, ending with the death of Cleopatra, and the subjugation of the country by the Romans. The incidents relating to Egypt, of modern date, will be found interwoven with those of Syria. See Syria, &c. EGYPTIAN ERA. The old Egyptian year was identical with the era of Nabonasser, beginning Feb. 26, 747 B.C. and consisted of 365 days only. It was reformed, 30 B.C. at which period the commencement of the year had arrived, by continually recediup, to the 29th August, which was determined to be in future the first duy of the year. To reduce to the Christian era, subtract 746 years, 125 days. ELBA, ISLE OF. Taken possession of by the British, July 6, 1796 ; but abandoned the next year. Elba was conferred upon Napoleon (with the title of emperor continued) as the place of his retreat upon relinquishing the throne of France, April 5, 1814. He secretly embarked from this island with about 1200 men in hired feluccas, on the night of Feb. 25, 1815, and landed in Provence, March 1, to recover the Imperial crown. See Bonaparte and France. After having been quitted by Bonaparte, Elba was taken possession of by the Grand Duke of Florence, July, 1815. ELEATIC SECT. Founded by Xenophanes, the philosopher of Colophon ; he had been banished to Sicily on account of his wild theory of God and nature, and his sect originated there. This theorist supposed that the stars were extinguished every morning and rekindled at night; that eclipses were occasioned by a partial extinction of the sun ; that there were several suns and moons for the convenience of the different climates of the earth, &c., about 535 B.C. — Strabo. ELECTIONS, BRIBERY at. Various statutes have been enacted against it from time to time. The principal acts relating to elections commenced with 7 Henry IV. 1409. Elections were made void by bribery, in 1696 et seq. The later acts relating to elections are 16 & 17 Vict. c. 68 (Aug. 15, 1853); and 17 & 18 Viet. c. 102 (Aug. 10, 1854); by the last act, treating electors, cockades, flags, bands of music, &c., are strictly forbidden. ELECTORS. Those for members of parliament for counties were obliged to have forty shillings a-year in land, 39 Hen. VI. 1460. — RuffheadJs Statutes. Among the acts relating to electors are the following : — Act depriving excise and custom-house officers, and contractors with government, of their votes, 1782. Act to regulate polling, 9 Geo. IV. cap. 59, 1828. Reform in Parliament bill (see Reform Bill), 2 & 3 JVill. IV. 1832. County Elections' act, 7 Will. IV. cap. 102, 20 Aug. 1836. ELE 229 ELE ELECTORS OF GERMANY. Originally, all the members of the Germanic body made choice of their head ; but amidst the violence and anarchy which prevailed for several centuries in the empire, seven princes who possessed the gi-eatest power assumed the exclusive privilege of nominating the emperor. — Br. Robertson. An eighth elector was made, in 1648 ; and a ninth, in favour of the duke of Hanover, in 1692. The number was reduced to eight in 1777; and was increased to ten at the peace of Luneville, in 1801. The electorship ceased on the dissolution of the German empire, and when the crown of Austria was made hereditary, 1804-1806. See Germany. ELECTRICITY, — from ViKntrpov, electi-um, amber, the electrical properties of which are said to have been known to Thales, 600 B.C. The phenomena of electricity were produced from various substances and recorded by Dr. Gilbert, of Colchester, in 1600, and by Otto Guericke, to whom is attributed the origin of the electric machine, in 1647. In 17-jO, Steplien Grey divided all material substances mto electrics and non-electrics, and shortly after, Dufaye discovered the phenomena of attraction and repulsion. In 1746, the experiments of Kleist, Cunajus, and Muschenbroek, led to the discovery of the Leyden phial or jar, about 1755. Franklin's researches extended from 1747 to 1760. To him we owe the theory of induction and the identity of lightning and electricity. He first drew lightning fiom the clouds, and suggested lightning con- ductors (see Lightning Conductors). While repeating some of Franklin's experiments, Richman, of St. Petersburg, was killed in 1753. The following were eminent electricians. Canton, Beccaria, yEpinus, Symmer (175o-6). The electricity developed by fishes was investigated by Ingenhouss, Cavendish, and others, about 1773. Cavendish constructed an artificial torpedo; to him also is mainly due the foundation of chemical electricity. He decomposed atmospheric air and water by the agency of electricity, about 1787. Coulomb is rcgai-ded as the father of Electro-statics, and to him we owe the torsion balance, about 1785. A new epoch was created by the discoveries of Galvani, in 1790, and Volta, in 1800. See Gulvanum and Voltaic Electricity. The successive researches of Lavoisier, Priestley, Davy, Cavallo, Poisson, Saussure, &c. are very important. In 1820, Oersted announced the discovery of Electro-magnetism, and in 1822, Faraday that of Magneto-electi-icity. The electrical reseai-ches of the latter are published in three octavo volumes (1833-55). Sir W. Snow Harris received 6000^. fi>r his invention of a permanent system of lightning conductors for ships, which is stated to be so perfect, that no instance of serious damage by lightning has occurred in the British navy in the last twenty-five years. In 1840, the electricity of steam was discovered, on which Mr. Armstrong made many experiments, and finally constructed the powerful hydro-electric machine. The very largo and powerful electric machine and Leyden battery at the Panopticon in Leicester-square, London, were put into perfect action in the spring of 1855, by Dr. H. M. Noad. The most eminent philosophers of the present day are still devoting their attention to electricity, among whom may be mentioned Harris, Faraday, De la Rive, Grove, Wheatstoue, Riess, Matteui'ci, Du Bois-Rej^mond, Tyndall, &c. ELECTRIC CLOCK and BALL. Mr. Alexander Bain is said to have first conceived the idea of working clocks by electricity, in 1 837 ; his clocks, as well as those of Mr. Shepherd, appeared in the exhibition of 1851. An electric clock, with four dials, illuminated at night, was set up in front of the office of the Electric Telegraph com- pany, in the Strand, London, July 1852. It indicates Greenwich time at all houi-s ; and the various railway stations receive their time from the Strand-ofiico, which is the medium of communication from the Greenwich Observatory. This is one purpose of the new time-ball on the top of the office in the Strand; the Electric Telegraph company, the South-Eastcrn Railway company, and the Astronomer-Royal having acted in conjunction in laying down a subterranean wire from the Observatory in Greenwicli jiark. At one o'clock precisely to a second, the ball suddenly slides down upon a kind of piston in an air cylinder, so as to bre.ik the force of the concussion. As this time-ball is 130 feet above the level of the Thames, and as it is six feet in diameter, exhibits bright colours, and falls through a considerable space, its descent can be seen for a great distance on all sides. ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH.* Between 1787 and 1820, ten applications of electricity to * Experiments have been tried witli a view to determine how long a time is consumed in the transfer of tlic subtle .ajrciit, electricity, to a given distiince ; but the time is absolutely unappieeiable at least for all common purposes, since that ngent, which can travel round the globe in the tt-idh pari oj at>tco)id, sets at uoujiht the measiu'cments of every-day lile. This i)ower, applied to telegraphs in wonderful in its resuhs. Lord Palmerstou on one occasion, at a public dinner in Soutliamptou, jilc.isaiitly alluded to a prospective period when, if a minister were a.sked in the house of commons " whetlier it were true that a war had broken out in India?" he might, perhaps, be able to answer. ELE 230 ELE telegraphic purposes are recorded. In 1819, Oersted discovered that an electric curi-ent, transmitted through a wire placed parallel to a magnetic needle, either above or below it, causes the needle to deviate either to the right or the left according to the direction of the current ; and the celebrated Ampere proposed a telegraph on this principle in 1820, suggesting, however, that as many magnetic needles and as many- circuits should be employed as there were characters to be indicated. Baron Schelling and Fechner proposed to limit this number by employing fewer needles. In 1833, Gauss and Weber proposed a telegraph by means of magneto-electricity. The first electric telegraph in England, founded on Oersted's discoveiy, was invented by professor Wheatstoue in 1837, the application being adapted to railways. Morse in America, Steinheil in Germany, and other parties elsewhere, constructed or proposed electric telegraphs about the same time. The electric telegraph on the London and Blackwall railway was the first efficient example of the application of these telegraphs to general and commercial purposes. Electric telegraphs have since been constructed on every railway, and form their most important adjuncts. For the submarine telegraph connecting France and England (first attempted on August 28, 1850) see Submarine Telegraph. ELECTRO-GILDING and ELECTRO-PLATING. Among the many applications of electi'icity to the ai'ts of recent years, are electro-gilding and electro-plating. No sooner was it known that the precious metals might be precipitated from their solu- tions by electricity, than investigations were made as to the practicability of coating metallic ornaments with gold and silver by electrical agency. At the house of Messrs. Elkington, London, and other houses in London and Birmingham, are seen articles of dazzling bi'illiancy with surfaces of pure gold and silver produced by the electi'ic process. ELECTRO-MAGNETISM. Analogies between electricity and magnetism discovered by Oersted of Copenhagen, in 1807, were established by him in 1819 et seq. and were confirmed by numerous subsequent experiments made by philosophers in Eng- land, France, Germany, America, and other countries. The electro-magnetic foi'ce is now applied by M. Breguet of Paris in the manufacture of theodolites and the finer kinds of mathematical instruments (1855). ELECTRO-PHYSIOLOGY. This branch of science has not been much cultivated since the discoveries of Galvani in 1790 ; all the phenomena of Electro-physiology or animal electricity being considered by Volta as due to an ordinai'y electric current. The correctness of Volta's views are now doubted by many, in consequence of the researches of Nobili (1827), Matteucci, and others at the present time, who consider that there is in the living body a nervous and muscular electric current. M. Du Bois-Reymond lectured on this subject at the Royal Institution, May and June, 1855. ELECTRO-TINT. Mr. Palmer of Newgate-street, London, has patented an invention by which engravings may not only be copied from other engraved plates, but the engraving itself actually produced, by electrical agency. There are sevei'al processes by which this is accomplished, one of which, also protected by a patent, Mr. Palmer calls Glyphography. ELECTRO-TYPE. The application of electricity to the multiplying copies of works of ai't was, in point of time, antecedent to all other varieties of electro-metallurgy. The first specimens were copies of coins by Mr. Spencer, so extremely like the originals as to deceive many persons. Any models, such as busts and ornaments, may now be electrotyped with wonderful accuracy and facility. Great improvements have been made on the original processes. ELEPHANT. This animal, in the earliest times, was trained to war. The history of the Maccabees infoi-ms us, that "to every elephant they appointed 1000 men armed with coats of mail, and 500 horse : and upon the elephants were strong towers of wood," &c. The elephants in the army of Antiochus were provoked to fight by showing them "■Wait an instant, until I telegraph the governor-general, and I will tell you." Yet tlie Submarine Telegi-apli had not then been thought of. But one of the most astonishing results of the Electric Telegraph has lately occurred in America, ■where the telegraph may be said to have run a race with Time, and beaten him. New Orleans is westward of New York, and the clocks are thus later in the former city than in the latter, in proportion to the difference of longitude. When the Atlantic made her first return voyage from Liverpool, a brief abstract of her news was telegraphed to New Orleans at a few minutes after noon (New York time) : it reached its destination at a few minutes before noon (New Orleans time), and was published in the New Orleans papers on the evening of the very day when the ship arrived at New York : the evening papers of New York and New Orleans gave the same news at the same hour ! ELE 231 EMB the " blood of grapes and mulberries." The first elephant said to have been seen in England, was one of enormous size, presented by the king of France to our Henry III., in U3S.*—BaJcer's Chron. ELEUSINIAN MYSTERIES. A great festival under this name was observed by the Athenians and other nations : these mj^steries were the most celebrated of all the religious ceremonies of Greece, and were instituted by Eumolpus, 1356 B.C. They were so supei'stitiously observed, that if any one revealed them, it was supposed that he had called divine vengeance upon him, and he was put to death. The mysteries were introduced from Eleusis into Rome, and lasted about 1800 years, and were at last abolished by Theodosius the Great, a.d. 389. ELGIN MARBLES. These admirable works of ancient art were derived chiefly from the Parthenon, a temple of Minerva in the Acropolis at Athens, of which temple they formed part of the frieze and pediment, built by Phidias about 500 B.c. Lord Elgin began the collection of these marbles during his mission to the Ottoman Porte, in 1802 ; they were purchased of him by the British government for 30,000^. and placed in the British Museum, in 1816.' ELL. An English measure containing a yard and a quarter. It was so named from ulna, the arm, and was fixed to this precise length by king Henry I. in llOl. — Stowe's Chron. This sovereign fixed, at the same time, the measure of the yard to the length of his arm. — Idem. ELOPEMENT. A married woman who departs from her husband, loses her dower by the statute of Westm. 2, c. 14 — except that her husband, without coercion of the Church, shall become reconciled to her, 13 Edw. I. 1284. — Vinev's Statutes. Earlier laws punished elopement with groat severity, and in cases wherein adultery followed from it, it was punished with death. See Adultery. ELPHIN, BISHOPRIC of. St. Patrick founded a cathedral near Elphin, "by a river issuing from two fountains," in the fifth century, and placed over it St. Asicua, whom he created bishop, and who soon after filled it with monks. After many centuries, and a little before the arrival of the English, tliis see was em-iched with large estates, upon the translation of Roscommon to it. Ardcarn, Druniciive, and others of less note, were also annexed to Elphin ; and by these unions it became at length one of the richest in all Ireland. It is valued in the king's books, by an extent returned 28 Eliz. at 103^. 18s. sterling. The see is now united to Kilmore, under the pro- visions of the Church Temporalities' act, passed Aug. 1833. ELY, BISHOPRIC of. A churcli was built here by Etheldra, queen of Egfrida, king of Northumberland, who founded also a religious house, .and planted it with virgins, and became first abbess herself The Danes ruined the latter ; but the monastery was rebuilt and filled with monks, on whom king Edgar and many succeeding monarchs bestowed great privileges, and made grants of land ; so that, in process of time, the abbey of Ely became the richest in England. Richard, the eleventh abbot, wishing to free himself from the bishop of Lincoln, within whose diocese the monas- tery was situated, made great interest with Henry I. to get Ely erected into a bishopric. His successor was the first prelate, a.d. 1109. It is valued in the king's books at 2134^ 18s. 5cZ. EMANCIPATION of the ROMAN CATHOLICS. See Roman Catholics. EMBALMING. The ancient Egyptians believed that their souls, after many thousand years, would come to reinhabit their bodies, in case these latter were preserved entire. Hence arose their practice of embalming the dead. The Egyptian manner of preserving the dead has been the admiration and wonder of modern times. They rendered the body not onlj' incorruptible, but it retained its full proportion of size, symmetry of features, and personal likeness. They called the embalmed bodies mummies, some of which, buried 3000 years ago, are perfect to this day. The .art of such embalming is now lost. Wiien Nicodemus came, witii Joseph of Arimathea, to pay the last duties to Our Saviour after his crucifixion, he brought a mixture of myrrh and aloes to embalm his hody.— John xix. 38. EMBARGO. This power is vested in the crown, but is rarely exercised except in extreme cases, and sometimes as a prelude to war. The most memorable instances of embargo * Wlicn Alexander had conquered Torus, king of India, ho took a groat elcph.int, wliich had fought valiantly for the king, and uamiug liiin Aj.ix, dodic.ited him to the sun, and let him go with this iuscription : — "xVlcxauder, tlie son of Jupiter, hath dedicated. Ajax to the sun." This elephant was found, it is said, with the iuscription 350 years after. EMB 232 EMP were those for the prevention of corn going out of the kingdom in 1766 ; and for the detention of all Russian, Danish, and Swedish ships in the several ports of the king- dom, owing to the armed neutrality, Jan. 14, 1801. See Armed Neutrality. EMBER WEEKS. Observed in the Christian Church in the third century, to implore the blessing of God on the produce of the earth by prayer and fasting. Ember DaTS, three of which fall in these weeks, and in which penitents sprinkle the ashes (embers) of humiliation on their heads. Four times in each year were appointed for these acts of devotion, so as to answer to the four seasons, spring, summer, autumn, and winter. EMBROIDERY. Its invention is usually asci'ibed to the Phrygians ; but we learn from Homer, and other ancient authors, that the Sidonians particularly excelled in this decorative species of needlework. Of this art very early mention is made in the Scriptures. — Exodus, xxxv. 35, and xxxviii. 23. An ancient existing specimen of beautiful embroidery is the Bayeux tapestry, worked by Matilda, the queen of William I. of England. See Bayeux Tapestry. EMERALD. The precious stone, of a green colour, is found in the East and in Peru ; inferior ones in other places. It has been alleged that there were no true emeralds in Europe before the conquest of Peru ; but there is a genuine emerald in the Paris Museum, taken from the mitre of Pope Julius II. who died in 1513, and Peru was not conquered till 1545 ; hence it is inferred that this emerald was brought from Africa, or the East. EMIGRATION. Of late years, emigrations from Britain have been considerable. In the ten j'ears ending 1830, the emigrations to our North American Colonies, West Indies, Cape of Good Hope, New South Wales, Swan River, Van Diemen's Land, &c., were, according to official returns, 154,291. In the decennial period to 1840, emigration had increased to 277,695, exclusively of the vast numbers that preferred settling in the United States of America. But in the ten years to 1850, and since, owing to the vast stream of emigration to Australia, this drain from the physical arteries of the empire has been of unparalleled extent. From the returns already made up to Jan. 5, 1852, we extract the numbers of the six latest years : — In 1S46, From England, 87,611. From Ireland, 38,813. Prom Scotland, 3,427. Total, 129,851. 111 1847, Ditto 153,898. Ditto . 95,756. Ditto 8,616. Total, 258,270. In 1848, Ditto . . . 176,883. Ditto . . . 59,701. Ditto . . . 11,505. Total, 248,089. In 1849, Ditto 212,124. Ditto . 70,247. Ditto 17,127. Total, 299,498. In 1850. Ditto . . . 214,612. Ditto . . . 51,083. Ditto . . . 15,154. Total, 280,849. In 1851, Ditto 254,970. Ditto . 62,350. Ditto 18,646. Total, 335, & 66. The total emigration from the United Kingdom was in 1852, 368,764; in 1853, 329,937. The emigration to Australia, since the discovery of the gold-fields in that quarter, has been prodigious, being in 1852, 87,000. There was a great falling off of numbers in 1853. EMINENCE. A spiritual dignity in the Roman States, conferred upon cardinals by a decree of Pope Urban VIII. dated Jan. 10, 1630, as being more honourable than the title of Excellency. Previously to that time, cardinals had t\\e title oi I ilustrissimi. — Ashe. The grand-master of Malta also obtained this title. — Pardon. EMIR. A title of dignity among the Turks and Persians, first given to caliphs. This rank was first awarded to the descendants of Mahomet, by his daughter Fatima, about A.D. 650 — Ricaut. To such only (who were held in great esteem) was originally given the privilege of wearing the green turban. The title is also given to high officers , another title being joined. EMLY, BISHOPRIC of. An ancient Irish see, supposed to have been founded by St. Patrick, and formerly endowed with large possessions. Emly was called Imelaca- Ibair : and St. Ailbe was the first bishop in a.d. 448. Ancient historians mention it as having been, about this time, a great and flourishing city ; but Emly is now an inconsiderable village. In 1568, the see was united to the then archiepiscopal see of Cashel. See Cashel. EMPALEMENT. This barbarous and dreadful mode of putting criminals to death is mentioned by Juvenal, and was often inflicted in Rome, particularly by the monster Nero. The victim doomed to empalement is spitted through the body on a stake fixed upright ; and this punishment is still used in Turkey and Arabia. Tlie dead bodies of murderers were sometimes staked in this manner, previously to being buried, in Eagland. — Southern, Williams (who committed suicide), the murderer of EMP 233 ENG the Marr family, in Ratcliffe Highway, London, Dec. 8, 1811, was staked in his ignominious grave. This practice has been since abolished with us. See Burying Alive. EMPEROR. Originally a title of honour at Rome, conferred on victorious generals, who were first saluted by the soldiers by that name. Augustus Caesar was the first Roman emperor, 27 B.C. Valens was the first emperor of the eastern empire, a.d. 364. Charlemagne was the first emperor of Germanj% crowned by Leo. III. a.d. 800. Ottoman I. founder of the Turkish Empire, was the first emperor of Turkey, 1 296. The Czar of Russia was the first emperor of that country, 1722. Napoleon Bona- parte was the first emperor of France, in 1804. Don Pedro IV. of Portugal was the first emperor (of Brazil) in the New World, 1825. EMPIRICS. They were a set of early physicians who contended that all hypothetical reasoning respecting the operations of the animal economy was useless, and that experience and observation alone were the foundation of the art of medicine. The sect of Empirics was instituted by Acron of Agrigentum, about 473, B.C. ENAMELLING. The origin of the art of enamelling is doubtful. It was practised by the Egyptians and other early nations, and was known in England in the time of the Saxons. At Oxford is an enamelled jewel which belonged to Alfred, and which, as appears by the inscription, was made by his order, in his reign, about a.d. 887. ENCAUSTIC PAINTING. The art of enamelling or painting by ^ve.— Bailey. Painting with burnt wax. — Chambers. It was known to the ancients. — Idem,. This very beautifid art, after having been lost, was restored by Count Caylus and M. Bachelier, A.D. 1749. ENCENIA. Festivals anciently kept on the days on which cities were built and churches consecrated ; and, in later times, ceremonies which were renewed at certain periods, as at Oxford, at tlie celebrations of founders and benefactors. — Oldisworth. Thoy were feasts celebrated by the Jews on the 25tli of the ninth month, in commemoration of the cleansing or purifying the temple by the Maccabees, which had been polluted by Antiochus Epiphanes, 131 B.C. ENCUMBERED ESTATES (IRELAND) BILL. See Incumbered Edates. ENCYLOP.^DIA. The first work to which this designation was expressly given, was that of Abulfaragius, an Arabian writer, in the thirteenth century. Many were published as early as the fifteenth century, but none alphabetically. Ckamha-s'.i Dictionary was tlie first of the circle of arts and sciences, in England, first published in 1728. See Cijclopcedia. ENGHIEN, BATTLE of. Fought by the British under William III. and the French under Mar.shal Luxemburg, who were victorious, Aug. 3, 1692. William had put himself at the head of the confederated army in the Netherlands, and leagued him.^elf with the Protestant powers upon the Continent against the ambition of Louis XIV. and in the end he triumphed. A victory obtained here by the great Cond^. first ^avo the ducal title to a prince of the house of Bourbon Condd. The duke D'Enghien was shot by torch-light, immediately after condemnation by a ^military court, at Vincennes, March 20,1804. The body was exhumed, March 20, 1816. ENGINEERS. This name is of modern date, as engineers were formerly called Trench-masters. Sir William Pelham officiated as Treucli-m!»stcr in 1622. The chief engineer was called camp master-general in 1634. Captain Thomas Rudd had the rank of chief engineer to tlie king, about 1650. The corps of engineers was formerly a civil corps, but Wius made a military force, and directed to rank with the artillery, April 25, 1787. It has a colonel-in-chief, and a second, and five colonel-commandants, and twenty colonels.— The first society of Civil Engineers was formed by Smeaton and others in 1793, and was afterwards termed the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers. It published 3 vols, of Transactions, and still exists.— The Institution of Civil Engineers was established in 1818, and obtained a charter in 1828. ENGLAND. See Britain. So named by order of Egbert, first king of England, in a general council held at Winchester, a.d. 829. This appellative had been used as far back as a.d. 688, but had never been, until then, ratified by any assembly of the Lation. It came from A mjlcn, a tribe of Saxons, and lond, the'Saxon for country. First hostile appearance of the Danes upon the coast. (See Dane*) . a.d. 783 Thoy enter the Tliames with a fleet of :-l50 sail, anil destroy Canterbury and London by fire 851 Second series of iuvasious . . . 8ti7 Reign of Alfroil, who defeats the inv.i- dcrs in ji5 pitched battles . .a.d. 871 [The University of Oxford is said to have been founded about this time] Alfred's body of laws framed . . . £00 ENG 234 ENG ENGLAND,* continued. His general survey made, and the rolls deposited at Wincliester . . a.d. 806 He divides England into counties . . 900 University of Cambridge founded. (See Cambridge) 915 General massacre of the Danes . . Ill02 Sweyn, king of Denmark, arrives in England, and avenges the death of his countrymen. Ethelred II. flies to Normandy for protection . . . 1003 Ethelred recalled from exile . . . 1014 The Danes again ravage England and complete its conquest . . . . 1017 The Saxon line restored . . . .1041 Era of the conquest. The Norman line begins in William I. .... 1006 Justices of peace iirst appointed . . 1076 New survey of England ; Domesday- book, commenced 1080 — completed, (See Domesday Book) . . . . 10S6 The empress Maud, daughter of Henry I. claims the succession on the death of her father 1135 She lands in England . . . Sept. 1139 Is crowned at Winchester . March 3, 11-tl Is defeated ; retires to France . . . 1147 Returns, and concludes a peace, through her son, with Stephen . . . . 1153 The Saxon line restored . . . . 1154 Murder of Becket at the altar. (See Becket's Murder-) 1171 Conquest of Ireland by Henry II. . . 1172 England divided into circuits for the administration of justice . . . 1176 English laws digested by GlanviUe . . 1181 Bichard I. joins the crusaders. (See Crusades) 1191 He is made prisoner by Henry VI. of Germany Dec. 1192 Is ransomed by his subjects for the sum of400,000« 1194 Diieu et mon droit) 1198 Normandy is lost to England in the reign of John 1204 England put under an interdict by the pope, and king John excommuni- cated 1208 M.agna Charta, or the great Charter of English Liberty, obtained by the ba- rons. (See Magna Ckarto.) . . . 1215 Gold first coined in England. (See Coin and Gold) 1257 The Commons of England summoned to parUament. (See Parliament) . . 1265 The principality of Wales united to England by Edward 1 1283 Death of Roger Bacon . . . .1294 Murder of Edward II. at Berkeley castle, {which see) 1327 Art of weaving brought to England. (See Weaving) 1331 Edward III. takes Calais, after a year's siege. (See Calais) . . . . 1347 Orderof the Garterinstituted,(see Garter, Order of) 1350 Edward the Black Prince takes the French king prisoner, at the battle of Poictiers {which see) .... 1356 Law pleadings in English . . . . 1362 Death of Wicklifle 1385 Murder of Richard II. at Pomfret castle, (wkich see) 1399 The line of Lancaster .... 1399 Order of the Bath instituted by Henry IV. {See Bath) 1399 Henry IV. marries Joan of Navarre a. d. France conquered by Henry V., who is made regent of the kingdom . . . Marries Catherine of France . Henry VI. crowned at Paris . Dec. He marries Margaret of Anjou . . . Henry is deposed by Edward. Line of York. (See Towton) . . . . Margaret and her son made prisoners at Tewkesbui-y .... May 4, The prince killed in cold blood May 21,' Henry murdered . . June 20, The civil wars between the houses of York and Lancaster terminate by the death of Richard III. at Bosworth, {which see, and Jioses) . . . . Henry VII. marries Elizabeth, daughter of Edward IV Court of Star-chamber instituted. (See &ar-chamhe.r) Yeoman of the Guard, being the first appearance of a standing army in England, instituted by Henry VII. . Henry sells the sovereignty over France to Louis Gardening introduced into England generally, from the Netherlands . . Death of prince Arthur . . . . Sliillings first coined. (See Shillings) . Henry VIII. marries Catherine of Spain, widow of his brother Arthur Interview with Francis 1. at Ardres, Pas de Calais. (See Field of the Cloth of Gold) May 31, First geographical map of England drawn. (See article Maps) . . . Henry VIII. receives the title of "De- fender of the Faith," {which see) . Is styled " Head of the Church" . . He divorces Catherine .... The Pope's authority in England is abolislied Era of the Reformation .... Sir Thomas More beheaded . . . Anna Boleyn beheaded .... Queen Jane Seymour dies . . . . The first authorised edition of the Sacred Volume printed Cromwell, lord Essex, beheaded . . Anne of Cleves divorced .... Queen Catherine Howard and lady Koch- ford beheaded The title of " King of Ireland " confirmed to the English sovereigns by act of parliament Henry marries Catherine Parr, widow of lord Latimer Protectorate of Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset Edward VI. promotes the Reformation during his sliort reign . . . . Interest fixed at 10 per cent. . Somerset deprived of power . . . And is beheaded Book of Common-prayer and the church service established .... Mary restores Papacy . . . . Execution of lady Jane Grey, and of her husband, father, and friends Mary marries Philip of Spain . . . Bishops Ridlej', Latimer, and Cranmer burnt. (See Cranmer) . . lo.io and Calais retaken by the Fi-ench . . . Reign of Elizabeth; Papacy abolished, and the Church of England established nearly as it now exists Execution of Mary, queen of Scots . . 1403 1417 1420 1430 1445 1461 1471 1471 1471 1485 1486 1487 1488 1492 1500 1502 15U3 1509 1520 1520 1521 1532 1532 1533 1534 1535 1530 1537 1539 1540 1540 1542 1543 1543 1547 1547 1547 1549 1552 1552 1553 1554 1554 1556 1558 1558 1587 * The various occurrences of a remarkable character relating to England, not noticed in this place, will be found under their respective heads through the volume. ENG 235 ENG ENGLAND,* continued. The Spanish Armadca. (See Armada) a.d. 15SS Devereux, carl of Essex, beheaded . IGUl Uuion of the two Crowus . . . . 1603 James I. is styled the first " King of Great Britain " 1G04 The Gunpowder plot (w/tic^ see) . . . 1605 The present translation of the Bible . 1011 Baronets first created. (See Baronets) . 1611 Shakspoare dies 1616 Raleigh beheaded . .... 161S Anne of Denmark, queen of James, dies. 161!) Camden, the historian, dies . . . 1623 Cliarles I. marries Henrietta of France . 16'25 Death of Lord Bacon .... 162ii Buckingham assassinated . . . . l(i'28 Hampden's trial 1637 Lord Strafford beheaded . . . . 1641 The civil war against Charles breaks out. 1642 Archbishop Land beheaded . . . 1644 Death of Ham pdon 1644 Execution of Cliarles I. ; the fiirm of government changed . Jan. 30, 1649 Oliver Cromwell made Protector of the Commonwealth 1653 Death of Cromwell 1658 Richai-d Cromwell Protector Sept. 4, 11)58 He resigns .... April 22, 1659 Monarchy re-established in the "' Resto- ration of Charles II." . . . . 1660 He marries Catherine, the Infanta of Portugal .... May 21, 1662 A great plague ravages London, carrying off' 68, 000 persons. (Hco Plague) . .1665 Gi'eat fii'c of London. (See Fires) . . KiOO Death of Milton 1674 The Habeas Corpus Act, for protecting English subjects .against false arrest and imprisonment, passed . . . 167S Lord Ru.ssell and Algernon Sydney put to death 1683 Duke of Monmouth's rebellion . . . 1685 Abdication of James II 1688 Era of the Revolution, styled by Voltaire the era of English liberty; William HI. proclaimed 1688 Bank of England incorporated. (See Hank of England) 1694 Death of tlie queen regnant Mary, con- sort of William . . . Dec. 28, 1694 Death of James II. in exile . Aug. 6, 1701 Union oftlie two kingdoms, by act, under the title of Great Britain . . . 1707 Accession of the House of Hanover . 1714 Interest at 5 yw'c cm< 1714 The Scots' rebellion .... 1715 Dcjith of Marlborough . . . . 1722 Order of tlie Bath {tohich see) . . . 1725 Death of Newtoa 1727 Death of Wilhelmina Caroline, queen of George II 1737 Second Scots' rebellion .... 1745 Lords Tjovat, Balmerino, and Kilmarnock beheaded 1746 Death of i)riuco Frederick Tx^uis, son of George II., and fatlier of George III. . 1751 New style introducedintoEngl.md. (.Sec New l^,/l,) .... Sept. 3, 1752 Conquest of India under colonel, after- wards Lord Clive. (See India,) . . 1757 Dcathof Gen. Wolfe. (SeeQtubcc) . .17.09 Accession of George III. . . Oct. 25. 1760 His nuptials with Charlotte Sophia of Slecklonburgh Strclitz . Sept. 8, 1761 They are crowned . . . Sept. 22, 1761 George, prince of Wales, born Aug. 12, 1762 Isle of Man, (wliicli sa;) annexed to the sovereignty of Great Britain . .1765 Death of the Old Pretender, the "Cheva- lier de St. George " . . Dec. 30, 17C5 Commencement of the war with Ame- rica. (See America) . . . . 1775 Death of Chatham . . . April 8, 1778 Separation of America from Great Bri- tain Nov. 30, 1782 Margaret Nicholson's attempt on the life of George III. . . . Aug. 3, 1786 Death of Charles Edward, the Young Pretender, at Rome . . . . 17SS George III. becomes deranged, Oct. 12, 1783 He recovers, and goes to St. Paul's to make thanksgiving . . Apr. 23, 1789 First coalition against France. (See Coalitions) . . . . June 26, 1792 Habeas Corpus suspended by the king. (See Habeas Corpus) .... 1794 Marriage of tlie prince of Wales with the princess Caroline of Brunswick, Apr. 8, 1795 Cash payments suspended . Feb. 25, 17ii7 Death of Edmund Burke . July 8, 1797 Habeas Corpus again suspended, Aug. 28, 1798 Hatfield's attempt on the life of Geo. III. (See Hatfield) . . . May 11, ISOO The legislative union with Ireland. (See Union) Jan. 1, 1801 [The English sovereigns relinquish the title of " King of France, " on the union of the two countries ; the em- pire now called the " Uuited King- dom of Great Britain and Ireland."] The Habeas Corpus act is again sus- pended April 19, ISOl Peace of Amiens (which see) March 27, ISOl J )esp,ard's treason. (See Despard) J a.n. 16, 1803 War against Bonaparte . . April 29, 1803 Death of Nelson . . . . Oct. 21, 1805 Death of Mr. Pitt . . . Jan. 23, 1806 Lord Melville impeached, (see Trials), April 29 ; acquitted . . June 12, 1806 Death of Chai-les James Fox . Sept. 13, ls06 Death of General Moore. (See Corunna, Battle of) ... . Jan. 16, 1809 Duke of York impeached by colonel Wardle Jan. 26, 1809 The jubilee (w/mcA see) . . Oct. 25, 1809 Sir Francis Burdett's arrest, and subse- quent riots . . . . April 6, 1810 King's malady returns . . Nov. 2, 1810 The prince of Wales is sworu as prince regent Feb. 5, 1811 Assassination of Mr. Perceval, prime minister May 11, 1812 War with America is commenced. (See United Slates) . . . June 18, 1812 Peace with France . . . April 14, 1S14 Visit of the emjieior of Russia and king of Prussia to England . . June 7, 1814 Centenary of the house of Hanover cele- bnated Aug. 1, 1814 Peace with America . . Dec. 24, 1814 Battle of Waterloo, which finally closes tlic French war . . . June 18, 1815 Death of Sheridan . . . July 9, 1816 Spa-fields meeting (W(ic7t . Iff) . Dec. 2, 1816 Green-bag inquiry (?t7(icA «c«) . Feb. 2, isi" Habeas Corpus suspended . Feb. 21, 1817 Cash payments resumed . Sept. 22, 1817 Princess Charlotte of Wales, who had married prince Leopold, May 2, 1816, dies in childbirth . . Nov. 6, 1817 Duke of Clarence's (afterwards William IV.)man-iaffe Tulv 11, ISIS Queen Cli.arlotte, consort of George III., dies at Kew .... Nov. 17, 1818 * The various occurrences of a remarkable character relating to England, not noticed in this place, will be found under their respective heads through the volume. ENG 236 ENG ENGLAND, continued. Manchester reform meeting, (wJcich see) ; its disastrous terminatiou . Aug. 16, 1819 Duke of Kent dies . . . Jan. 23, 1820 Death of George III. . . . Jan. 29. 1820 Trial of Queen Caroline. (See Queen Caroline's Trial) . . . Aug. 19, 1820 Coronation of George IV. . . July 19, 1S21 Queen Caroline expiresat Hammersmith, near London . . . Aug. 7, 1821 Lord Byron dies . . . . Ajjril 19, 1824 Duke of York dies . . . Jan. 22, 1827 Mr. Canning, first lord of the treasury, (See Administratimu) , . April 10, 1827 His death .... Aug. 8, 1827 The portals of the constitution thrown open to the Roman Catholics. (See Roman Catholics) . . . April 13, 1829 Death of George IV. . . June 20, 1830 Mr. Huskisson killed on the Liverpool railway, (which see) . . . Sept. 1-5, 1830 The cholera morbus makes great ravages in England. (See Cholera) . Oct. 26, 1831 Parliamentary reform ; act passed. ^See iJf/brmm Parliament) . . June 7, 1S32 Sir Walter Scott dies . . . Sept. 21, 1832 Assault on William IV. by a discharged pensioner at Ascot . . June 19, 1832 Coleridge dies . . . . July 25, 18::'4 Slavery abolished. (See Slaves) Aug. 1, 1884 Coi-pd'ation reform ; act passed. ( See Corporations) . . . Sept. 9, 183.5 WilUam IV. dies .... June 20, 1837 [The crown of Hanover is now sepa- rated from that of Great Britain.] Coronation of Victoria . . June 28, 1838 Marriage of the queen with prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg . . . Feb. 10, 1840 Oxford's assault on the queen. (See Oxford, Edtcard) . . . June 10, 1S40 Prince of Wales born . . . Nov. 9, 1841 Kiug of Prussia visits England, Jan. 24, 1842 John Francis fires a pistol at the queen. (See Francis) . . . May 30, 1842 Bean, a deformed youth, presents a pis- tol at her . . . . July 3, 1842 Queen embarks for Scotland on her first visit there . . . Aug. 29, 1842 Southey dies . . . March 21, 1843 Queen's visit to the Orleans family at Chateau d'Eu . . . Sept. 2, 1843 King of Saxony visits England May 28, 1844 Emperor of Russia's visit . June 1, 18-14 Louis Philippe's visit . . Oct. 7, 1844 Queen's visit to Germany . . Aug. 9, 1845 The exiled French royal family take up their residence at Claremont March 4, 1848 Great Chartist demonstration in Lon- don April 10, 1848 Cholera re-appears in England in 1848 and 1849 Queen embarks on her visit to Ireland Aug. 1, 1849 Adelaide, dowager queen, dies Dec. 2. 1849 The "Exhibition of 1851," projected by prince Albert, ofiicially announced Jan. 3, 1850 Death of Wordsworth . . April 23, 1850 Pate's ai3sault on the queen . June 27, 1850 Death of sir Robert Peel . July 2, 1850 1852 1852 1853 1863 18; Duke of Cambridaje dies . July 8, 1850 Queen's visit to Belgium . . Aug. 21, 1850 Great excitement occasioned by the pope's establishment of a Roman Catholic hierarchy in England Nov. 1850 Death ofthe poet Thomas Moore Feb. 26, 1852 Death of Wellington . . Sept. 14, 1852 His public funeral at St. Paul's. (See Wellington's Funeral) . . Nov. 18, Shght earthquake at Liverpool, &c. Nov. 9, Prince Leopold bom . . April 7, Mrs. Stowe visits England, &c. April, Camp at Chobham formed on June 14 ; breaks up . . . . Aug. 19, 1853 Death of sir Charles Napier, conqueror of Scinde .... Aug. 29, 1853 English and French fleets enter Bospho- rus Oct. 22, 1853 Protocol signed betwcn England, France, Austria, and Prussia, for re-establish- ment of peace between Russia and Turkey .... Dec. 5, 1853 Many meetings on Eastern question, favoui-able to Tin-key . Sept. to Dec. 1853 Exportation of military stores prohibited Feb. 18, 1854 Great strike at Preston, 14,972 hands unemployed at one time, Oct. 15, 1853, to May 1, Queen reviews Baltic fleet . March 11, Ti'caty of alliance between England, France, and Turkey, signed March 12, 1854 War declared against Russia. (See Russo- Turkish War) . . . Jtarch 28, 1854 Fast day on account of the war April 2ii, 1854 Marquis of Anglesey dies . May 28, 1854 Important commercial treaty concluded with United States by Lord Elgin on behalf of Canada . . June 7, 1854 King of Portugal visits England June, 1854 Crystal Palace opened by the Queen, June 10, 1854 Cholera prevails in south and west of London . . . Aug. and Sept. 1854 Death of Lord Denman . Sept. 22, 1854 Thanksgiving for abundant harvest, Oct. 1, Great explosion and fire at Gateshead and Newcastle . . . Oct. 6, Meeting of Parliament . Dec. 12, Resignation of Lord Aberdeen's ministry Jan. 29, 1855 Formation of Lord Palmerston's ministry after failures by others Feb. 1855 Sebastopol Inquiry Committee nominated Feb. 23, 1855 Visit of Emperor and Empress of French April 16 to 21, 1855 Loan of 16 millions agreed to . April, 1S55 Distribution of Crimean medals May 18, 1855 New Metropolitan cattle market opened, June 13, 1855 Death of Lord Raglan . June 28, 1855 Agitation and rioting concerning Sun- day tiading bill, which is withdrawn, July 2, 1855 The queen and prince visit Paris, Aug. 18, 1855 1854 1854 1854 KINGS AND QUEENS OF ENGLAND. BEFORE THE CONQUEST. 827. Egbert, first sole monarch, so reigned ten years ; succeeded by his son. 837. Ethelwolf; reigned twenty years ; suc- ceeded by his son. 857. Ethelbald. called the Second ; died 20th Dec, 860 ; succeeded by his next brother. 800. Ethelbert; died in 866, and was suc- ceeded by 866. Ethelred, third son of Ethelwolf ; died April 27th, 872 ; succeeded by 872. Alfred, sumamed the Great, fourth son of Ethelwolf, died 28th Oct. 901. 901. Edward the Elder; succeeded his father Alfred ; died in 924. 924. Atiielstan, eldest son of the last king ; died Oct. 17, 940. 940. Edmund I., fifth son of Edward the Elder; bled to death from a wound ENG 287 ENG ENGLAND, continued. received in an affray, May 20th, 947. 047. Edred, brother of Edmund, died in 955, and was succeeded by 955. Edwy, eldest son of Edmund, died of grief in 959. In this ruign, Duns- tan, a turbulent and ambitious priest, ruled the king, who afterwards ban- ished him. 959. Edgar, styled the Peacealilc, brother of Kdwy ; died July 1st, 974. 974. Edward the Martyr, his son, stabbed at Corfe Castle, at the instance of his mother-in-law, Elfrida, Mar. lSth,979. 979. Ethelredll. ; succeeded his half-brother Edward; retired. 1013. Sweine, proclaimed Vnng ; died Feb. 3rd, 1014 ; succeeded by iiis sou. 1014. Canute the Great ; while absent in Denmark the exiled king returned. 1015. Btlielred restored,- died April 24th, 1016; succeeded by his son. 1016. Edmund Ironside ; divided the king- dom with Canute ; murdered at Ox- ford, Nov. 30th, 1016; reigned seven months. 1016. Canute ar/ain : maried Emma, widow of Ethelred ; died in 1036. 1036. Harold I., his natural son ; a cruel prince ; died Apiil 14 th, 10:10. 1039. Hardicanute, son of Canute an^i Emma; died of repletion at a marriage feast. 1041. Edward the Confessor, son of Ethelred and Emma : died Jan. 5, 1066, naming William of Normandy his successor. 1066. Harold II., son of earl Godwin ; reigned nine months : killed in battle. [William of Normandy invaded Eng- land in Sept. 1060, with a powerful fleet and army, and gave battle to Harold, at Hastings, on the 14 th October following, over whom he obtained a complete victory, and Harold being slain, he was pro- claimed king by his triumjjhant army on the spot.] AFTEE THE CONQUEST. 1066. William the Conqueror ; died at Rouen, Sept. 9, 1087. 10S7. William II. Rufus; killed by an arrow, Aug. 2. 1100. 1100. Henry I. Beauclerk, his brother ; died of a surfeit, Dec. Ist, 1135. 1135. Stephen, earl of Blois, nephew of Henry: the empress Maud, daughter of Henry, contended with him for the crown ; died Oct. 25th, 1154. 1154. Henry II. Plantagenet, grandson of Henry and son of Maufl ; married Eleanor of France; died July 6th, 1189. 11 89. Richard I. Comr de Lion, his son ; died of a wotuid, April 6, 1199. 1199. John, the brutlier of Richard; mamod Isabella d'AnguulCmc ; died Oct. 18th, 1216. 1216. Henry III. son of John ; married Elea- nor of Provence ; died Nov. lOth, 1272. 1272. Edward I. son of Henry: suruamed Lnngshanks ; married Eleanor of Ca.s- tilc ; 2udlv, Margai'ct of France ; died July 7th, "1307. 1307. Edward II. son of Edward I. ; married Isabella of France ; dethroned, Jan. 25th, 1327 ; munlcred at Berkeley Castle, Sept. 21, following. 1327. Edward III. his sou; manied Pliilippa, of Hainault ; died Jimc 21, 1377. 1377. Richard II. sou of Edward the Black Prince, and grandson of Edward III. ; married Anne of Austria; 2ndly, Isabella of France ; dethroned Sept. 28th, 1399 ; nmrdtred at Pomfret Castle, 10th Feb. following. HOUSE OF LANCASTER. 1399. Henry IV. covisin of Richard II. ; mar- ried Joan of Navarre ; died Mar. 20th, 1413 ; succeeded by 1413. Henry V. his son ; married Catherine of "France ; died Aug. 31st, 1422. 1422. Heniy VI. his son ; married Margaret of Anjou ; deposed JIar. 4th, 1461 ; murden-ed. by Richard, duke of Glou- cester, in the Tower, June 20th, 1471. HOUSE OF YORK. 1461. Edward IV. ; married lady Elizabeth Grey ; died April 9th, 14!S3. 1483. Edward V. his son ; deposed June 22nd, 1483, and murdered in the Tower by Gloucuster ; reigned two mouths and 13 days. 1483. Richard III. brother of Edward IV. ; dain at Bosworth, Aug. 22nd, 1485. H0U.9E OF TUDOR, 1485. Henry VII. ; married Elizabeth of York ; died April 22nd, 1509. 1509. Henry VIII. his son. See preceding annals ; died Jan. 2Sth. 1547. 1547. Edward VI. sou of Henry VIII. rby the lady Jane Seymour), died July 6th, 1553. 1553. Mary, daughter of Henry (by Catherine of Arragon), married Philip of Spain ; died Nov. 17th, 1558. 1558. Elizabeth, daughter of Henry (by Anna Boloyn), died Mar. 24th, 1603. HOUSE OF STUART. 1603. James I. of England, and VI. of Scot- laud, son of Maiy, queen of Scots : married Anne, princess of Denmark ; died Mar. 27th, 1625. 1625. Charles I. his son; n)aiTied Henrietta of France; beJieailed at Whitehall, Jan. 30th. 1649. 1649. Commonwealth. Oliver Cromwell made protector, Dec. 12th, 1653; diedScpt. 3rd, 1658. Kicliard Cromwell, his son, made protector Sept. 4th, 16.58 ; resigned Apr. 22nd, 1650. 1660. Charles II. sou of Ch.arles I. ; married tlie infanta Catherine of Portugal ; died Feb. 6th, 1685. 1685, James II. his brother ; married 1st, Anne Hyde ; 2ndly, the princess of Modena ; abdicated by flight, Dec. 12th, 1688; died in exile, Aug. 6th, 17iil. If 89 ' William III. prince of Orange, and \ Mary, liis queen, daughter of James ; began their reign, Feb. 13th, 1680 ; Mary died Dec. 28th, 1694; and Wil- liam of a fall from his horse, Mar. 8th, 1702. 1702. Anne, second daughter of James ; mar- ried George, prince of Denmark ; died without issue, Aug. 1st, 1714. HOU.se OF HANOVER 1714. George I. elector of Hanover and duke of Bninswick -Lunenburg ; son of Sophia, who was daughter of Eliza- beth, the daughter of James I. ; mar- ried the princess Sophia ; died June nth. 1727. 1727. Geoi-ge II. his son; married to Wilhel- mina-Caroline of Brandenburg-An- spach ; died Oct. 25th, 1760. 1760. George III. grandson of George II. ; ENG 238 ENG ENGLAND, continued. married Charlotte of Mcckleuburg- Strelitz ; died Jan. 29th, 1820. 1820. George IV. his son ; married Caroline of Brunswick ; died June 26th, 1830. 1830. William IV. brother of George IV. ; mar- ried Adelaide of Saxe-Meiuingon ; died June 20th, 1837. 1837. Victoria, the reigning queen, whom God PRESERVE. THE PRESENT (1855) ROYAL FAMILY OF ENGLAND. The Queen. Alexandrina-ViCTORiA, only daughter of Edward, Duke of Kent ; bom May 24, 1819 ; succeeded to the throne on the decease of her uncle, William IV. June 20, 1837. Crowned at Westminster, June 28, 1838. Married (Feb. 10, 1810) to her cousin, Francis-ALBERr-Augustus- Charles-Emmanuel, duke of Saxe, prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha ; and has issue : 1. Viotoria-Adelaide-Mary-Louisa, princess royal, born Nov. 21, 1840. 2. Albert-Edward, prince of Wales, duke of Saxony, duke of Cornwall and Rothesay, earl of Chester and Carrick, baron of Renfrew, and lord of the Isles, born, Nov. 9, 1841. 3. Alice-Maud-Mary, bom April 25, 1843. 4. Alfred-Ernest, born Aug. 6, 1844. 5. Helena-Augusta-Victoria, born May 25, 1846. 6. Louisa-Carolina-Alberta, born March 18, 1848. 7. Arthur-Patrick- Albert, bom May 1, 1850. 8. Leopold-George-Duncau- Albert, born April 7, 1853. The Queen's JIother. Victoria-Maria-Louisa, duchess of Kent, aunt to the duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, born Aug. 17, 1786 ; married, 1st (Decern. 21, 1803) Emich-Charles, prince of Leiningeu, who died July 4, 1814, leaving issue, Charles, prince of Leiningen, born Sept. 12, 1804, and the princess Feodore, born Dec. 7, 1807. Married, 2nd (May 28, 1818) to Edward duke of Kent, who died Jan. 23, 1820. Issue, The Queen. England and Wales were united a.d. 1233, and Scotland was united to both in 1707, and the three were then styled Gi'eat Britain. Ireland was incorporated with these countries by the act of Legislative Union, Jan. 1, 1801, and the whole called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. ENGLAND, NEW, North America. First settled by the Puritans who were driven from Europe at the beginning of the I7th century by religious persecution. The first attempt to form a settlement was made in 1607. Named New England by captain Smith in 1614. Settlement of the Plymouth company in 1620. The inhabi- tants are mostly descendants from the natives of England. ENGLISH LANGUAGE. See article Languages. From the High Dutch or Teutonic sprung (among others) the English language, now one of the most copious and beautiful of Europe. Law pleadings were made in English by order of Edward III. instead of the French language, which had been continued from the time of the Conquex'or, a.d. 1362. The English tongue and English apparel were ordered to be used in Ireland, 28 Hen. VIII. 1536. The English was ordered to be used in all lawsuits, and the Latin disused, May, 1731. ENGRAVING. The engraving of gems is a branch of art of the highest antiquity. The earliest writers make mention of engraved seals and seal rings, and there still exist many antique engravings equal to later productions of similar artists. Engraving from plates and wood is chiefly of modern invention, having its origin about the middle of the fifteenth century. Engraving on glass was perfected to an ai't by Boudier, of Paris, 1799. The copyright to engravings has been protected by several statutes ; among the principal are the acts 16 & 18 Geo. III. 1775 and 1777 ; and the acts 7 & 8 Vict. Aug. 6, 1844, and 15 Vict. May 28, 1852. ENGRAVING os COPPER. Prints from engraved copper-plates made their appearance about A.D. 1450, and were first produced in Germany. Masso, surnamed Finiguerra, was the first Italian artist in this way, 1460. The earliest date known of a copper- plate engraving is 1461. Rolling presses for working the plates were invented in 1545, and many improvements of it followed. Of the art of etching on copper by means of aquafortis, Francis Mazzouli, or Parmegiano, is the reputed inventoi^ about A.D. 1532.— De Piles. ENGRAVING, LITHOGRAPHIC. This is a new branch of the art, and Alois Scnne- felder may be regarded as the inventor of it. It was first announced on the continent in 1798, and became more known as polyautography in 1808. It was introduced into general use in England by Mr. Ackermann, of London, in 1817, since which time it has come into very general use. Some of our fine prints are of lithographic engraving. ENGRAVING, MEZZOTINTO. The art was discovered by Siegen, and was improved by Prince Rupert in 1648; sir Christopher Wren further improved it in 1662. Aquatinta, by which a soft and beautiful effect is produced, was invented by the celebrated French artist, St. Non, about 1662; he communicated his invention toLe ENG 239 EPI Prince. Barrabe of Paria was distinguished for his improvements in this kind of engraving, 1763. Chiaro-oscuro engraving originated with the Germans, and was first practised by Mair, one of whose prints bears date 1491. See Zincu'jruphy, &c. ENGRAVING on STEEL. The mode of engraving on soft steel, which, after it has been hardened, will multiply copper-plates and fine impressions indefinitely, was introduced into England by Messrs. Perkins and Heath, of Philadelphia, in 1819. Steel engraving produces the most delicate and beiiutiful impressions, and is more esteemed than eugraviug on copper. ENGRAVING on WUOD. Took its rise from the hrief malders, or manufacturers of playing-cards, about a.D. 1400 ; and from this sprung the invention of printiug, first attempted by means of wooden types, not moveable. See Printing. The art is referred by some to a Florentine, and by others to Reuss, a German ; it was greatly improved by Uurer and Lucas Van Leyden, in 1497 ; and was brought to perfection in Euglaud by Berwick, his brother, and pupils, Nesbett, Andersou, &c., 1789 et scq. The earliest wood engraving which has reached our times is one representing St. Christopher carrying the infant Jesus over the sea; it bears date A.D. 1423. ENLISTMENT op SOLDIERS and SEAMEN. It is declared by statute that no persons enlisting as soldiers or sailors are to be sworn in before a magistrate in less than twenty-four hours, and then they are at liberty to withdraw upon their returning the enlistment or bounty money, and 21s. costs. Enlistment, formerly most arbitrary, and forcibly made, is now seldom other than voluntary in either service. ENNISKILLEN, Ireland. The people of this town occupy a remarkable place in the history of the civil wars of Ireland. They made an obstinate defence against the army of Elizabeth, 1595. Their memorable defence against James II., 1689. 1500 Enniskilleuers met general M'Ciu'ty with a force of 6000 men, of whom 3000 were slain, and nearly all the rest were made prisoners, they losing but 20 men, July 20, 1689. The dragoon regiment called the " luniskillingers," is recruited here. ENTOMOLOGY. This branch of natural history cannot be regarded as ranking as a science until the arrangement of Linnseus, a.d. 1739. The London Entomological Society was instituted in 1806 ; it is directed chiefly to the study of insects found in Great Britain ; and inquiries into the best methods of destroying noxious insects, and making known such as are useful. ENVOYS AT COURTS. Mmisters in dignity below ambassadors.— -S/r T. Herbert. Envoys enjoy the pi'otection, but not the ceremonies, of ambassadoi's. Envoys Extraordinary ai-e of modern date. — Wicquefort. The court of France denied to them the ceremony of being conducted to court in the I'oyal carriages, a.d. 1039. Many of the ministers of England at foreign courts are called Envoys Extraordinary. EPHESUS. Famous for the temple of Diana, which magnificent structure was one of the seven wonders of the world ; it was 425 feet long, and 200 broad, and cost 220 years of labour. Ctesiphon was the chief architect, and 127 kings contributed to its gnindeiu". The temple was burnt by Eratostratus, solely to perpetuate his memory, 356 B.C. — Pliny. It rose from its ruins, and w;us richer and more splendid thim before ; but it was again burnt a.d. 200. — Univ. Hist. EPHORI. These were powerful magistrates of Sparta, first created by Theopompus to control the i-oyal power, 760 b.c. They were five in number, and acting as censors in the state, they could check and restrain the authority of the kings, and even imprison them, if they were guilty of irregularities. EPIC POETRY. Homer's Iliiid and Odyssey were the first epic poems. See PIomee. EPICUREAN PHILOSOPHY. Epicurus of Gargettus, near Athens, was the founder of it, about 300 B.C., and taught that the greatest good consists in a happiness, springing not from sensual gratification or vicious pleasures, but from virtue, and consisting in tiie peace and harmony of the soul with itself. His disciples had all things in common ; and the pha-santuess of his system, and its ease and luxury, made him many followers. There were, however, men who pretended to be of this sect, and who interpreted the philosopher in a gross sense, and made happiness consist in a gratification of the sensual appetites; but these were called the sophists of the sect. Many authors, ancient and modern, have vindicated the disciples of Epicurus from the vices of these latter. EPIGRAINIS. They derive their origin from the inscriptions placed by the ancients on their tombs. Marcus Valerius Martialis, the celebrated Latin epigrammatist, ^\ho EPI 240 ERA nourished about a.d. 83, is allowed to have excelled all others, ancient or modern, in the tasteful and pointed epigram. The following Latin Epigram, on the miracle of Our Saviour in turning water into wine at Cana (John iii.) is a beautiful example : — " Vidit et erubuit lympha pudica Deum." EPIPHANY. The feast of the Epiphany celebrates the arrival of the wise men of the East, and the manifestation to the world of the Saviour, by the appearance of a miraculous blazing star, which conducted the Magi to the place where he was to be found ; instituted a.d. 813 — Wheatlcy. The primitive Christians celebrated the feast of the Nativity for twelve days, observing the first and last with great solemnity ; and this being twelve days after Christmas, it is vulgarly called Twelfth-day. Pardon says, "The heathens used this word to signify the appearance of their gods upon the earth, and from the heathens the Christians borrowed it." EPIRUS. Known by the great warlike achievements of Pyrrhus. Its early history is very obscure, and it is only during the reign of this sovereign, who was the last, that it becomes interesting. The first Pyrrhus (Neoptolemus) settled in Epirus, after the Trojan war, 1170 B.C. He was killed in the temple of Delphi, about 1165 b.c. Eeign of the great Pyrrhus . .B.C. He enters iuto a league against Deme- trius ; the battle ot Bera^a . . . Expedition iuto Italy ; he gains liis first battle against the Romans . He gains anotlier great battle . . . His conquest of Sicily .... His last battle with the Eomans . . He takes Macedou from Antigonus 306 294 2S0 279 278 274 274 Expedition against Sparta . .B.C. He enters Argos, and is killed by a tile, thrown at him from a house-top by a woman Philip unites Epirus to Macedon . Its conquest by the Romans . . . 272 272 220 167 Annexed to the Ottoman empire . a.d. 1466 The Epirots were very numerous and very brave. They seem to have been a hardy race of mountaineers, living almost in a state of nature, where the habitual necessity of defending themselves against wild beasts, and against the violence of each other, inured them from their infancy to the use of arms, the acquirement of intrepidity, and the love of glory. EPISCOPACY. The government of the Christian Church by its bishops. It may be said to have been instituted a.d. 33, when Peter sat in the bishop's chair at Rome. — Butler. Episcopacy commenced in England in the second century ; in Ireland about the same time ; and in Scotland in the fourth century ; but historians dispute with theologians upon this point. See Bishops. In Scotland, episco2)acy was abolished at the period of the revolution, 1688-9 ; but there have been post-revolu- tion bishoprics established in that kingdom. See Bishops of Scotland. The sect called Episcopalians first appeared about the year 500. — Burnet. EPITAPHS. They were used by the ancient Jews, by the Athenians, the Romans, and most of the nations of antiquity; their date is referred in England to the earliest times. — In the epitaphs of the ancients arose the epigram. — Boileau. EPITHALAMIUM. The nuptial song or composition made on the marriage of two persons of distinction. Tysias, or Tisias, the lyric poet, is said to have been the first writer of a nuptial complimentary song, or epithalamium. He received the name of Stesichorus, from the alterations made by him in music and dancing, 536 B.C. — Bossuet. Verses in praise of the bride now belong to all countries.— .4 s^e. EPOCHAS. These are periods in history which are agreed upon and acknowledged by the respective historians and chronologers, and which serve to regulate the date of events. The following are the epochs thus particularly adopted. See Eras. Creation B.C. 4004 Deluge 234S Calling of Abraham .... 1921 Argonautic expedition . . . . 1225 Destruction of Troy .... 1184 1st Olympiad 776 Building of Rome . . .B.C. 753 Xabonasser 747 The Seleucidas 312 The battle of Actium 38 The Christian era . . . . a d. 1 Diocletian 284 EQUINOX. The precession of the equinoxes was confirmed, and the places and distances of the planets were discovered, by Ptolemy, a.d. 130. When the sun in his progress through the ecliptic comes to the equinoctial circle, the day and night are equal all over the globe : this occurs twice in the year ; once in the first point of Aries, whicii is called the vernal equinox ; next in the first point of Libra, which is the autumnal equinox. — Blair. ERAS. Notices of the principal eras will be found in their alphabetical order ; a few only need be mentioned here. The era of Nabonasser, after which the astronomical ERA 241 ETH observations made at Biibylon were reckoned, bepian Feb. 26, 747. The era of the Seleuci(la2 (used by the Maccabees) commenced 312 B.C. The Olj'mpiads belong to the Grecians, and date from the year 776 B.C. ; but they subsequently reckoned by Indic- tions, tlie first beginning a.d. 313 : these, among chronologers, are still used. See Indictions. The Koraans reckoned from the building of their city, 753 B.C. ; and afterwards from the 16th year of the emperor Augustus, which reckoning was adopted among the Spaniards until the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic. The disciples of Mahomet began then- Hegira from the flight of their prophet from Mecca, which occurred a.d. 622. ERAS OF THK CREATION and REDEMPTION. The Jews and Christians have had divers epochas ; but in historical computation of time the most extraordinary epochs are chiefly.used ; which are two, the Creation of the World, and the appearance of om- Redeemer, which last the Christians have made their era. They did not adopt it, however, until the sixth century, when it was introduced by Denys the Little, a Scythian, who became abbot of a monastery near Rome : he was the first who com- puted time from the birth of Christ, and fixed that great event according to the vulgar era. — Cassiodorus Chron. This computation began in Italy, a.d. 525, and in England in 816. It is the only one now in general use, and is that observed in this work. See Creatiori, and Christian Era. ERFURTH. Founded in a.d. 476 ; and its famous university established in 1390. Erfm-th was ceded to Prussia in 1802. It capitulated to Murat, when 14,000 Prussian troops surrendered, Oct. 16, 1806. In this city Napoleon and Alexander met, and offered peace to England, Sept. 27, 180S. The French retreated to Erfurth from Lcipsic, 18th Oct., 1813. ERICSON'S CALORIC ENGINE. See Caloric. ESCHEATS. Any land or other property that falls to a lord within his manor by for- feiture or death. The escheator observes the rights of the king in the county whereof he is escheator. — Cowel. In London a court of escheats was held before the lord mayor, to recover the property of a bastard who died intestate, for the king ; such a court had not been held in the city for one hundred and fifty years before, July 16, \in.— Phillips. ESCURIAL. The palace of the kings of Spain, one of the largest and most magnificent in the world. It was commenced by Philip II. in the year 1562 ; and the fii-st expen- diture of its erection was 6,000,000 of ducats. It forms a vast square of polished stone, and paved with marble. It may give some notion of the surprising grandeur of this palace to observe, that, according to the computation of Francisco de los Santos, it would take up more than four daj-s to go through all its rooms and apart- ments, the length of the way being reckoned thirty-three Spanish leagues, which is above 120 English miles. Alvarez de Colmenar also asserts, that there are 14,000 doors, and 11,000 windows belonging to diis edifice. ESPIERRES, BATTLE of. Between the allied English and Austrians on the one side, the former commanded by the duke of York, and the French on the other. The French attacked the allies concentrated here, with an army of 100,000 men, and were repulsed after a long and desperate engagement, losing 12,000 killed and wounded, 500 prisoners, and seven pieces of cannon. May 22, 1794. ESQUIRES. Among the Greeks and Romans, esquires were armour-bearers to, or attendants on, a knight. — Blount. In England the king created esquires by putting about their necks the collar of SS, and bestowing upon them a pair of silver spurs. A British queen is recorded as having married the armirjer, or esquire, of her deceased husband. The distinction of esquire was first given to persons of fortune not attendant upon knights, a.d. 1345. — Stovic ; Mcijrich's Ancient Armour. ESSLING, BATTLE of. Between the armies of France and Austria, commanded by Napoleon and the archduke Charles ; a dreadful conflict which commenced on May 21, and was renewed with increased vigour on the next day. May 22, 1809. Napoleon was defeated with the loss of 30,000 men ; but the loss of the Austrians, also most severe, exceeded 20,000. This was the severest check that the French emperor had yet experienced, and his army was greatly endangered in its retreat. ETHER. It was known to the earliest chemists. Nitric ether was first discovered by Kunkel, in 168l ; and muriatic ether was first made from the chloride of tin, by Courtanvaux, in 1759. Acetic ether was discovered by count Lauraguais, same year; and hydriodic ether was first prepared by Gay-Lussac. The phosphoric was obtained by M. Boullay. ETH 242 EUP ETHER AND CHLOROFORM in SURGICAL OPERATIONS. The employment, in 1846, of ether and chloroform (the latter the more powerful of the two) as anaesthetic agents, promises to be of vast benefit to mankind. Tlie discovery that by inhaling ether the patient was rendered unconscious of pain and insensible of any surgical operation he underwent, was first made by Mr. Thomas Morton, of Boston. Chlorofoi-m was first applied for the same pui-pose by Dr. Simpson, of Edinburgh, and was first administered in England by Mr. James Robinson, surgeon-dentist, and these discoveries immediately drew the attention to them of the whole medical world. Some few failures have occurred, and a few deaths ensued, but in hundreds of instances the application of these agents has been successful. ETHICS. The doctrine and system of morality; a science which is scarcely more inculcated by religion and virtue than it is influenced by manners and government. The Chinese, who are said to have been acquainted with astronomy at least 3000 years before the birth of Christ, were so refined in the earliest ages, that they studied ethics, we are told, a thousand years before that event; and hence they must have lived at that time under not only civilised and enlightened, but refined and moral governments. ETNA, MOUNT. Here were the fabled forges of the Cyclops: and it is called by Pindar the pillar of heaven. Eruptions are mentioned by Diodorus Siculus as hap- pening 1693 B.C. and Thucydides speaks of three eruptions as occurring, 734, 477, and 425 B.C. There were eruptions, 125, 121, and 43 B.C. — Livy. Eruptions a.d. 40, 253, and 420. — O'arj'em. One in 1012. — Geoffrey de Viterbo. Awful one which over- whelmed Catania, when 15,000 inhabitants peri.shed in the burning ruins, 1169. Eruptions equally awful and destructive, 1329, 1408, 1444, 1536, 1537, 1564, and in 1669, when tens of thousands of persons perished in the streams of lava which rolled over the whole country for forty days. Eruptions in 1766, 1787, 1809, 1811, and in May 1830, when several villages were desti'oyed, and showers of lava reached near to Home. Another violent eruption, and the town of Bronte desti'oyed, Nov. 18, 1832. Another and violent eruption occurred in August and September, 1852. ETON COLLEGE. Founded by Henry VI. in 1441, and designed as a nursery to King's College, Cambridge. John Stanberry, confessor to Henry VI. (bishop of Bangor in 1448,) was the first provost. Besides about three hundred noblemen's and gentle- men's sons, there are seventy king's scholars on the foundation, who, when properly qualified, are elected, on the first Tuesday in August, to King's College, in Cambridge, but are not removed till there are vacancies, and then according to seniority. ETON MONTEM. The establishment of the Montem is nearly coeval with the college, and consists in the procession of the scholars, arrayed in fancy dresses, to Salt-hill, once in three years, to collect donations on the road. The money so collected has amounted to 800/. and is given to the senior or best scholar, their captain, who is going off to Cambridge, for his support while studying at that university. — Lysons's Magna Britannia, The montem was discontinued in Jan. 1847; but this being still strongly opposed by the Etonians, it may be revived. EUCLID, ELEMENTS of. Euclid was a native of Alexandria, and flourished there about 300 B.C. The Elements are not wholly his, for many of the invaluable truths and demonsti'ations they contain were discovered and invented byThales, Pythagoras, Eudoxus, and others; but Euclid was the first who reduced them to regular order, and who probably interwove many theorems of his own, to render the whole a com- plete and connected system of geometry. The Elements were first printed at Basil by Simon Grynseus, in a.d. 1533. EUDIOMETER. To ascertain the purity of atmospheric air, or the quantity of oxygenous gas or vital air contained in it, was invented (among other instruments) by Dr. Priestley, in 1772. Some improvements upon this instrument have been since made, and it is susceptible of more. EUNUCHS. This species of mutilation is first mentioned among the Egyptian and Assyrian nations ; and eunuchs in the earliest times were attendants in courts. The first princess who was waited upon by eunuchs in her chamber, was Semiramis, queen of Assyria and Babylon, about 2007 B.C. — Lenglet. Numbers of this class of persons are in the quality of attendants on the ladies of the Seraglio in Turkey. EUPATORIA (Kosleff). A sea-port on the west coast of the Crimea. After the allied French, English, and Turkish armies landed in the Crimea Sept. 14, 1854, a detach- ment under captain Brock occupied this place, which was afterwards reinforced by the Turks. It was attacked Feb. 17, 1855 by 40,000 Russians under Liprandi, who. EUR 243 EXC were repulsed with the loss of 500 men by the Turks, whose loss was only 50, among which, however, was Selim Pasha, the commander of the Egyptian contingent. EURYMEDON, BATTLE of. One of the most celebrated battles in Grecian history, when Cimon, son of Miltiades, destroyed the Persian fleet at Cyprus, and defeated the land forces of the Persians near the river Eurymedon, in Pamphilia, hence the name of this battle, fought 470 B.C. — Lenglet. EUXINE. See Black Sea. EVANGELISTS. Mark and Matthew wrote their Gospels in a.d. 44 ; Luke in 55 ; and John in 97. In 95, John was thrown into a cauldron of boiling oil at Rome, whence, being taken out unhurt, he was banished to the Isle of Patmos, and there, in the year 96, he wrote the Apocalyxme, and died in 100. — Butler. At the council of Nice in 325, there were 200 varied versions of the adopted Evangelists. EVESHAM, BATTLE of. Between Prince Edward, afterwards Edward I. and Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester, in which the barons were defeated, and the earl, his son, and most of his adherents slain. Henry III. at one period of the battle was on the point of being cut down by a soldier who did not know his rank, but was saved by his timely exclamation, " Do not kill me, soldier ; I am Henry of Winchester, thy king ! " This victory broke up the treasonable conspiracy of the barons ; fought Aug. 4, 1265. EVIL MAY-DAY. A day memorable in London, and thiis called on accoimt of the dreadful excesses of the apprentices and populace, which was directed against foreigners, particularly the Fi'ench. " The rioters were headed by one Lincoln, who, with a number of others, was hanged ; and 400 more in their shirts, and bound with ropes, and halters about their necks, were carried to Westminster, but they crying ' mercy, mercy ! ' were all pardoned by the king (Henry VIII.) which clemency gained him much love." May 1, 1517. — Delaune. This insurrection commenced witli the London apprentices, on account of strangers being permitted to trade in England. Their outrages at Ludgate were of a dreadful character. Two hundred of the rioters were convicted of treason, of whom fifteen only were executed ; the rest being pardoned on the intercession of the queens of England, France, and Scotland, the two last being, also, at the time, in London. — Salmon's Chron. of England. EXCHANGE. One, called Collegium Mercatorum, existed at Rome, 493 B.C. The Exchange at Amsterdam was reckoned tlie finest structure of the kind in the world. Many edifices of this name in the United Kingdom ai'e magnificent. The Exchange of London was founded by sir Thomas Gresliam, June 7, 1566, and was called Royal by Elizabeth, on her paying it a visit in Jan. 1571. This edifice was built on the Bite of the ancient Tun-prison. It was totally destroyed in the memorable fire of 1666; and was rebuilt by Nicholas Hawksmoor, 1668; and repaired and beautified in 1769. Again burnt, and made a pile of ruins, with a number of public offices and adjoining houses, Jan. 10, 1838. Its rebuilding was commenced under Mr. Tite, in 1840, and it was opened Oct. 28, 1844. See Bills of Exchange and Royal Exchange. EXCHEQUER. An institution of great antiquity, consisting of officers whose functions jvre financial and judicial : the chancellor of the exchequer is the first of these, and he formerly sat in the court of exchequer above the barons. The first chancellor was Eustace de Fauconbridge, bishop of London, in the reign of Henry HI. about 1221. The exchequer stopped payment from Jan. to May 24tb, Charles II. 1673. — Stowe. The English and Irish exchequers were consolidated in 1816. EXCHEQUER BILLS. The government securities so called were first issued in 1697, and first circulated by the bank in 1796. These bills, of which more than twenty millions sterling are often in circulation, are in effect accommodation notes of govern- ment, that are issued in anticipation of taxes, at daily interest ; and, being received for taxes, and paid by the bank in lieu of taxes, in its dealings with the exchequer, they usually bear a premium. Robert Aslett, a cashier of the Bank of England, was tried at the Old Bailey for embezzling exchequer bills, and found not gnilly on account of the invalidity of the bills, though the actual loss to the bank amounted to 320,OOOZ. Mr. Beaumont Smith was tried for forging exchequer bills, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to transportation, Dec. 4, 1841. EXCHEQUER CHAMBER, COURT of. Erected by Edward III. in 1357. It was remodelled by Elizabeth, in 1584, and then made to comprise the judges of all the courts. This court is for error from the judgments of the courts of Queen's Bench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer, of pleas in actions commenced therein. Remodelled B 2 EXC 244 EXC by act 11 Geo. IV. & 1 Will. IV. c. 70, July 23, 1830. The Exchequer office, Westminster, was instituted by Henry IV. in 1399. EXCHEQUER, COURT of. Instituted by William I. on the model of the Transmarine Exchequer of Noimandy, in 1079 ; according to some authorities, by Henry I. It included the Common Pleas until they were separated, 16 John, 1215. — Coke's Reports. The exchequer is so named from a chequered cloth which anciently covered the table where the judges and chief oi3Eicers sat. Here are tried all causes relating to the king's revenue ; such as are concerning accounts, disbursements, customs, and fines imposed, as well as all matters at common-law between subject and subject. The judges are styled barons. — Bcatson. There are a chief and four puisne barons ; the fifth judge having been added July 23, 1830. CHIEF BARONS OF THE EXCHEQUER. From the Revolution. 1689. lf)95. 1714. 1716. 1722. 1723. 1725. 1726. 1730. 1738. 1740. 1742. 1772. 1777. 1690. 1695. 1703. 1706. 1707. 1714. 1715. 1722. 1725. 1730. 1741. 1757. 1766. Sir Robert Atkins. April 10. Sir Edward Ward. June 10. Sir Samuel Dodd. Nov. 22. Sir Thomas Bury. June 11. Sir James Montagu. May 9. Sir Robert Eyre. Dec. 5 : afterwards C. J. common pleas. Sir Geoffrey Gilbert. June 1. Sir Thomas Pangelly. Oct. 29. Sir James Reynolds. April 30. Sir John Comyn. July 7. Sir Edmund Probyn. Nov. 24. Sir Thomas Parker. Nov. 29. Sir Sydney Stafford Smytbe, Oct. 29. Sir John Skynner. Dec. 17. 1787. Sir James Eyre. Jan. 26 : afterwards C.J. common pleas. 1793. Sir Archibald Macdonald. Feb. 12. 1813. Sir Vicary Gibbs. Nov. 8 : afterwards C.J. common pleas. 1814. Sir Alexander Thompson. Feb. 24. 1817. Sir Richard Richards. April 22. 1824. Sir William Alexander. Jan. 9. 1831. John Lord Lyudhurst. Jan 18. Pre- viously lord chancellor ; and again lord chancellor, in 1834. 1834. Sir James Scarlet. Dec. 24. Created lord Abinger, Jan. 1835. 1844. Sir Frederick Pollock. April 15. The present (1850) Chief Baron of the Exchequer in England. CHIEF BARONS OP THE EXCHEQUER IN IRELAND. From the Revolution. John Hely. Dec. 5. Robert Doyne. May 10. Nehemiah Donnellan. Dec. 27. Richard Freeman. June 25. Robert Rochfort. June 12. Joseph Deane. Oct. 14. Jeffrey Gilbert. June 16. Bernard Hale. June 9. Thomas Dalton. Sept. 2. Thomas Marlay. Sept. 29. John Bowes, Dec. 21. Edward Willis. March 11. Anthony Foster. Sept. 5. 1777. James Dennis, (afterwards Baron Trac- ton). July 3. 1782. Walter Hussey Burgh. July 2. 1783. Barry Yelverton (afterwards viscount Avonmore). Nov. 29. 1805. Staudish O'Grady, (afterwards viscount Guillamore). Oct. 5. 1831. Henry Joy. Jan. 6. 1838. Stephen Woulfe. July 20. 1840. Maziere Brady. Feb. 11. 1846. David Richard Pigot. Sept. 1. The present (1855) Chief Baron of the Exchequer in Ireland. EXCHEQUER, EQUITY. In process of time the court of exchequer (the preceding court) became gradually enlarged in its jurisdiction, until at length it was not merely a revenue court and one at common law between subject and subject, but one in which suits in equity were also instituted. In fact, until the act 5th Vict. 0. 5, passed Oct. 5, 1841, the court of excheqvier possessed a triple jurisdiction. But by the statute just mentioned, its equity business was transferred to the couit of chancery. EXCHEQUER, TELLERS of the. Besides chamberlains of the Exchequer, Clerks of the Pells, and Auditor of the Exchequer, offices which have all been discontinued since their last avoidance in Oct. 1826, or by surrender or abolition, in Oct. 1834, there were the four lucrative offices of Tellers of the Exchequer, also abolished, 10th Oct. 1834. John Jeffreys Pratt, earl and marquess Camden, was appointed one of the four tellers of the exchequer, when a commoner, in 1780, and held the appoint- ment until his death, in 1840, almost sixty years. During nearly half of this long term, he relinquished the vast income arising from the office, amounting in the whole to upwards of a quarter of a million sterling, and placed it at the service of the state, as it annually accrued ; an act of patriotism that sheds a lustre on his name. EXCHEQUER, COMPTROLLER-GENERAL of the. This office was created on the abolition of the offices of the auditor and the four tellers of the exchequer, and the clerk of the pells, mentioned in the preceding article. The first comptroller-general was sir John Newport, appointed Oct. 11, 1834. 34,438Z. per annum have been saved to the state by the retrenchments in this department of the government. EXC 245 EXE EXCISE. Tlie excise system was established in England by the Long Parliament. It was continued under Cromwell and Charles II. ; and was organised as at present by the Walpole administration. Excise was first collected and an office opened in 1643, and the duty was arbitrarily levied upon liquors and provisions to support the parlia- ment forces against Charles I. The old excise office was built on the site of Gresham College, in 1774 ; the present is at Somerset-house. The officers of excise and customs were deprived of their votes for returning members of parliament in 1782. See Revenue. AMOUNT OF THE EXCISE REVENUE OP GREAT BRITAIN IN THE FOLLOWING TEARS. \1U. Great Britain ITSC. Ditto . 1808. Ditto 18-20. Ditto . lS2r. United Kingdom . 1830. Ditto . 1834. Ditto 1837. Ditto . £3,754,072 5, 540, 114 19,807,914 2(5,364,702 20,995,324 18,644,385 16,877,292 14,518,142 1840. United Kingdom 1845. 1848. 1850. 1851. 1852. ISiS. 1854. Ditto Ditto Ditto. Jan. Ditto. Jan. Ditto. Jan. Ditto. Jan. . £12,607,766 . . 13,585,583 . 13,919,652 . . 13,985,363 . 14,316,083 . . 14,442,081 . 1.3,356,981 Ditto. Jan. 5. . . . 15,337,724 Notwithstanding the abolition of excise duty upon numerous articles, and the reduc- tion of duty upon various others, of late years, the total excise revenue, so far ft-om having decreased, has progressively advanced (18;j3 excepted) in its aggregate annual amount. Additional excise duties were charged by 17 & IS Vict. c. 27, July 3, 1S54. EXCOMMUNICATIOISr. An ecclesiastical anathema, or interdict from Christian com- munion. It was originally instituted for preserving the purity of the Church ; but ambitious ecclesiastics converted it by degrees into an engine for promoting their own power. Some suppose excommunication to be of Hindoo origin in the Pariah caste, and that it was adopted by the Jews (who had three degrees of it), and from these hitter by the Christian Churches. The Greek and Roman priests, and even the Druids, had similar punishments in aid of their respective religions. — Phillips. EXCOMMUNICATION by the POPES. The Catholic Church excommunicates by bell, book, and candle. See Bell, Booh, and Candle. The popes have carried their authority to such excess as to excommunicate and depose sovereigns. Gregory VII. was the first pope who assumed this extravagant power. He excommunicated Henry IV. emperor of Germany, in 1077, absolving his subjects from their allegiance ; and on the emperor's death, " his excommunicated body " was five years above ground, no cue daring to bury it. In England were many excommunications in Heuiy II.'s reign ; and king John was excommunicated by pope Innocent III. in 1208, when all England lay under an interdict for six years. The citizens of Dublin were excom- municated by Clement IV. in 1206. Bulls denouncing hell-firo to queen Elizabeth accompanied the Spanish Armada, and plenary indulgences were oflFored to all who should assist in deposing her. See article Interdict. EXECUTIONS. See Crime. In the reign of Henry VIII. (thirty-eight years) it is shown that no less a number than 72,000 criminals were executed. — Stowe. In the ten years between 1820 and 1830, there were executed in England alone 797 criminals ; but as our laws became less bloody, the number of executions proportionally decrea.sed. In the three years ending 1820, the executions in England and Wales amounted to 312 ; in the three years ending 1830, they were reduced to 178 ; in the tliree years ending 1840, they had decreased to 62 ; and in the three ycai-s endiner 1850, to Z7.— Pari. Returns. EXECUTIONS IN LONDON In the year 1820 In the year 1825 In tho year 1830 In the year 1835 In the year 1836 . 43 . 17 . 6 .nil . nil In tlio year 1S37 In the year 1838 In the year 1839 In the year 1840 In tlie year 1842 IN THE FOLLOWING TEARS: — . 2 In the year 1843 .nil In the year 1S48 . 3 . nil In the year 1844 . 1 In the year 1849 . 3 . 2 In the year 1845 . 3 In t!io year 1850 . nil . 1 lu the year 1846 . 2 In tho year 1851 . nil . 2 In tho year 1847 . nil In tho year 1852 . nil EXECUTIONS OF REMARKABLE CRIMINALS. Name. Jack Shcppard Lord llalnieriuo and othera Lord Lovat . Eugene Aram . Theodore Gardellc Earl Ferrers John Porrott John McNaughten, esq. . Ehzaboth Browurigg . Daniel Porreau I , ,, Robert Penmu } brothers Rev. Dr. Dodd John Douellan, esq. . . , Crime. Celebrated robber Rebellion . . . . Rebellion Murder . . . . Murder Murder of his steward rraudulent bankrupt . JIurder of Miss Knox Murder of her apprentice See Forgery Forgery (see Forgery) . Mux'der . . . . ExeciUed. Tyburn . Tower-hill Tower-hill. York . Ilaymarket Tyburn . Smithfield . Strabane Tyburn Tyburn . Tyburn . Warwick Date. Nov. 16, 1724 . Aug. 18, JIarch 30, . Aug. 0, . April 4, . May 5, Nov. 11, . Dec. 13, Sept. 14, 1767 , Jan. 17, 1770 June 27, 1777 . April 2, 1778 1746 1747 1757 1760 1760 1761 1761 EXE 246 EXE EXECUTIONS, continued. Name. Mr. Hackman Mrs. Phepoe Sir Edward Crosbie Messrs. Sheares Galloping Dick Governor Wall . Mr. Crawley . George Foster . Colonel Despard . *John Hatfield Robert Emmett . Richard Patch . f John Holloway . Oweu Haggerty . . ) T. Simmons, the man of blood Major Campbell . Capt. Sutherland Richard Armitage John Bellingham Philip Nicholson . Francis Tuite . Charles Callaghan William Sawyer Capt. Grant . John Cashman Miirderersof the Lynchfamily {Eliza Fenning The 3 Ashcrofts, father & sons Bi-andreth and others Charles Hussey John Soanlan, esq. . Arthur Thistlewood . John Brunt James Ings John Davidson Richard Tidd . John Chennell Thomas Calcraft Murderers of Miss Thompson David Haggart . Josiah Cadman Murderers of Mrs. Torrance Murderers of Mr. Hoskins John Smith . Samuel Greenwood . John Thurtell John Wayte Hen. Fauntleroy, esq. banker Edward Harris §Probert, Thurtell's associate Spitalfields gang Charles Thomas White . II Edward Lowe Catherine Walsh . tWilliam Rea . William Corder Joseph Hunton, quaker Burke, the murderer Anne Chapman Stewart and wife . Mr. Comyn John Bishop Thomas Williams Crime. Murder of Miss Reay . Celebrated murderess . . High treason High treason . . . . Highway robbery Miirder of serj. Armstrong . Murder of two females . Murder of his wife and child. High treason . . . . Forgery High treason . . . . Murder of Mr. Bligh . Murder of Mr. Steele . . Murder Murd. of Capt. Boyd inaduel. Murder Forgeiy Murder of Mr. Perceval Murder of Mr. & Mrs. Bonar. Murder of Mr. Goulding . . Murder of Mr. Merry . Murder of Jack Hacket . . Famous Irish robber Spa-fields riots . . . . Wild-goose-lodge affair . Administering poison . . Murder High treason . . . . f Murder of Mr. Bird and I ( his housekeeper . J Murder of Ellen Hanley . . Cato-street gang ; murder "| and treason (see Cato- y street Conspiracy) . . j Murder and parricide of ) Mr. Chennell, sen. . . j Murder . Highw.ay robbery Murder of Mr. Weare Forgery Forgery . Robbery . Highway Robbery . Arson .... Coining .... Murder of her child Highw,ay robbery Murder of Maria Marten Forgery .... (See Burking) Murder of her child . Noted murderers . Burning his own house . Murder of a poor Italian boy ) (see Burking) . , . ) Executed. Tyburn . Old Bailey . Ireland Dublin . Aylesbury. Old Bailey Dubhn Old Bailey Horsemouger Carlisle . Dublin Horsemonger Bate. April 18, 1779 Dec. 11, 1797 . June 2, 1798 July 12, 1799 April 4, 1800 . Jan. 28, 1802 March IB, . Jan. 18, -la. Feb. 18, . Sept. 3, Sept. 20, 1803 -la. Ap. 8, 1806 1802 1803 18(3 1803 Old Bailey. Feb. 22, 1807 Hertford . March 7, 1808 Armagh . . Oct. 2, 1808 Execution-dock,June29, 1809 Old Bailey. June 24, 1811 Old Bailey . May 18, 1812 ( Pennenden-heath, ( Aug. 23, 1813 Dublin . . Oct. 9, 1813 Horsemonger-la. Ap. 2, 1814 Old Bailey . May 1-5, 1814 Maryborough, Aug. 16, 1816 Skiuner-st. March 12, 1817 Ireland . . July 19, 1817 Old Bailey . July 26, 1817 Lancaster . Sept. 8, 1817 Derby . Nov. 6, 1817 Pennenden-heath, Aug. 3,1818 Limerick . March 16, 1820 Old Bailey . May 1, 1820 Dublin . . May 3, 1821 Edinburgh. June 11, 1821 Old Bailey . Nov. 21, 1821 Ireland . Dec. 19, 1S21 Ireland . . Aug. 3, 1822 Maidstone . Dec. 23, 1822 Old Bailey . Dec. 27, 1822 Hertford . . Jan. 9, 1824 Old Bailey . Feb. 24, 1824 Old Bailey. Nov. 30, 1824 Old Bailey . Feb. 22, 1825 Old Bailey. June 20, 1825 Old Bailey . Nov. 29, 1826 Old Bailey . Jan. 2, 1827 Old Bailey . Nov. 22, 1827 Old Bailey. April 14, 1828 Old Bailey . July 4, 1828 BurySt. Edmunds, Aug. 8,1828 Old Bailey . Dec. 8, 1828 Edinburgh. Feb. 16, 1829 Old Bailey . June 30, 1829 Glasgow . July 24, 1829 Ennis . March 18, 1830 Old Bailey . Dec. 5, 1831 * He was a rank impostor, and married, by means of the most odious deceit and fraud, the celebrated " Beauty of Buttermere." t Thirty of the spectators of this execution were trodden to death, and numbers were pressed, maimed, and wounded. _ t Immediately after her execution a great and painful sensation was caused by its being universally believed that this young creature suffered innocently. § This criminal was an accomplice of Thurtell's in the memorable murder of Mr. Weare, and he became approver ; but was afterwards hanged for horse-stealing. II He was the last coiner drawn on a sledge to the scaffold. IT Captain Charles Montgomery was ordered for execution this day, for forgery ; but he took a dose (an ounce and a half) of prussic acid, to save himself from the ignominy of the gallows, and he was found dead in his cell by the officers of justice. EXE 247 EXE EXECUTIONS, continued. Nojne. Elizabeth Cooke . John Smith . . . ) Jatnes Pratt . . • • ) Maryanne Burdock . John Pegsworth . James Greeuacre William Lees . Francois Benj. Courvoisier Josiah Misters . Robert Blakesley . John Delahmit . Daniel Good . AVilliam Crouch James Tapping Jolin Tavvcll Thomas Henry Hooker . Joseph Connor . John Platts . Catherine Foster James Bloomfield Rush Fred. George Manning, and 1 his wife, Maria Manning. ) James Barbour Henry Horler . . . . Grant, Quin, and Coomcy . Emanuel Barthelemy . C)-ime. Burking of Cath. Walsh Unnatural crime . . . Remarkable ca. of poisoning . Murder Murder of Hannah Brown . Murder of his wife Murder of lord W. Russell . Wounding Mr. Mackreth . . Miu-der of Mr. Burdou . Murder of Thomas Maguire . Murder of Jane Jones . Murder of liis wife . . . Mui-der of Emma Whiter Murder of Sarah Hart . . Murder of Mr. Delarue . Murder of Mary Brothers Murder of Collis . Murder of her husband . . Murder of Messrs. Jermy, ( sen. andjun. . . . ) Murder of O'Conncr Murder of Robinson . . Murder of his wife Murder of Thos. Bateson . . Murder of Mr. Moore and ) C. CoUard . . .J Executed. Old Bailey Old Bailey . Bristol . Old Bailey . Old Bailey Old Bailey . Old Bailey Shrewsbury Old Bailey Dublin Old Bailey Old Bailey . Old Bailey . Aylesbury . Old Bailey Old BaUey . Derby Date. . Jan. 9, 1832 Aprils, 1S35 . April 15, 1835 March 7, 1837 . May 2, 1837 Dec. le, 1839 . July 6, 1840 April 2, 1841 . Nov. 15, 1841 . Feb. 5, 1842 . May 23, 1842 May 27, 1844 March 24, 1845 March 28, 1845 . April 28, 1845 June 2, 1845 . April 1, 1847 BurySt. Edmunds, Ap.17,1847 Norwich April 21, 1849 Horsemonger-la.Nov.13, 1849 York . . Jan. 15, 1853 Old Bailey . Jan. 15, 1853 Monaghan . April 10, 1854 Old BaOey . Jan. 22, 1855 The executions in the preceding list are those of criminals remarkable for the atrocity of their offences. There arc, of course, numerous others, which, not having excited pviblic attention in an equal dcgi'oe, do not require any record in this volume, in wliich it is not professed to give all such occurrences. EXETER. This ciby is said to Lave been early honoured with the name of Aur/usta, from having been occupied by tlie second Augustan legion, commanded by Ves- pasian : its present name is derived from Excestre, " the castellated city of the Exe." It was for a considerable time the capital of the West Saxon kingdom. When held by the Danes, Alfred invested the city and compelled them to capitvdate. Again relieved by Alfred in a.d. 891. Sweyn laid siege to Exeter, 1003, when a dreadful massacre of the inhabitants, and the destruction of the town, ensued. Besieged by William the Couqueror, 1067. The castle surrendered to king Stephen, 1136. Edward I. held a parliament here, 1286. Besieged by sir William Courteuay, 1469. The city sustained a violent assault from Perkin Warbeck, 1497. Welsh, the vicar of St. Thomas's, hanged here on the tower of his own church, as a chief leader in the great western and Cornish rebellion, July 2, 1549. Exeter was constituted a county of itself by Henry VIII. rendei'ing it thereby independent of Devon. The see of Devon is removed to Exeter . 1049 The theatre erected 12U0 1236 1250 1371 Tlio city first governed by a mayor The celebrated nunnery founded Tlie ancient bridge built The Black Prince vi.sits Exeter . Tlic duchess of Clarence takes refuge in the city 1469 Annual festival consecrated . . . 1549 The guildhall built 1593 Prince Maurice takes Exeter for king Charles I. . . September 4, 1643 The city surrenders to the forces of the Parliament .... April, 1646 The canal to Topsham cut . . . . 1675 A mint established by James I. . . 16S8 Water-works erected 1694 The sessions liouse built . . 1773 The new bridge built 1778 1783 1795 1796 1807 Lunatic asylum founded . . . . County gaol built Subscription library foiuidcd . . . Devon and Exeter institution for the pro motion of science, estabhshed . . 1813 New city prison built ISIS The last of the ancient walls removed . 1818 The subscription rooms opened . . . 1820 The public baths erected . . . 1821 Mechanics' Institution opened . . . 1825 New cemetery commenced . . . 1837 Great fire, 20 houses burnt . Aug. 2, 1844 Another great fire . . . April 26, 1847 The case of the rev. Mr. Gorham v. the bishop of Exeter. See a note to Trials Aug. 2 1849 EXETER, BISHORRIC of. This bishopric anciently con.stituted two sees, Devonshire and Cornwall. Tlio church of the former was at Creditou, and of the latter at Bod- min. In A.D. 1032 "the sees were united, and soon after the seat was removed to Exeter. St. Patroe was the first bishop of Cornwall, before 900 ; (Edu]phus,the first bishop of Devonshire, 905; and Leofric, the first bishop of E.xeter, in 1049. The cathedral belonged to a monastery founded by Athelstan : Edward the Confessor removed the monks to his new abbey of Westminster, and gave their church for a cathedral to the united see : valued in the king's books at 500/. per annum. EXE 248 EYR EXETER CHANGE, London. Built by Walter Stapleton, bishop of Exeter, aud lord treasurer in 1316. It was entirely demolished at the period of the Strand improve- ments in 1829. The new Exeter Change, built by the marquis of Exeter near its site, and running from Wellington-street to Catherine-street, with a passage, on each side of which are shops for fancy articles, was opened in 1845. This place, sometimes called the " Wellington Arcade," forms a communication between the two streets mentioned, and is 12 feet wide, 20 feet in height, and 60 in length. EXETER COLLEGE, Oxford. Owes its foundation to Walter Stapleton, bishop of Exeter, in 1314. This prelate was lord treasurer of England in 1319, and again in 1324; and was beheaded by order of the qvieen-rcgent, Isabella, in 1326. The college buildings consist of a handsome quadrangle in the later Gothic style. EXETER HALL, Strand, London. For the meetings of religious, scientific, and other institutions, concerts, oratorios, and musical societies, a large and magnificent apartment, with a splendid orchestra and organ, and having attached rooms for committees, &c., was erected in 1830. EXHIBITION OF 1851. See Crystal Palace. This wonderful emporium of the "Works of Industry of all Nations " was projected by prince Albert, and was opened by a royal ceremonial. May 1, 1851. The number of exhibitors exceeded 15,000, but the articles exhibited, in arts, manufactures, and the various produce of countries, even the most remote, defy all numerical calculation. The palace continued open twenty- three weeks, and the fragments of two other weeks, altogether 144 days, within which time it was visited by 6,170,000 persons, averaging 43,536 per diem, whose admission at the respective prices of one pound, half-a-crown, and one shilling, amounted to 505,107^. including season tickets, leaving a surplus, after payment of expenses, of about 150,000^. The greatest number of visitors in one day was 109,760 (Oct. 8); and at one time (2 o'clock, Oct. 7) were 93,000.* The exhibition was closed to the public, Oct. 11, 1851. EXPEDITIONS, OR DESCENTS of the BRITISH. These will be found described under their respective heads through the volume. The following are the most remarkable of our later expeditions, and are those most commonly referred to : — France, near Port rOrient . Oct. 1, 1746 Cherbourg Aug. 7, 1758 St. Malo ; 4000 men lost . . Sept. 1758 (^mberan 'Bay {Freiich emigrants) . . 1796 Ostend (all made prison(rs) . May 1798 Haider Point and Zuyder Zee Sept. 1799 EXPORTS. See Revenue. The exports of British manufactures are increasing annually. Edward III. by his encouragement of trade turned the scale so much in favour of English merchandise, tliat by a balance of trade taken in his time, the exported commodities amounted to 294,000Z. and the imported to only 38,000^. OFFICIAL VALUE OP EXPORTS FROM GREAT BRITAIN TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD, VIZ : — In 1700 . . £6,097,120 In 1810 . . £45,869,839 In 1840 . . £97,402,726 In 1750 . .10,130,991 In 1820 . .51,733,113 In 1845 . .131,564,503 In 1775 . . .16,326,363 In 1830 . . .66,735,445 In 1850 . . .175,126,706 In 1800 . . 38,120,120 In 1835 . . 78,376,732 In 1851 . . 190,397,810 The above are the exports of all merchandise and manufactures from the United Kingdom and produce of the colonies, at their official value : the declared value is of infinitely less amount. EYLAU, BATTLE of. Between the French and Russians, one of the most bloody of the late war : it terminated in favour of Napoleon, who commanded in person ; but both armies by this and other recent battles were so much reduced, that the French retired to the Vistula, and the Russians on the Pregel j the loss to the victor was 15,000 men, and the Russian loss in slain alone was 20,000. Feb. 8, 1807. EYRE, JUSTICES in. The term signifies the itinerant court of Justices. This court was instituted by Henry I. ; and when the forest laws were in force, the ofiice of Chief Justice in Eyre was one of great trust and dignity. By an ancient custom these justices should go their circuit every third year, and punish all abuses committed in the king's forests. The last instance of a court being held in any of the forests is believed to have been during the reign of Charles II. a.d. 1671.- — Beatson. * These 93, 000 persons were assembled at one time, not in an open area, like a Roman amphitheatre, but (it should be recollected) within a windowed and floored and roofed building. There is no like vast assemblage recorded in either ancient or modern annals, as having been gathered together, it may be said, in one room. Ferrol, in Spain . Eg3rpt (Abercrombie) Copenhagen {which see) Walcheren (unfortunate) Bergen-op-Zoom Crimea . . . . Aug. 1800 March 1801 Sept. 1807 July 1809 March 8, 1814 Sept. 1854 FAB 249 FAL r. FABII. A noble and powerful family at Rome, who derived their name from faha, a bean, because some of their aucestors cultivated this pulse ; they were said to be descended from Fabius, a supposed son of Hercules, and were once so numerous that they took upou themselves to wage war against the Veicntes. They came to a general engagement near the Cremera, iu which all the family, consisting of 3U6 men, were slain, B.C. 477. There only remained one, whose tender age had detained him at Rome, and from him arose the noble Fabii in the following ages. FABLES. " Jotbara's fable of the trees (Judges ix. about B.C. 1209) is the oldest extant, and as beautiful as any made since." — A ddison. Nathan's fable of the poor man (2 Sam. xii. about B.C. Iu:i4) is next in antiquity. The earliest collection of fables extant is of eastern origin, and preserved in the Sanscrit. The fables of Vishnoo Sarma, called Pilpay, are the most beautiful, if not the most ancient in the world. — Sir William Jones. The well-known JEsop's fables {which see), were written about 540 years B.C. — Piutarch. FACTIONS. Among the Romans, factions were parties that fought on chariots in the circus, and who were distinguished by their different colours, as green, blue, red, and white, to which Domitian added two others, one in coats embroidered with gold, a second wearing scarlet, about a.d. 90. Both the emperors and people had gcnei-ally greater inclination for some particular colour than the rest; but ujiou a quarrel happening in Justinian's reign, between the blue and green, when 40,000 were killed on both sides, the name of faction was abolished. — With us faction means a party or sect, in religious or civil matters, and is always taken in an ill sense. FAIRLOP OAK. A celebrated tree in the forest of Hainault, Essex, blown do%vn in February, 1820. Its extended branches covered a space of more than 300 feet in circumference : and beneath them a fair was annually held on the first Friday in July. This fair originated with the eccentric Mr. Day, a pump and block maker of Wapping, who, having a small estate in the vicinity, annually repaired here with a party of friends, to diue on beans and bacon. Every year added to the number; and in the course of a short time it assumed the appcarauce of a regular fair, which is still continued, though the institutor and the venerable oak are no longer iu existence. FAIRS AND WAKES. They are of Saxon origin, and were first instituted hi England by Alfred, a.d. 886. — Spelman. They were established by order of Gregory VII. iu 1078, and termed Feme, at which the monks celebrated the festival of their patron saint ; the vast resort of people occasioned a great demand for goods, wai-es, &c. They were called wakes from the people making merry during tlio vigil, or eve. Fairs were esta- blished in France and England by Charlemagne and William the Conqueror about A.D. 800 in the first, and 1071 in the latter kingdom. The fairs of Beaucairo, Falaise, and Leipsic, are the most famous in Europe. FALCONRY. The certainty of falconry in England cannot be traced until the reign of king Ethelbci-t, the Saxon monarch, a.d. 850. — Pennant. There arc thirty-two species of the falco genus. The falcon is a bird of prey of the hawk kind, but superior to all othera for courage, docility, gentleness, and nobleness of nature ; and it is no credit to our country to state that these noble birds used formerly to be tamed, and kept for the genteel pastime of falconry. — PhilUjts. It is said that the grand seignior at one time kept six thousand falconers in his service. — Pardon. FALCZI, PEACE of. This celebrated peace was concluded between Russia and Turkey, July 2, 1711, the Russians giving up Azoph and all their possessions on the Black Sea to the Turks ; in the following year the war was renewed, and terminated by the peace of Constantinople, April 16, 1712. FALERXIAN ^\'INE. This wine, so celebrated by the Roman poets, especially Virgil and Horace, was the produce of Faleruus, or, as called by Martial, Mous Massicus, a mountain and plain of Campania. In Rome, the age of wine was a criterion of its goodness ; and Horace in his Odes boasts of having di-unk Falernian wine that bad been, as it were, born with him, or which reckoned its age from the same consuls, 14 B.C. The Opiniian wine is said to have been kept for 200 j-ears. FALKIRK, BATTLE of. Between the English under Edward I. and the Scots, com- manded by Wallace, in which it is said from 20,000 to 40.,000 of the latter were FAL 250 FAR slain ; the whole Scotch army was broken up, and was chased off the field with dreadful slaughter, July 22, 1298. The English archers, who began about this time to surpass tliose of other nations, first chased the Scottish bowmen from the ground, and then pouring in their arrows among the pikemen who were cooped up within their iiitrenchmeuts, threw them into disorder, and rendered the assault of the English pikemen and cavalry more easy and successful. — Hume. Battle of Falkirk between the king's forces and prince Charles Stuart, in which the former were defeated, Jan. 18, 1746. FALKLAND ISLANDS. A group of islands in the South Atlantic, belonging to Great Britain. Seen by Americus Vesputius ; and visited by Davis, 1592. Taken possession of by France, 1763. The French were expelled by the Spaniards ; and in 1771, Spain gave up the sovereignty to England. Not having been colonised by us, the republic of Buenos Ayres assumed a right to these islands, and a colony from that country settled at port Louis ; but owing to a dispute with America, the settlement was destroyed by the latter in 1831. In 1833 the British flag was hoisted at Port Louis, and a British officer has since resided there. — McCulloch. FAMILY OF LOVE. A society, called also Philadelphians, from the love they professed to bear all men, even the most wicked. They assembled at Brewhouse-yard, Nottingham. Their founder was a fanatic named David George, an Anabaptist, of Holland, who propagated his doctrines in Switzerland, where he died in 1.556. After this event, the tenets of the society were declared to be impious, and George's body and books were ordered to be burned by the common hangman. — Dr. Thornton. See Agape monians. FAMINES, AND SEASONS of REMARKABLE SCARCITY. The famine of the seven years in Egypt began 1708 B.C. — Usktr ; Blair. In a famine that raged at Rome thousands of the people threw themselves into the Tiber, 436 B.C. — Livy. voured the flesh of horses, dogs, cats, and vermin ..... a.d. One occasioned by long rains . . . One in England and France (Rapin) Again, one so great, that bread was made from fern-roots (Stov)) . . . . One throughout these islands Awful one iu Prance (Voltaire) . One general in these realms . One which devastates Bengal . . . At the Cape de Verde, where 16,000 per- sons perish One grievously felt in France . . . One severely felt in England . Again, throughout the kingdom . . At Drontheim, owing to Sweden inter- cepting the supplies .... Scarcity of food severely felt by the Irish poor, 1814, 181(5, 1822, and 1315 1335 1353 1438 1565 1693 1748 1771 1775 1789 1795 1801 1813 Awful famine in Egypt . . a.d. 42 At Rome, attended by plague . . . 262 In Britain, so grievous that people ate the bark of trees 272 In Scotland, and thousands die . . . 306 In England, where 40,000 perish . . 310 Awful one in Phrygia . . . . 370 So dreadful in Italy, that parents ate their children (Dufremoy) . . . 450 In England, Wales, and Scotland . . 739 Again, when thousands starve . . 823 Again, which lasts four years . . . 954 Awtul one throughout Europe . . lOlii In England, 21 William 1 1087 In England and France ; this famine leads to a pestilential fever, which lasts from 1193 to 1195 Another famine in England . . . 1251 Again, so dreadful, that the people de- poor, 1814, 1816, 1822, and . . . 1831 In Ireland the failure of the potato crop (produced by disease in that esculent), and the consequent scarcity of food in that country in 1846, and the three following years consecutively, almost amounted to a famine, particularly in the south and west. Grants by parliament, to relieve the suffering of the people, were made in the session of 1847, the whole amounting to ten millions sterling. FAN. The use of the fan was known to the ancients : Cape hoc flabellumet ventuliim; hide sicfacito. — ^Terence. The modern custom among the ladies was borrowed from the East. Fans, together with muffs, masks, and false hair, were first devised by the harlots in Italy, and were brought to England from France. — Stow. The fan was used by females to hide their faces at church. — Pardon. In the British Museum are fan-handles and other articles of Egyptian manufacture, used anciently by women. FARCE. This species of dramatic entertainment originated in the di'oll shows which were exhibited by charlatans and their buffoons in the open street. These were introduced into our theatres in a less ludicrous and more refined form ; and they are now shorter, but often superior to the pieces called comedies. See article Drama. FARTHING. One of the earliest of the English coins. Farthings in silver were coined by king John ; the Irish farthing of his reign is of the date of 1210, and is valuable and rare. Farthings were coined in England in silver by Henry VIII. First coined in copper by Charles II. 1665 ; and again in 1672, when there was a large coinage of copper money. Half-farthings were first coined in the reign of Victoria, 1843. See Queen Anne's Farthings. FAS 251 FER FASTS. They were practised and observed by most nations from the remotest antiquity. Annual fasts, as that of Lent, and at other stated times, and on particular occasions, to appease the anger of God, began in the Christian Church, in the second century, A.D. 138. Fast days are appointed by the reformed Churches in times of war and pestilence. Fasting for an incredible time has been recorded of numerous persons. See Ahsiinence. FEASTS AND FESTIVALS. The feast of tlie tabernacles was instituted by Moses in the wilderness, 1490 B.C. but was celebrated with tlie greatest magnificence for four- teen days, upon the dedication of the temple of Solomoij, 1005 B.C. — Tosejihus. In the Christian Cliurch those of Chi-istmas, Easter, Ascension, and the Pentecost, or Whit- suntide, were first ordered to be observed by all Christians, a.d. G8. Rogation days were appointed in 469. Jubilees in the Romish Church were instituted by Boniface VIII. in 1300. See Jubilees. For fixed festivals observed in the Cimrch of England, as settled at the Reformation, et seq. see Book of Common Prayer. FEBRUARY". The second month of the yeai-, so called from Februa, a feast which was held tiierein in behalf of the manes of deceased persons, when sacrifices were per- formed, and the last offices were paid to the shades of the dead. This month, with January, was added to the year, which had previously but ten months, by Numa, 713 B.C. See Calendar and Year. FECIALES. Heralds of ancient Rome to denounce war or proclaim peace. When the Romans thought themselves injured, one of this sacerdotal body was empowered to demand redress; and after thirty-three days, if submission were not made, war was declared, and the Feciales hurled a bloody spear into the territories of the enemy, in proof of intended hostilities. These priests or heralds were instituted by Numa, about 712 B.C. — Livy. FENCING. This science, as it is called, was introduced into England from France, where it had long before been tolei-ated, and is still mucli in use, as instruction in self- defence, duels being fought chiefly by small swords there. Fencing schools having led to duelling in England, they were prohibited in London, by statute 13 Edw. I. 1284. — Northouck's Hist, of London. FERE-CHAMPENOISE, BATTLE of. Between the French army under Marmont, Mortier, and Arrighi, and the Austrians under the prince of Schwartzenberg. by whom tlie French were surprised and defeated, March 25, 1814. Paris surrendered to the allied armies six days after this battle. See France. FERI^ LATIN.cE. These were festivals at Rome, instituted by Tarquin the Proud. The principal magistrates of forty-seven towns of Latium assembled on a mount near Rome, where they and the Roman authorities offered a bull to Jupiter Latialis. During these festivals it was not lawful for any person to work, 534 B.C. — Livy. FERNS, BISHOPRIC of, in Irkland. Anciently this see was for a time archiepis- copal ; for in the eai'ly ages of Christianity the title of archbishop in Ireland, except that of Armagh, was not fixed to any particular see, but sometimes belonged to one, and sometimes to another city, according to the sanctity anil merits of the presiding bishop. He was not denominated from his see, but from the province in which his prelacy was situated. St. Edan was seated here in a.d. 598. Leighlin and Ferns were united in ] 600 ; and under the provisions of the Church Temporalities' act, passed Aug. 1833, both have lately been imited to the bishopric of Ossory. See Ossory. FEROZESHAH, BATTLE of, India. Between the Sikhs and British. The British attacked the entrenchments of the Sikhs, and carried by storm their first line of works, Dec. 21 ; but night coming on, the operations were suspended till daybreak next day, when their second line was carried, and their guns captured ; the Sikhs advanced to retake their guns, but were repulsed with great loss, and retreated towards thcSutlej, Dec. 22 ; and recrossed that river unmolested, Dec. 27, 1845. FERR ARS' ARREST. Mr. George Fcrrars, a member of parliament, being in attendance on the house, was taken in execution by a sheriff's oflicer for debt, and committed to the Compter. The house despatched their sergeant to require his release, which was resisted, and an affray taking place, his mace was broken. The house in a body repaired to the Lords to complain, when the contempt was adjudged to be very great, and the punishment of the otfenders was referred to the lower house. On another messenger being sent to the sheriifs by the commons, they delivered up the senator, and the civil magistrates and the creditor were committed to the Tower, the inferior officers to Newgate, and an act was passed releasing Mr. Ferrars from liability for the debt. The king, Henry VIII. highly approved of all these proceedings, and the FER 252 FIE transaction became the basis of that rule of parliaineut which exempts members to this day from arrest, a.d. 1542. — HoUingshed. FERRO. The most western of the Canary Isles, from whose west point some geo- graphers have taken their first meridian. This island was known to the ancients, and was re-discovered in 1402. See Canary Islands. In the middle of the Island of Ferro is the fountain tree, from whose leaves great quantities of water are distilled. FERROL, BRITISH EXPEDITION to. Upwards of 10,000 British landed near Ferrol under tlie command of Sir .James Pulteney, in August, 1800. They gained possession of the heights, notwithstanding whicli the British general, despairing of success, on account of tlie strength of the works, desisted from the enterprise, and re-embarked the troops. His conduct on this occasion, which was in opposition to the opinion and advice of the officers of his army, was very much condemned in England. The French took seven sail of the line here, Jan. 27, 1809. FETE DE DIEU. Berengarius, archbishop of Angers, was opposed to the doctrine of transubstantiation when it was first propagated, and to atone for this crime a yearly procession was made at Angers, which was called la fete de Dieu, a.d. 1019. FETE DE VERTU. An assemblage, chiefly of young persons, annually brought to- gether by the late benevolent lady Harcom-t, to be adjudged rewards for industry and virtue. The scene of this cheering exhibition was Nuneham, iu Oxfordshire; and here females of coi'rect morals, and males engaged in laudable pursuits, obtained pi'izes every year. These f^tes were commenced in 1789, and continued till lady Harcourt's death. FEUDAL LAWS. The tenure of land, by suit and service to the lord or owner of it, was introduced into England by the Saxons, about A.D. 600. The slavery of this tenure was increased vxnder William I. in 1068. This was done by dividing the kingdom into baronies, and giving them to certain persons, requiring them to furnish tlie king with money, and a stated number of soldiers. These laws were discoun- tenanced in France by Louis XL in 1470. The vassalage was restored, but limited by Henry VII. 1495. Abolished by statute 12 Chas. IL 1663. The feudal system was introduced into Scotland by Malcolm II. in 1008; and was finally abolished in that kingdom, 20 Geo. II. 1746.^ — Lyttlcton ; Ruff head ; BlacJcsione. FEUILLANS. The order of Feuillans, which had been founded in France the preceding year, settled in Paris in 1587. — Henault. Members of a society formed in Paris to counteract the intrigues and operations of the Jacobins, named from the Feuillan convent, where their meetings were held, early in the Revolution. A body of Jacobins invested the building, burst into their hall, and obliged them to separate, Dec. 25, 1791. — Hist. French Revolution. FEZ (the ancient Mauritania), founded by Edrus, a descendant of Mahomet, a.d. 793. It soon after became the capital of all the western Morocco States. Leo Africanus describes Mauritania as containing more than seven hundred temples, mosques, and other public edifices in the twelfth century. FICTIONS IN LAW. Invented by the lawyers in the reign of Edward I. as a means of carrying cases from one court to another, whereby the courts became checks to each other. — Hume. Memorable declaration of lord Mansfield, in the court of King's Bench, emphatically uttered, that " no fiction of law shall ever so far prevail AGAINST THE REAL TRUTH, AS TO PREVENT THE EXECUTION OF JUSTICE," May 21, 1784. This constitutional maxim is now a rule of law. FIEF. In France we find fiefs-men mentioned as early as the age of Childebert I. A.D. 611. They were introduced into Italy by the Lombards. Into Spain, before the invasion of the Moors, a.d. 710. Into England, by the Saxons (see Feudal Laws). Into Scotland, directly from England, by Malcolm II. 1008. Towards the end of our second race of kings, France was held as a feudal tenure, and was governed as a great fief rather than as a monarchy. — Mezeray. FIELD OF THE CLOTH of GOLD. Henry VIII. embarked at Dover to meet Francis I. of France at Ardres, a small town near Calais in France, May 31, 1520. The nobility of both kingdoms here displaj'ed their magnificence with such emulation and profuse expense, as procured to the place of interview (an open plain) the name of The Field of the Cloth of Gold. Many of the king's attendants involved themselves in great debts on this occasion, and were not able, by the penury of their whole lives, to repair the vain splendour of a few days. A painting of the embarcation, and another of the interview, are at Windsor Castle. — Butler. FIE 253 FIR FIESCHFS ATTEMPT on LOUIS-PHILIPPE of FRANCE. This assassin fired au infernal machine at the French king, as lie rode along the lines of the National Guard, on the Boulevard du Temple, accompanied by his three sons and suite. The machine consisted of twenty-five barrels, charged with various species of missiles, and lighted simultaneously by a train of gunpowder. The king and his sons escaped ; but Mai'shal Mortier (duke of Treviso) was shot dead, many officers wore dangerously wounded, and an indiscriminate slaughter was made among the spectators, there being upwards of forty persons killed or injured, July 28, 1835. FIFTH-MONARCHY MEN. These were fanatical levellers who arose in the time of Oliver Cromwell, and who supposed the period of the Millennium to be just at hand, ■when Jesus should descend from Heaven and erect the fifth universal monarchy. They actually proceeded in their fanaticism so far as to elect Jesus Christ king at London ! Cromwell dispersed them, 1653. — Kcardey. FIG TREE, Ficus Carica. Brought from the south of Europe, before a.d. 1548. — The Botany-Bay Fig, Ficus Australis, brought from N. S. Wales, in 1789. iSee Fruits. FIGURES. The numerical characters, or arithmetical figures (nine digits and zero), and the method of computing by them, were brought into Europe from Arabia, about A.D. 900. They are said to have been first known in England about the year 1253 (reign of Henry III.), previously to which time the numbering by Roman letters was in use in these countries. See Arithmetic. FINES AND RECOVERIES. Conferring the power of breaking ancient entails and alienating estates. The practice of breaking entails by means of a fine and recovery was introduced in the reign of Edward IV. but it was not, properly speaking, law, till the statute of Henry VII. which, by correcting some abuses that attended the practice, gave indirectly a sanction to it ; 4 Henry VII. 1489. — Uuiiie. Fines and recoveries are now abolished. FIRE. It is said to have been first produced by striking flints together. The poets suppose that fire was stolen from Heaven by Prometheus. Zoroaster, kiug of Bactria, was the founder of the sect of the Magi, or Worshippers of Firo, since known by the ap]»ellation of Guebres, still numerous in the countries of the East, 2115 B.C. — Justin ; Pliny. Heraclitus maintained that the world was created from fire, and he deemed it to be a god omnipotent, and taught tliis theory about 596 B.C. — Noiiv. Diet. In the Scriptures God is said often to have appeared in, or encompassed with, fire — as to Moses in the burning bush, on Mount Sinai; and to the prophets Isaiah, Ezekicl, and St. John. The wrath of God is described as a consuming fire, and the angels, as hia ministers, are compared to it. — See the Bible. FIRE-ARMS. Small arms were contrived by Schwartz, a.d. 1378 ; they were brought to England about 1388. Fire-arms were a prodigious rarity in Ireland in 1489, when six muskets were sent from Germany as a present to the earl of Kildare, who was then chief-governor. Muskets were first used at the siege of Rhcgcn, in 1525. The Spaniards were the first nation who armed the foot soldier with these weapons. — Ullun. Voltaire states, that the Venetians were the first to use guns, in an engage- ment at sea against the Genoese, 1377 ; but our historians affirm, tliat the English had guns at the battle of Creasy, in 1346; and the year following at the siege of Calais. See Artillery. FIRE-BARS, DEATH by the. An ancient punishment of China, the invention of the emperor Sheoo, who reigned in the 12th century B.C. The sufferer was compelled to walk on bars of red-hot iron, from which, if he fell, his almost certain fate, he was received in a burning furnace beneath, and was consumed in the flames. The Carthaginians arc said to have had a punishment similar to this ; but the fact is not BufiSciently authenticated. FIRE-ENGINES. The firc-cngino is of modern invention, although the forcing-pump, of which it is au application, i.s more than two centuries old. The fire-engine, to force water, was constructed by John Vander Hoyden, about the year 1G63; it was im- proved materially in 1752, and from that time to the present. The fire-watch, or fire-guard of London, was instituted Nov. 1791. The fire-brigade was established' iu London in 1833. FIRE-SHIPS. They were first used iu the sixteenth century. Among the most for- midable contrivances of this kind ever used, was an explosion vessel to destroy a bridge of boats at the siege of Antwerp, in 1585. The first use of them in the English navy was by Charles, lord Howard of Effingham, afterwards earl of Netting- FIR 254 FIR ham, lord high admiral of England, in the engagement of the Spanish Armada, July, 1588. — Eapin. FIRE-WORKS. Are said to have been familiar to the Chinese, in remote ages : they were invented in Europe, at Florence, about a.d. 1360 ; and were first exhibited as a spectacle in 1588. At an exhibition of fire-works in Paris, in honour of the marriage of the dauphin, afterwards Louis XVI. the passages being stopped up, occasioned such a crowd, that the people, seized with panic, trampled upon one another till they lay in heaps; a scaffold erected over the river also broke down, and hundreds were drowned; more than 1000 persons perished on this occasion, June 21, 1770. Madame Blanchard ascending from Tivoli Gardens, Paris, at night in a balloon sur- rounded by fireworks, the balloon took fire, and she was precipitated to the ground, and dashed to pieces, July 6, 1819. See Balloon. FIRE-WORKS IN ENGLAND. The grandest ever known in this country were played off from a magnificent building purposely erected in the Green-park, London, at the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, which was signed April 30, 1748. Sir William Congreve has borne the palm from the Italian and French artists ; he erected the beaiitiful pagoda- bridge, the temple of concord, and other devices in the parks, and superintended the grand display of fireworks, Aug. 1, 1814, on the celebration of the general peace, and to commemorate the centenary accession of the family of Bi-unswick to the British throne. These fireworks surpassed all previous exhibitions of the kind. FIRES IN LONDON. The conflagration of a city, with all its tumult of concomitant distress, ia one of the most dreadful spectacles which this world can offer to human eyes. — I)r. Johison. In London have been many fires of awful magnitude. Among the early fires, was one which destroyed the greater part of the city, a.d. 982. A fire happened in the 20th of William I. 1086 ; it consumed all the houses and churches from the west to the east gate. — Baker's Citron. For the Great Fires in London see next article. The following are among the memorable fires of more recent occurrence in the metropolis :- A.r>. 16V6 1716 1736 In Sonthwark, 60 houses burnt In Wapping, 150 liouses burnt At Shadwell, 50 houses burnt In Cornhill ward, 200 houses burnt ; this fire began in Change-alley, and was the most ternble since the great iire of 1(566 . . . . March 25, 1748 At Covent-garden, 50 houses . . . 1759 In Smithfield, 28 houses burnt . . . 1761 At Shad well, 30 houses burnt . . 1761 In Throgmorton-street, 20 houses . . 1 774 At Wapping, 20 houses .... 1775 At Hermitage-stairs, 31 houses . . . 1779 At Horsley-dowu, 30 houses, besides many warehouses and ships . . 1780 In the Strand, 40 houses . . . . 1781 In Aldersgate-street, 40 houses ; the loss exceeding lOO.OOOJ. . . Nov. 5, 1783 At Rotherhithe, 20 houses . Oct^ 12, 1790 Again, when many ships and 60 houses were consiuned . . . Sept. 14, 1791 At 'Wapping, 630 houses, and an .East India warehouse, in which 35,000 bags of saltpetre were stored ; the loss l,000,000i. .... July 21, 1794 Astley's Amphitheatre . . Sept. 17, 1794 At Sliadwell, 20 houses burnt. Nov. 1, 1796 In the Minories, 30 houses . March 23, 1797 In the King's Bench, 50 residences, July 14, 1799 Near the Customs, 3 West India ware- houses ; loss 300,000?. . . Feb. 11, 1800 At Wapping, 30 houses . . Oct. 6, 1800 In Store-street, Tottenham-court road ; immense property destroyed, Sept. 27. 1802 The great tower over the choir of West- minster Abbey burnt . . July 9, 1803 Astley's again, and 40 houses. Sept. 1, 1803 Covent-garden theatre . . Sept. 20, 1808 Drury-lane theatre . . Feb. 24, 1809 In Conduit-street; Mr. Windham, in aiding to save Mr. North's library, received an injury which caused his death July 9, 1809 In Bui-y-street, St. Mary-axe, half the street made ruins . . . June 12, ISIl Custom-house burned down, with many adjoining warehouses, and the public records Feb. 12, 1814 At Rotherhithe ; loss, 80,000i. March 16, 1820 At Mile-end ; loss, 200,000i. . Jan. 22, 1821 In Smithfield ; loss, 100,000?.' . Aug. 14, 1822 In Red-lion street, 15 houses . June 6, 1823 English Opera-house, and several houses in its rear, burnt . . . Feb. 16, The two Houses of Parliament entirely consumed . . . . Oct. 16, The Royal-Exchange and many houses burnt to the gi-ound . . Jan. 10, At Wapping, 12 houses . . June 16, A stley 's theatre again . . June 8, At the Tower ; the armoury and 280,000 stand of arms, &c. destroyed, Oct. 30, At Dover-street, Piccadilly (Raggett's hotel) several persons of high respect- ability perished in the flames May 27, A destructive fire, burning several houses in Lincoln's-inn, New-square Jan. 14, One in St. Martin's-lane (at the house of a publican named Ben Caunt), three lives lost .... Jan. 15, Fire at Duke-street, London-bridge ; pro- perty estimated at 60,000(. damaged, Feb. 19, At the Rose and Crown, Love-lane, City, four lives lost . . . May 18, A great fire at the foot of London -bridge, four large hop warehouses burnt, loss 150,000? June 2.3, 1851 The warehouses of Messrs. Pawson, St. Paul's Churchyard burnt . Feb. 24, Works of Gutta Percha Company, near City road ; loss 100 000?. . June 5, Messrs. Scott Russell and Go's, works, Millwall ; loss 100,000?. . Sept. 10, Premises of Messrs, Saville and Edwards, printers, Ghandos-street, destroyed, Sept. 30, 1853 1830 1834 1838 1840 1841 1841 1845 1849 1851 1851 1851 1853 1853 1853 FIR 255 FLA FIRES IN LONDON", continued. Premises of Messrs. Townend, &c. Bread-street, destroyed; loss, 80,000(. Dec. 31, 1853 Messrs. Routlodge's premises, near Black- friars' road ; loss, one life and 150,000/. Feb. 16, 1855 Of Etna steam battei-y at Messrs. Scott Russell's works . . May 8, 1855 These are but a few fires out of as many hundreds of private buildings, f:\ctories, and houses in the metropolis; but since the great fire in the 'I'ower in 1841, no public edifice has suffered by this calamity. The insurance-offices calculate that as many as 300 fires occur annually in London. See Gateshead. FIRES OF LONDON, toe GREAT. Awful one at London-bridge, which begun on the Southwark side, but by some accident (not accounted for) it took fire at the other end also, and hemmed in the numerous crowd which had assembled to help the distressed. The sufferers, to avoid the flames, threw themselves over the bridge into boats and barges ; but many of these sunk by people crowding into them, and 3000 pei-sons were drowned in the Thames. The fire, likewise, for want of hands to extin- guish it, burnt great part of the city north and south from the bridge, 14 John, 1212. The fire, called the Great Fire, whose ruins covered 436 acres, extended from the Tower to the Temple-church, and from the north-east gate to Holborn-bridge. It began at a baker's house in Pudding-lane behind Monument-yard, and destroyed in the space of four days, eighty -nine churches, including St. Paul's ; the city gates, the Royal Exchange, the Custom House, Guildhall, Sion College, and many other public buildings, besides 13,200 houses, laying waste 400 streets. This conflagration happened (not without strong suspicion of treason), Sept. 2, 1666, a)id continued three days and nights, and was at last only extinguished by the blowing up of houses. — Hume; Rapin ; Carte. FIRST Fruits. Prwutlm among the Hebrews. They were offerings which made a large part of the revenues of the Hebrew priesthood. First fruits were instituted hy pope Clement v. in A.D. 1306; and were collected in England in 1316. The first yeai-'s income of every Church benefice in England was given to the popes till the 27th of Hen. VIII. 1535, when the first fruits were assigned, by act of paidiament, to the king and his successors. — Carte. Granted, together with the tenths, to increase the incomes of the poor clergy, by queen Anne, Feb. 1704. Consolidation of the offices of First Fruits, Tenths, and queen Anne's Bounty, by statute 1 Vict. April, 1838. See Augmentation of Poor Livings. FISHERIES. The Fishmongers' company of London was incorporated in 1536. Fishing towns were regulated by an act passed in 1 542. Fishing on our coasts was forbidden by statute to strangers in 1609. The Dutch paid 30,000Z. for permission to fish on the coasts of Britain, 1636. The corporation of the Free British Fisheries was instituted in 1750. Fish-machines for conveying fish by land to London were set up in 1761 ; and supported by parliament, 1764. The British Society of Fisheries was established in London in 1786. The Irish Fishery Company was formed in Dec. 1818. See Herring, Whale and Newfoundland Fisheries. FIVE-MILE ACT. This was an oppressive statute passed in the 16th year of Charles II Oct. 1665. It obliged non-conformist teachers, who refused to take the n on -resistance oath, not to come within five miles of any corporation where they had preached since the act of oblivion (unless they were travelling), under the penalty of fifty pounds. — Kearsley. FLAG. The flag acquired its present form iu the sixth century, in Spain ; it was pre- viously small and square. — Ashe. The flag is said to have been introduced there by the Saracen.s, before wiiich time the ensigns of war were extended on cross pieces of wood. — Pardf/n. The term flag is more particularly used at sea, to denote to what couutry a ship belongs, and the quality of its commander. The houour-of-the-flag salute at sea was exacted by England from very early times; but it was formally yielded by the Dutch in a.D. 1673, at which period they had been defeated in many actions. Louis XIV. obliged the Spaniards to lower their flag to the French, 1680. Henault. After an engagement of three hours betwecu Tourville and the Spanish admiral Papachin, the latter yielded by firing a salute of nine guns to the French flag, June 2, 1688.— /(/oft. See Salute at Sea. FLAGELLANTS, SECT of. A general plague, which swept away a vast multitude of people, gave rise to the fanatic sect of flagellants or whippers, whom this scourge had awakened to a sense of religion. — Henault. They established themselves at Perousc, A.D. 1260. They maintained that there was no remission of sins without flagellation FLA 256 FLE and publicly lashed themselves, while in procession preceded by the cross, until the blood flowed from their naked backs. Their leader, Coui-ad Schmidt, was burnt,, 1414. FLAMBEAUX, FEAST of. This was a feast instituted in Greece, to commemorate the fidelity of Hypermnestra, who saved her husband Lynceus (son of .lEgyptus) while her forty-nine sisters, on the night of their nuptials, sacrificed theirs, at the command of their jealous and cruel father, Danaus, 1425 B.C. See Argos. FLANDERS. The country of the ancient Belgse ; conquered by Julius Ca3sar, 47 B.C. It passed into the hands of France, a.D. 412. It was governed by its earls subject to that crown, from 864 to 1369. It then came into the house of Austria by marriage ; but was yielded to Spain in 1556. Flanders shook off the Spanish yoke in 1572 ; and in 1725, by the treaty of Vienna, it was annexed to the German empire. — Priestley. Flanders was overrun by the French in 1792 and 1794, and was declared part of their Kepublic. It was made part of the kingdom of the Netherlands in 1814, and was erected into the kingdom of Belgium in 1831. See Belgium. FLAT-BUSH, BATTLE of, Long Island. Fought between the British forces and the revolted Americans, when the latter, after a desperate engagement, were defeated, with the loss of 2000 men killed, and 1000 prisoners, Aug. 27, 1776. The Americans, in their retreat to New York after this engagement, were providentially saved by the interposition of a thick fog. FLATTERY CAPE. Situate on the western coast of North America. It was so named by the illustrious English navigator, captain Cook, because it had promised to him a harbour at a distance, which it did not yield him upon his nearer approach, in 1778. This disappointment was severely felt by his crew, who at the time were in want of provisions and refreshments. — Cook's Voyages. FLAX. The flax Bead was first planted in England ia a.d. 1533. For many ages the core was separated from the flax, the bark of the plant, by the hand. A mallet was next used ; but the old methods of breaking and scutching the flax yielded to awater-mUl which was invented in Scotland about 1750. See ai'ticle Henvp. FLEET MARKET, PRISON, &c. Built on the small river Fleta, now arched over, and used as a common sewer. In the reign of Hen. VII. this river was navigable to Holborn-bridge ; and the obelisk in Fleet-street denotes the extent of it in 1775. The prison, for debtors, was founded as early as the first year of Richard I. It was the place of confinement for those who had incurred the displeasure of that arbitrary court, the Star Chamber ; and persons were committed here for contempts of the court of Chancery. The Fleet prison was burnt down by the prisoners, June 7, 1780.* Fleet market was originally formed in 1737 ; and was removed from Farringdon-street, Nov. 20, 1829. The granite obelisk in Fleet-street, to the memory of Alderman Waithman, erected June 25, 1833, and completed in one day. Fleet Prison demolished (the debtors having been removed to the Queen's Bench), 1845. FLEUR-DE-LIS. The emblem of France, and of which it is gravely recorded that it was sent to the French people from heaven by an angel, whose commission was addressed to Clovis, their first Christian king. Clovis, it is related, made a vow that if he proved victorious in a pending battle with the Alemans. he would embrace Christianity ; and his arms having been triumphant in this battle, which was fought near Cologne, a.d. 496, he adopted the lily, and it has been the national emblem ever since. See Lily. FLEURUS, BATTLE of. Between the allies under the prince of Coburg, and the French revolutionary army commanded by Jourdan. The allies, with an army of 100,000 men, had for their object the relief of Charleroi, when they were met on the plains of Fleurus, and signally defeated. Between eight and ten thousand were killed, wounded, and taken prisoners ; and Jourdan was enabled to form a junction with the French armies of the Moselle, the Ardennes, and the north. In this memorable battle the French made use of a balloon to reconnoitre the * Au extraordiuary and formidable evil once prevailed in this prison. Illicit marriages were celebrated in it to an amazing extent. Between the 19th October, 1704, and February 12, 1705, there were celebrated 2954 marriages in the Fleet, without license or certificate of banns. Twenty or thirty couple were sometimes joined in one day, and their names concealed by private marks, if they chose to pay an extra fee. Pennant, at a later period, describes the daring manner in which this nefarious traffic was carried on. He says, that in walking by the pri.son in bis youth, he has been often accosted with " Sir, will you please to walk in and be married? " And he states, that painted signs, of a male and ferpale hand conjoined, with the inscription, " Marriages perfonned within, " were common along the building. This glaring abuse was put an end to by the Marriage Act in 1753. FLI 257 FLO enemy's army, an experiment which, it is said, contributed to the success of the day, June 17, 1794. FLIES. There happened an extraordinary and memorable fall of these insects in London, covering the clothes of passengers in the streets, in which they lay so thick, that the impressions of the people's feet were visible on the jiavements, as they are in a thick fall of snow, a.d. 1707. — Chamberlain's History of London. In the United States of America is an insect, commonly called the Hessian Ji>/, from the notion of its having been brought there by the Hessian troojis in the service of England in the American war of independence ; its ravages were very extensive on the wheat in 1777 et seq. ; but the injury to the crops was much less after a few years. — Before and during the severe attack of cholera at Newcastle in Sept. 1853, the air was infest^id with small flies. FLOATING BATTERIES. See article Batteries, and Gibraltar, Siege of, 1781. FLODDEN-FIELD, BATTLE of. Between the English and Scots. James IV. of Scot- land, having taken part with Louis XII. of France, against Henry VIII. of England, this battle was one of the consequences of his unfortunate policy ; and James, and most of his chief nobles, and upwards of 10,000 of his army were slain, while the English, who were commanded by the earl of Surrey, lost only persons of small note. Henry VIII. was at the time besieging Teroueune, near St. Omcr. Fought Sept. 9, 1513. FLORALIA. Games, in honour of Flora at Rome, instituted about the age of Romulus, but they were not celebrated with regularity and proper attention till the year U.C. 580. They wei"e observed yearly, and exhibited a scene of the most unbounded licen- tiousness. It is reported that Cato wished once to be px-esent at the celebration, and that when he saw that the deference for his presence interriipted the feast, he retired, not choosing to be the spectator of the prostitution of naked women in a public theatre. — Valerius Max. FLORENCE. It is said to have been founded by the soldiers of Sylla, and enlarged by the Roman Triumviri. It was destroyed by Totila, and was rebuilt by Charlemagne. Florence, at the time a republic, had its constitution destroyed, and Alexander de Medicis was appointed duke under the title of grand duke of Tuscany, by the emperor Charles V. in 1530. On the death of Gaston de Medicis in 1737, Florence fell with the rest of the duchy, to the duke of Lorraine, afterwards emperor. This city is truly the seat of the arts. In its palaces, universities, academies, churches, and libraries, are to be found the rarest works of sculpture and painting in the world. The Florentine academy, and the ..4 carfc»i/a dclla Crusca, were instituted to enrich the literature and improve the language of Tuscany ; the latter was so named because it rejects like bran all words not purely Tuscan : both are now united under the former name. Florence was taken by the French in July 1796, and again in March 1799 ; and was restored in 1811. See Tuscany. FLORES, OR ISLE of FLOWERS. Discovered by Vanderberg, in 1439 ; and settled by the Portuguese in 1448. The whole surface of this island presented originally the appearance of a garden of flowers, rich in perfume, the summer breeze wafting the odour round the coast. This is one of the Azores ; so called by Mai'tin Behem, on account of their abounding in hawks. FLORIDA. First discovered by Sebastian Cabot in ad. 1497. It was visited by Ponce de Leon, the Spanish navigator, April 2, 1512, in a voyage he had .absurdly under- taken to discover a fountain whoso waters had the property of restoring youth to the aged who tasted them ! Florida was conquered by the Sjtaniards under Ferdi- nand de Soto, in 1539 ; but the settlement was not fully established until 1565. It was pluiulered by s'.r Francis Drake in 1585 ; and by Davis, a buccaneer, in 1665. It w;vs invaded by the British in 1702. Again, by general Oglethorpe, in 1740. Ceded to the Britisii crown in 1763. 1'aken by the Spaniards in 1781 ; and guai'anteed to them ill 1783. Revolution in 1 SI 0, when the American government took means for occupying thf country; and after a tedious negotiation, it was finally ceded* by Spain to the United States in 1820-21. FLORIN. A coin first made by the Florentines. A floren was issued by Edward III. which was current in England at the value of 6s. in 1337. — Camden. This English * In ISOl, the American goverumeut purcliased Louisiana from the French, of which they contended West Florida formed a part. On the revolution, and in consequence of this purchase, Spain, unable to defend the country, ceded the whole of Florida to the United States, to which it wjis finally annexed after the negotiation above mentioned. S FLO 258 FLU coin was called floren after the Florentine coin, because the latter was of the best gold. — Ashe. The florin of Germany is iu value 2s. Ad. ; that of Spain 4s. i\d. ; that of Palermo and Sicily 2s. 6cZ. ; that of Holland 'Is.^A ylife. A silver coinage of florins, value 2s. was issued by proclamation of queen Victoria, August, 1849. FLOWERS. The most delightful and fragrant among the ornaments of our gardens are of foreign production. The modern taste for flowers came, it is said, from Persia to Constantinople, and was imported thence to Europe for the first time in the sixteenth century ; at least many of the productions of our gardens were conveyed by that channel. From the reign of Henry VIL to that of Elizabeth, our present common flowers were, for the most part, introduced into England. The art of preserving flowers in sand was discovered in 1633. A mode of preserving them from the efi"ects of frost in winter, and hastening their vegetation in summer, was invented in America, by George Morris, in 1792. Among the flowers, the periods of whose introduction to our gardens have been traced, are the following : — FLOWERS, PLANTS, &C. Acacia, N. America, before . a.d. 1640 Allspice shrub, Carolina . . . 1726 Anniseed tree, Florida, about . . . 1766 Ai'bor Vitse, Canada, before . . . 1696 Arctopus, Cape of Good Hope . . . 1774 Aiu-icula, Switzerland .... 1567 Azarole, S. Europe, befoi-e . . . 1640 Bay, roj-al, Madeira .... 1665 Bay, sweet, Italy, before . . . . 1548 Camellia, China 1811 Chaste tree, Sicily, before . . . . 1570 Christ's thorn, Africa, before . . . 1596 Canary bell-flower. Canaries . . . 1696 Carnation, Flanders .... 1567 Ceauothus, blue. New Spain . . . 1818 Canary convolvulus, Canaries . . 1690 Convolvulus, many-flowered . . . 1779 Coral tree, Cape 1816 Coral tree, bell-flowered. Cape . . 1791 Coral tree, tremulous. Cape . . . 17S9 Creeper, Virginian, N. Am.erica . . 1603 Dahlia, China . . . . . . 1803 Dryandra, New Holland . . . 1803 Evergreen tliorii, Italy . . . . 1629 Everlasting, great-flowered, Cape . . 1781 Everlasting, giant. Cape . . . . 1793 Fei-nbush, sweet, N. America . . 1714 Fox-glove, Canaries 1698 Geranium, Flanders .... 1534 Gillyflower, Flanders 1507 Gold-plant, Japan 1783 Golden boll-flower, Madeira . . . 1777 Hawthorn, American, from N. America, before 1683 Heath, ardent. Cape . . . . 1800 Heath, beautiful. Cape .... 1795 Heath, fragrant, Cape . . . . 1803 Heath, garland, Cape .... 1774 Heath, perfumed. Cape . . . . 1803 Honejrflower, great. Cape . . . 1688 Honeysuckle, Chinese, China . . . 1806 Honeysuckle, fly. Cape .... 1752 Honeysuckle, trumpet, N. America . . 1656 Hyssop, south of Europe, before . . 1548 Jasmine, Circassia, before . . . . 1548 Jasmine, Catalonian, East Indies . . 1629 Judas tree, south of Europe, before . 1596 Laburnum, Hungary .... 1576 Laurel, Alexandrian, Portugal, before . 1713 Laurestine, south of Europe, before . . 1596 Lavender, south of Europe, before . 1568 Lily, Italy, before 1460 Lily, Gigantic, N. South Wales . . 1800 Lily, red-coloured, South America . . 1623 Loblolly -bay, N. America, before . a.d. 1739 Lupine-tree, Cape, about . . . . 1793 Magnolia (see Magnolia), North America 1688 Magnolia, dwarf, China .... 1786 Magnolia, laurel-leaved, N. America . 1734 Maiden-hair, Japan 1714 Mignonette, Italy 1528 Milk-wort, great-flowered, Cape . . 1713 Milk-wort, showy. Cape . . . . 1814 Mountain-tea, N. America, before . 1758 Mock orange, south of Europe, before . 1596 Myrtle, caudleberry, N. America . . 1699 Myrtle, woolly-leaved, China . . . 1776 Nettle-tree, south of Europe, before . 1596 Olive, Cape, Cape 1730 Olive, sweet-scented, China ' . . . 1771 Oleander, red, south of Europe . . . 1596 Paraguay tea, Carolina, before . .1724 Passion-flower, Brazil . . . . 1692 Passion-flower, orange, Carolina . . 1792 Pigeon-berry, N. America . . . . 1736 Pink, from Italy 1567 Ranunculus, Alps 1528 Roses, Netherlands .... 1522 Rose, the China, China . . . . 1789 Rose, the damask, Marseilles, and south of Europe, about 1543 Rose, the Japan, China . . . . 1793 Rose, the moss, before . . . 1724 Rose, the musk, Italy . . . . 1522 Rose, the Provence, Flanders . . 1567 Rose, sweet-scented guelder, from China 1821 Rose, tube, from Java and Ceylon . . 1629 Rose without thorns, N. America, before 1726 Rosemary, south of Europe . . . 1548 St. Peter's wort, North America . . 1730 Sage, African, Cape .... 1731 Sage, Mexican, Mexico . . . . 1724 Sassafras tree, N. America, before . . 1663 Savin, south of Europe, before . . . 1584 Snowdi-op, Carolina .... 1756 Sorrel-tree, N. America, before . . 1752 Sweet-bay, south of Europe, before . 1548 Tamarisk plant, Germany . . . 1560 Tea tree, China, about .... 1768 Tooth-ache tree, from Carolina, before . 1739 Trumpet-flower, N. America . . . 1640 Trumpet-flower, Cape .... 1823 Tulip, Vienna 1578 Virginia creeper, N. America, before . 1629 Virgin's-bower, Japan . . . . 1776 Weeping-willow, Levant, before . . 1692 Wax-tree, China 1794 Winter berry, Virginia .... 1736 Youlan, China 1789 ¥ FLUSHING, SIEGE op. A British armament under the command of the earl of Chatham, landed at Walcheren, July 30, 1809, with a view to the destruction of the ships and arsenal at Antwerp. On August 16th, Flushing was taken ; 6800 prisoners and 200 pieces of cannon were captured ; but the want of ability and energy of the commander and a number of untoward circumstances first rendered the principal FLU 259 FOR object of the expedition abortive, and then the pestilential nature of the island, at that particular season of the year, obliged the British to relinquish every advantage they had gained, and tlie place was evacuated, with great loss, (7000 dead and many incajiacitated) in December following. See Wulchcren Expeditiuii. FLUTE. Invented by Hyagnis, a Phrygian, the father of Marsyas. — Plutarch. The flute, harp, lyre, and other instruments were known to the Romans ; and the flute was so prized in antiquity, that several female deities lay claim to its invention. It was in far more general use as a concert instrument than the violin, until early in the la-st century, when the works of Corelli came over. See Music. FLUXIONS. Invented by Newton, 1G69. The differential calculus by Leibnitz, 1684. The finest applications of the calculus are by Newton, Euler, La Grange, and La Place. The first elementary work on fluxions in England is a tract of twenty-two pages in A New Short Treatise of Alf/ebra, together with a Specimen of the Nature and Algorithm of Fluxions, by John Harris, M.A. London, octavo, 1702. FLYING, ARTIFICIAL. It has been attempted in all ages. Friar Bacon maintained the possibility of the art of flying, and predicted it would be a general practice, A.n. 1273. Bishop Wilkins says, it will yet be as usual to hear a man call for his ^cin(/s when he is going on a journey, as it is now to hear him call for his boots, 1651. FONTHILL-ABBEY, in Wiltshire. The celebrated mansion of a remarkable character, Mr. Beckford. Within this vast and sumptuous edifice (the building of which, alone, cost Mr. Beckford 273,000Z.), were collected the most costly articles of vertu, the rarest works of the old masters, and the finest specimens of the arts. The auction of its treasures, and the sale of the abbey to Mr. Farquhar, took place in 1819 ; 7200 catalogues, at a guinea each, were sold in a few days. FONTAINEBLEAU, PEACE of. Concluded between France and Denmark in 1G79. Treaty of Fontainebleau between the emperor of Germany and Holland, signed Nov. 8, 1785. Treaty of Fontainebleau betw'een Napoleon and the royal family of Spain, Oct. 27, 1807. Concordat of Fontainebleau between Napoleon and pope Pius VII. Jan. 25, 1813. Fontainebleau was entered by the Austrians, Feb. 17, 1814. And here Napoleon x-esigned his imperial dignity, and bade farewell to his army, April 5, 1814. FONTENOY, BATTLE op, near Touruay. Between the French, commanded by count Saxe, and the English, Hanoverians, Dutch, and Austrians, commanded by tlic duke of Cmiiborland.* The battle was fought with great obstinacy, and the carnage on both sides was considerable, the allies losing 12,U00 men, and the French nearly an equal number of lives ; but the allies were in the end defeated. Count Saxe, who was at the time ill of the disorder of which he afterwards died, was carried about to all the posts in a litter, assuring his troops that the day would be then' own ; fought April 30, (May 11,) 1745. FONTS. Formerly the baptistry was a small room, or place partitioned off in a church where the persons to be baptized (many of whom in the early ages wei'e adults) were submerged. Previously to these artificial reservoirs, lakes and rivers were resorted to for immersion. Fonts for the initiation into Christianity were instituted in a.d. 1G7. FOOLS, FESTIVALS of, at Paris. These were held on the first of January, and were continued for 240 years. In their celebration, we are told, all sorts of absurdities and ijideccncies were committed, A.D. 1198. Fools or licensed jesters were kept at court in England (as they were at other courts in Europe), and were tolerated up to the time of Cliarles I. 1G25. FOREIGNERS, See Aliens. Foreigners were banished by proclamation, in Cimsequence of England being oveiTun with Flemings, Normans, and the people of other nations, 2 Hen. I. 1155. Foreigners were excluded from enjoying ecclesia.stical benefices, by the statute of provisors, 18 Edw. III. 1343. — Vinei: The later alien acts operate much in relieving foreigners from coercion and restraint. FOREIGN LEGIC)N. Foreigners have frequently been employed as auxiliaries in the pay of the British govcrimient. (See J/cssiaui).) An act for the formation of a Foreign Legion, as a contingent in the present war (1855) was pas.«ed Dec. 22, 1854. The Queen and prince Albert reviewed 3500 soldiers, principally Swiss and Germans, at Shornclifle, Aug. 9, 1855. * Tlic king, Louis XV. and the dauphin were present .it this great b.ittlc. The success of the Britisli at the commencement of it is still quoted bj- military men as the best illustration of the extra- ordinary power of a colunui. The advance of the Austrians during sevoi-al hours at the battle of Jtuicugo (fought June 14, ISOO) was compared to it by Bouajiartc. S 2 FOR 260 FOR FORESTS. There were in England, even in the last centurj^, as many as 68 forests, 18 chases, and upwards of 780 parks. The New Forest in Hampshii'e was made by William I. who for that purpose destroyed 36 parishes, pulled down 36 churches, and dispeopled the country for 30 miles round, a.d. 1079-85. — Stoio. The commissioners appointed to inquire into the state of the woods and forests, between a.d. 1787 and 1793, reported the following as belonging to the Crown, viz. : — in Berkshire, Windsor Forest and Windsor Great and Little Park. In Dorset, Cranburn Chase, In Essex, Walthiun or Epping Forest. In Gloucestershire, Dean Forest. In Hampshire, the New Forest, Alice Holt, and Woolmer Forest, Bere Forest. In Kent, Greenwich Park. In Middlesex, St. James's, Hyde, Bushy, and Hampton-court Parks. In Northamptonshire, the Forests of Whittlebury, Salcey, and Rockingham. In Notting- ham, Sherwood Forest. In Oxford, Whichwood Forest. In Surrey, Richmond Park. Some of these have since been enclosed. FORESTS, CHARTER op the. Charta de Foresta. Granted by king John, as well as the gi-aud charter of liberties. Magna Charta, a.d. 1215. This king having meanly resigned his crown and dominions to the pope Innocent III. to obtain absolution for the murder of his nephew Arthur ; and having, in a full assembly of clergy and laity, submitted to the humiliation of receiving them again from the j)ope's legate, to whom he paid homage for them, and took an oath to hold them as his vassal, under the yearly tribute of 1000 marks, the bishops and barons, incensed at the indignity, and roused by his exactions, entei-ed into a confederacy against him, rose in arms, and compelled him to sign the great national charters. See Magna Charta. There have been several Forest charters. A charter of Henry II. was found by the Record Commission, when inspecting the ancient records, Oct. 1, 181 3. FORFARSHIRE STEAMER. This vessel, on its passage from Hull to Dundee, was wrecked in a violent gale, and thirty-eight persons perished. Owing to the noble and courageous conduct of the Outer-Fern Lighthouse keeper (J. Darling), and bis heroic daughter (Grace Darling), who ventured out in a tremendous sea in a coble, several of the passengers were rescued. There were fifty-three persons in the vessel before she struck, Sept. 5, 1838. FORGERY. The forging of deeds, &c., or giving them in evidence was made punishable by fine, by standing in the pillory, having both ears cut off, the nostrils slit up and seared, the forfeiture of land and perpetual imprisonment, 5 Eliz. 1562. Forgery was first punished by death in 1634. Since the establishment of paper credit, a multitude of statutes have been enacted. Forging letters of attorney, for the transfer of stock, was made a capital felony in 1722. Mr. Ward, M.P. a man of prodigious wealth, was expelled the house of Commons for forgery. May 16, 1726 ; and was con- signed to the pillory, March 17, the following year. The value of forged notes which were presented at the bank during ten years, from January 1, 1801, was nominally 101,661Z. — Bank Returns. In one year (1817) the bank prosecuted 142 persons for forgery or the uttering of forged notes.* — Parliamentai-y Returns. Statutes reducing into one act all such forgeries as shall henceforth be punished with death, 1 Will. IV. 1830. The punishment of forgery with death ceased by stat. 2 & 3 AVill. IV. Aug. 1832, except in cases of forging or altering wills or powers of attorney to transfer stock ; but these cases also are no longer punishable by death, having been reduced to transportable offences, by act 1 Vict. c. 84, July 17, 1837. FORGERY, REMARKABLE EXECUTIONS for. The unfortunate David and Robert Perreau, brothers and wine-merchants, were hanged at Tyburn, Jan. 17, 1776. The rev. Dr. Dodd was found guilty of forging a bond, in the name of Lord Chesterfield, for 4200^. : the greatest interest was made, and the highest influence was exerted to save him, but when the case came before the council, the minister of the day said to George III. " If your majesty pardon Dr. Dodd, you will have murdered the Peri-eaus ; " and he was hanged accordingly, June 27, 1777. John Hatfield, a heartless impostor, who had inveigled " Mary of Buttermere," the celebrated beauty, into a marriage with him, was hanged for forgery at Carlisle, Sept. 3, 1803. Mr. Henry * The ofBcial returns of cases of forgery are, many of them, very curious. From these it appears that the first forger on the bank of England was Richard William Vaughau, a linen-draper of Stafford, in the year 1758, before which time, from the establishment of the bank, a period of sixty-six years, no attempt at this species of forgery had been made. Vaughan had employed a number of artists on different parts of the notes fabricated, which had all the appearance of being genuine. The criminal had filled up twenty of the notes, and had deposited them in the hands of a young lady of high respectability to whom he was attached, and on the point of being married, as a proof of his being a man of substance ; and bank-notes having been in circulation so long previously, and none having been before counterfeited, no suspicion of these notes being spurious was entertained. One o the artists was the Lnfuimor and accuser. i FOR 261 FOU Fauntleroy, a London banker, was hanged, Nov. 30, 1824. Joseph Hunton, a quaker merchaut, suffered death, Dec. 8, 1828. The last criminal hanged for forgeiy at the Old Biuley was Thomas Maynard, Dec. 31, 1829. FORKS. They were in use on the Continent in the 13th and 14th centuries. — Voltaire. This Is reasonably disputed, as being too early. In Fyues Mory son's Itinerary, reign of Elizabeth, he says, "At Venice each person was served (besides his knife and spoon) with a fork to hold the meat, while he cuts it, for there they deem it ill rminners that one should touch it with his hand." Thomas Coryate describes, with much solemnity, the manner of using forks in Italy, and adds, " I myself have thought it good to imitate the Italian fashion since I came home to P^ugland." a.d. 1608. FORMA PAUPERIS. A person having a just cause of suit, certified as such, yet so pcjor that he cannot meet the cost of maintainuig it, has an attorney and counsel assigned him on his swearing he is not worth 51. by stat. Hen. VII. 1495. This act, subsequently, was remodelled ; and, at the present day, persons may plead in formd pwuinris in the courts of law. — Liao Diet. FORT ERIE, Uppeb Canada. This fortress w^s taken by the American general Browne, July 3, 1814. It was attacked unsuccessfully by the British, with the loss of 962 men, Aug. 15, following. A sortie from the fort was repulsed by the British, but with great loss, Sept. 17, 1814. Evacuated by the Americans, Nov. 5, 1814. This pla<;o is now considerably strengthened, and is connected by a chain of field works,, with a contiguous strong battery. See Lalce Erie. FORTH AND CLYDE CANAL. This great undertaking was commenced July 10, 1768, under the direction of the ingenious Mr. Smeatou ; and the navigation was opened July 28, 1790. By uniting the Forth and Clyde, it forms a communication between the eastern and western seas on the coast of Scotland ; and thereby saves the long and dangerous navigation round the Laud's End, or the more hazardous course through the Pentland Frith. FORTIFICATION. The Phccnicians were the first people who had fortified cities. Apollodorus says that Perseus fortified Mycenaj, where statues were afterwards erected to him. The modern system was introduced about a.d. 1500. Albert Durer firet wrote on the science of fortification in 1527; and improvements were made by Vauban and others, towards 1700. The fortification of Paris, the most recent work claiming notice, was completed in 1846. See Paris. FORTUNE-TELLERS. Fortune-telling is traced to the early astrologers, by whom the planets Jupiter and Venus were the supposed betokeners of happiness and success. The SibylUo were women who floiu-ished in different parts of the world, and who were said to have been inspired by heaven. See Sibyls. The Gypsy tribe (see Gypsies) Las been celebrated for ages, and in all countries, as fortuuetellei'S, notwithstanding the severe penalties to which the exercise of the art subjected its professors. Our modern fortune-telling may be traced to the divination of the ancients. — Becker. Augury and divination led to palmistry, professed by modern fortune-tellers. — Ashe. In England the laws against this species of imposition upon the credulity of the weak and ignorant, were, at one time, very severe. A declaration was published in Franco, Jan. 11, 1680, of exceeding severity against fortune-tellers and poisoners, under which several persons suffered death. — Htnault. FOTHERINGAY CASTLE, Northamptonshire. Built a.d. 1408. Here Richard IIL of England was born, in 1443 : and Mary queen of Scots, whose death is an indelible stain upon the reign of our great Elizabeth, was beheaded in tliis castle, in which she bad been long pres-iously confined, Feb. 8, 1587, after an unjust and cruel captivity of almost nineteen years in England. It was ordered to be demolished by her sou, James I. of England. FOUNDLING HOSPITAL. "A charity practised by mo-^t nations about us for those children exposed by unnatural parents." — Addison. Foundling hospitals are, com- paratively, of recent institution in England, where, it would appear, none existed when Addison wrote in 1713. Tlie foundling liospital at ^loscow, built by Catherine II. •was an immense and costly edifice, in which 8000 infant children were succoured. Tlic Loudon Foundling Ho.spital was ]irojectcd by Thomas Coram, a benevolent sea- captain, the master of a vessel trading to the colonies ; it was incorporated by a charter from George II. in October, 1739, and succours about 500 infant children. FOUNDLING HOSPITAL, DUBLIN. The Foundling Hospital in Dublin was instituted in 1704 : in this charity there had been received, according to parliamentary returns. FOX 262 FRA in the thirty years preceding Jan. 1825, as many as 52,150 infants : of these 14,613 had died infants — 25,859 were returned as dead from the country, where they were out nursing — 730 died in the infirmary after returning — 322 died grown children — total deaths, 41,524 ; so that 10,626 only escaped this fate. Owing to this mortality, and from certain moral considerations, the intern department was closed by order of government, March 31, 1835. FOX AND GRENVILLE ADMINISTRATION. See " All the Talents' Administratimr FOX-GLOVE. A plant of which we have various specimens. — Miller. The canary fox- glove {Digitalis Canariensis), brought from the Canary islands to these countries, A.D. 1698. The Madeira fox-glove brought from that island in 1777. The fox-grape shrub ( Vitis Valpina), brought from Virginia before a.d. 1656. FRANCE. This country was known to the Romans by the name of Gaul. In the decline of their power it was conquered by the Franks, a people of Germany, then inhabiting what is still called Franconia. These invaders gave the name to the kingdom ; but the Gauls being by far the most numerous, are the real ancestors of the modern French. There is no nation in Europe where the art of war is better understood than in France : the government has always been military, and every man bred to the use of ai-ms. The ladies are more celebrated for their wit and vivacity, than for their beauty ; and the peasantry, who are destitute of the embellishments of apparel, are remarkably ordinary. The gentry excel their neighbours in the arts of dancing, fencing, and dress, and are the leaders of fashions in Europe. Previous to the revolution in 1789, France was divided into 32 provinces ; and after that era it was divided, first into 84, and subsequently into 103, departments, including Corsica, Geneva, Savoy, and other places, chiefly conquests. See BonapaHe's Empire of France. The Franks, under then- leader Phara- mond, settle in that part of Gaul, till late called Flanders . . .a.d. 420 BeigD of Clovls the Great . . . . 481 He defeats the Romans at Soissons . 48(3 He defeats the Alemanni at Cologne . 496 C'lovis embraces Christianity . . . 496 He kiUs Alaric the Goth, in battle, near Poictiers, and conquers aU the country from the Loire to the Pyrenees ; makes Paris the capital; and founds the monarchy 507 He proclaims the SaUque law . . . 511 Clovis dies, leaving four sons . . . 511 [Thierry reigns at Metz ; Clodomir at Orleans ; Cliildebert at Paris ; and Clo- thaire at Soissons.] Clothaire reigns alone 560 The raayors of the palace now assume almost sovereign authority . . . 584 Charles Martel becomes mayor of the palace, i. e. governor of France, and rules with despotic sway . . . . 714 Invasion of the Saracens .... 720 Keign of Pepin the Short . . . . 751 Reign of Charlemagne .... 768 He is crowned emperor of the West . . 800 RoUo obtains Normandy. (See Danes) . 905 Reign of Hugh Capet 987 Paris made capital of all France . . 996 Letters of franchise granted to cities and towns by Louis VI 1135 Louis VII. joins in the crusades . . 1146 Louis VIII., CteM)--de-iio7i, gives freedom to the peasantry 1220 Louis IX., called St. Louis, defeats John of England; conducts an army into Palestine ; takes Damietta ; and dies before Tunis 1270 Philip the Fair excommunicated by the pope 1301 Knights Templars suppressed . . . 1308 Union of Fi-aucc and Navarre . . . 1314 Philip VI. defeated at Cressy . . . 1346 Calais taken by Edward III. . . . 1347 Bauphiuy annexed to France . . . 1349 Battle of Poictiers (wkioli see), John, king of France, taken, and brought prisoner to England 1356 France laid under an interdict by the pope 1407 Battle of Agincourt (which see) . . 1415 Entire conquest of France by Henry V. of England, who is acknowledged heir to the kingdom 1420 Henry VI. crowned at Paris ; the duke of Bedford's regency .... 1422 Siege of Orleans ; battle of Patay ; the Enghsh defeated by Joan of Arc . . 1429 England lost all her possessions (but Calais) in France, between 1434 and 1450 Study of the Greek introduced into France 1473 The splendid interview of the Cloth of Gold, between Francis I. and Henry VIII. of England 1529 League of England with the emperor Charles V. against France . . . 1544 Death of Rabelais 1553 Calais is lost to England in the reign of Mary. (See Calais) .... 1558 Religious wars ; massacre at Vassy . . 1561 Massacre of St. Bartholomew . Aug. 24, 1572 Duke of Guise assassinated by command of the king and his brother, the cardi- nal, next day . . . Dec. 23, 1588 Henry III. murdered by Jacques Cle- ment, a friar .... Aug. 1, 15S9 [In the death of this prince ends the house of Valois.] Celebrated edict of Nantz by Henry IV. (See mict of Nantz) 1598 Murder of Heniy IV. by Ravaillac. (See article Ravaillac) 1610 [Mary de Medicis, widow of Henry, governs the kingdom during the mino- rity of Louis XIII.] Navarre re-united to France . . . 1620 Death of Cardinal Richelieu . . . 1642 Splendid reign of Louis XIV.. surnamed the Great 1643 Death of MoliSre 1673 Death of Corneille 1684 Edict of Nantz revoked . . . . 1685 Death of Racine 1699 Peace of Utrecht (ro/ticA see) . . . 1713 Death of Fduelon 1715 Law's bubble in France. (See iaw) . .1716 FRA 263 FRA FRANCE, continued. Death of cardinal Flcnry . . . 1743 Death of Montesquieu . . . . 1755 Damieu's attempt on the Ufe of Louis XV. (See Samun) 1757 Tlie Jesuits banished from France, and tlieir effects confiscated . . . . 1762 Louis XVI. assists America to throw ofif its dependence on England, at first secretly 1778 Torture is aboUshed in courts of French judicature 1780 The memorable French revolution com- mences with the destruction of the liaatile (which see) . . . Jaly 14, 1789 France divided into SO departments, Oct. 1789 The National Assembly (ickich see) de- crees that the title of the "king of France" shall be changed to that of the "king of the French" . Oct. 16, 1789 The plate and other property of the clergy is confiscated . . Nov. 6, 17S9 Confederation of the Champ de Mars, Fi-auce is declared a limited monarchy. (See Cham2) de Mars) . . . . 1790 The silver plate used in the churches decreed to be transferred to the mint, and coined .... March 3, 1791 Death of Mirabeau . . . April 2, 1791 The king (Louis XVL), queen and royal f;vmily, arrested at Varennes, in their flight from Paris . . June 22, 1791 Louis (now a j)risoner) sanctions the National Constitution . . Sept. 15, 1791 Condorcet's manifesto . . Dec. 30, 1791 The Jacobin club declare their sittings permanent .... June 18, 1792 The multitude march to the TuUeries to make demands on the king, bearing the red bonnet of Liberty . June 20, 1792 Six hundred volumes, the monuments of the privileged orders, are seized and publicly burnt . . . June 25, 1792 The regiment of royal Swiss guards cut to pieces .... Aug. 10, 1792 The statues of the kings and those of La' Fayette, M. Neckcr, and Mirabeau, demolished .... Aug. 11, 1792 Decree of the Nation.al Assembly against the priesthood ; of whom 40,000 are subjected to exile . . Aug. 23, 1792 Dreadful massacre in Paris ; the prisons broken open : 1200 persons, including 100 priests slain . . . Sept. 2, 1792 *Horrible murder of the princess de Lamballe Sept. 3, 1792 The National Convention (ichich sec) o|)ened Sept. 17, 1792 Royalty abolished by a decree of the con- vention Sept. 21, 1792 The French people declare their frater- nity with all nations who desire to be free Nov. 19, 1792 The National Convention detemiiucs on the triiil of the king . . Dec. 2, 1792 Decree for the pcrpotu:il banishment of the Bourlion Family, those confined in the Temple excepted . . Dec. 20, 1792 Louis is imprisoned in the Temjile dis- tinct from the Queon ; and is brought to trial Jan. 19, 1793 [Of 745 members composing the national Convention, 003 vote the king gxiHtij, 2C make different declai'ations, but do not vote negatively, and 26 are ab- sent.] Louis is condemned to death . Jan. 20, 1793 And is beheaded in the Place de Louis Quinze Jan. 21, 1793 Six thousand emigi-ants are arrested in Paris Jan. 22, 1793 Marat stabbed to the heart by Charlotte Corday July 13, 1793 The queen beheaded . . . Oct. 16, 1793 The infamous Philip Bgalit^, the duke of Orleans, who had voted for the king's death, is himself guillotined at Paris Princess Elizabeth beheaded Robespierre guillotined . Louis XVII. dies in prison . French Directory . Council of Five Hundred Nov. 6, 1793 May 12, 1794 July 27, 1794 June 8, Nov. 1, {which see) 1795 1795 deposed by Bonaparte, who is declared First Consul . . . . Nov. 9, [For the career of Napoleon, see Bona- parte's Empire of Fraiice.\ Legion of honour instituted . May 18, Duke d'Enghien shot . March 20, France formed into an empire under Napoleon, emperor . . May 20, He is crowned king of Italy . May 26, New nobility of France created Holland united to France . . July 9, The war with Russia, in the end so fatal to the fortunes of Napoleon, declared by France .... June 22, Triple alliance of Austria, Russia, and Prussia, against France . . Sept. 9, The British pass the Bidassoa, and enter France Oct. 17, Surrender of Paris (see Battles) to the allied armies . . . March 31, Abdication of Napoleon . April 5, Bourbon dynasty restored, and Louis XVIII. arrives at Paris . Napoleon returns to France His defeat at Waterloo Palis again surrenders . Louis re-enters tlie capital Execution of Marshal Ncy Duke de Berry murdered . Louis XVIII. dies . National Guard disbanded Seventy-six new peers created Polignac admiuLstration Chamber of Deputies dissolved May 3, March 1, June 18, July 3, . July 8, Aug. 16, . Feb. 13, Sept. 16, April 30, Nov. 5, Aug. 4, . May, The obnoxious ordinances regarding the press, and re-construction of the Cliam- ber of Deputies. . . July 26, Revolution commenced . . Julj' 27, Conflicts in Paris between the populace (ultimately aided by the national guard) and the army ; they continue three days, till . . . July 30, Charles X. retires to RambouiUet; flight of the ministry . . . July 30 The duke of Orleans (Louis Philippe I.) accepts the crown . . . Aug. 9, Charles X. retires to England . Aug. 17, Polignac and other late ministers are found guilty, and sentenced to perpe- tual imprisonment . . . Dec. 21, The abolition of the hereditary peerage decreed by both chambers; that of the peere (36 new peers being created) 1799 1802 1804 1804 1805 1S08 1810 1812 1813 1813 1814 1814 1814 1815 1815 1815 1815 1815 1820 1824 1827 1827 1829 1830 1830 1830 1830 1830 1830 1830 1830 * The multitude hunicd to the Temple, bearing the mutilated body of Madame de Lamballe, in order to exhibit tbe " impioiLS head " of their relative to the royal family : the queen and the princes.^ Elizabeth manifested the deepest emotion and sensibility ; but the king said with assumed apathy (while slirmking at the sight) to the person by whom it wa.s shown to him, " Vous arez raison. Monsieur," "You are right. Sir!" These assassins were termed the Septembrisera (which see). — Hist. Fr. Revol. FKA 264 FRA FRANCE, continued. concurring by a majority ot 103 to 70, Dec. 27, 1S31 Napoleon's sou, the duke of Reichstadt, formerly the king of Rome, dies at Schoenbruun, in Austria . July 22, 1832 Charles X. leaves Holyrood-house for the Continent .... Sept. 18, 1S32 Ministry of Marshal Soult, duke of Dal- matia Oct. 11, 1832 Bergeron, and Benoit tried for an attempt on the life of Louis-Philippe; acquitted by the jury . . . Marcli 18, 1833 The duchess de Berri, who has been de- livered of a female child, and asserts her secret maiTiage with an Italian nobleman , is sent off to Palermo, June 9, 1833 M. Bourrienue, author of " Memoirs of Napoleon," dies mad, at Caen, Feb. 7, 1834 Death of La Fayette . . May 20, 1834 Marshal Gerai-d takes office in the ministry .... July 15, 1834 M. Dupuytren dies . . Feb. 8, 1835 Due de Broglie, minister . March 14, 1835 Fieschi's attempt on the life of the king, by firing the infernal machine. (See Fieschi) .... July 28, 1835 Louis Alibaud fires at the king on his way from the Tuileries . . June 25, 1836 He is guillotined . . July 11, 1836 Ministry of count Mol^, who displaces M. Thiers .... Sept. 7, 1836 Prince Polignac set at liberty from the prison of Ham, and sent out of France with other exiles . . Nov. 23, 1836 Meunier fires at the king on his way to open the French chambers . Dec. 27, 1836 Talleyrand dies . . . May 17, 1838 Marshal Soult appears at the coronation of the queen of England, as special ambassador from France . June 28, 1838 Death of the diichess of Wurtemburg, daugliter of Louis-Philippe, and who excelled in sculpture . . Jan. 2, 1839 M. Thiers takes the presidency of foreign affairs .... March 1, 1810 The French chambers decree the re- moval of the ashes of Napoleon from St. Helena to France . . May 10, 1840 Descent of prince Louis Napoleon, gen. Montholon, and 60 followers, at Vime- roux, near Boulogue(afterwards tried, and the prince imprisoned) . Aug. 6, 1840 Darmes fires at the king . . Oct. 15, 1840 M. Guizot becomes minister of foreign affairs .... Oct. 29, 1840 *The ashes of Napoleon are deposited in the H6tel des luvalides . Dec 1.5, 1840 Project of law for an extraordinary credit of 140, 000,000 of francs, for ereetingthe fortifications of Paris . Dec. 15, 1S40 The chamber of deputies fix the duration of copyright to 30 years after the au- thor's death . . . March 30, 1841 Statue of Napoleon, of bronze, placed on the column of the Grande Arm^e, Boulogne . . . Aug. 15, 1841 Attempt to assassinate the duke of Aumale, sou of Louis-Philippe, on his return from Africa . . Sept. 13, 1841 The duke of Orleans, heir to the French throne, killed by a fall from his car- riage July 13, 1842 * The remains of the emperor Napoleon were, with the permission of the British Government, taken from the tomb at St. Helena, and embarked, on the 16th of October, 1840, on board of the Belle Poule French frigate, under the command of the prince de Joinville ; the vessel reached Cherbourg on November 30th ; and on December 15th the body was re-interred in the H6tel des Invalides. The funeral ceremony was one of the most grand, solemn and imposing spectacles that have ever been presented in France. It was witnessed by one million of persons; 150,000 soldiers assisted in the obsequies ; and the royal family and all the high personages of the realm were present ; but it was remarkable that all the relatives of the emperor were absent, being proscribed, and in exile or in prison. Visit of the queen of England to the French royal family at the Chateau d'Bu . . . from Sept. 2 to 7, 1843 Attempt made by Lecompte to assassi- nate the king in the park of Foutaine- bleau .... April 16, 1846 Prince Louis-Napoleon makes his escape from Ham .... May 26, 1846 Another attempt (the seventh) made on the life of the king, Louis-Philippe, by Joseph Henri . . . July 29, 1846 Marriage of the due de Montpensier with the iutanta of Spain . . Oct 10, 1846 Disastrousinundation in France, Oct. 20, 18)6 The Praslinmurder. (SeePro.f/i/0Aug.l7, 1847 Death of marshal Oudinot (duke of Reg- gio)at Paris, in his 91st year, Sept. 13, 1847 Soult made marshal-general of France, in his room .... Sept. 26, 1847 Prince Jerome Bonaparte returns to Franceafteranexileof32years, Oct.lO, 1817 Death of the ex-empress, Maria Louisa, of Austria .... Dec. 17, 18^7 And of madame Adelaide . Dec. 30, 1847 The proposed grand reform banquet at Paris, suppressed . . Feb. 21, 184S Violent revolutionary tumult in conse- quence ; barricades thrown up, the Tuileries ran sacked , the prisons opened, and frightful disorders committed by the populace . . Feb. 22, 23, 24, 1848 The king, Louis-Philippe, abdicates the throne in favourof his infant grandson, the duke of Orleans (but it is not accepted) .... Feb. 24, 1848 The royal family and ministers efft-ct their escape .... Feb. 24, 1S48 A republic proclaimed from the steps of the Hotel de Ville . . Feb. 26, 1848 The ex-king and his queen arrive at Newhaveu in England . March 3, 1848 Grand funeral procession in honour of the victims of the revolution, killed during the preceding excesses, March 4, 1848 The provisional government which had been formed in the great public com- motion, resigns to an executive commis- sion, elected by the National Assembly of the French republic . . May 6, 1848 [The members of this new government were : MM. Arago, Gamier-Pagfes, Marie, Lamartine, and Ledru-RoUin.] Perpetual banishment of Louis-Philippe and his family decreed . May 30, 1848 Election of prince Louis-Napoleon for the department of the Seine, and three other departments, to the National Assembly . . . June 12, 1848 Awful struggle and great loss of life in Paris; the people engaged against the troops and national guard. Jlore than 300 barricades thrown up, and firing continues in all parts of Paris during the night .... June 23, 184S The troops under generals Cavaignac and Lamorioiere succeed, with immense loss, in driving the insurgents from the left bank of the Seine . June 24, 1848 Paris declared in astate of siege, June 25, 1848 FRA 265 FRA I FRANCE, continued. The faubourg du Temjile carried with cannon and howitzers, and the iusur- fjents surrender . . . Jiine 26, 1848 [The national losses caused by this dreadful outbreak were estimated at 30,000,000 francs ; 16,000 killed and wounded, and 8(j00 prisoners were talcon. The archbishop of Paris was among the killed.] Prince Louis-Napoleon takes his seat in the National Assembly . Sept. 26, 1818 Paris relieved from the state of siege, which had contmucd 4 months, Oct. 20, 1848 Solemn promulgation of the constitution in front of the Tuilerios . Oct. 20, 1848 PrinceLouis-Napoleon declared president of the French republic by a majority of 4,600,770 votes. . . Dec. 11, 1848 [He had 6,048,872 votes, leaving him the above majority.] Death of the ex-king, Louis-Philippe, in exile, at Claremont, in England, Aug. 2H, 1850 Gen. Changarnier, deprived of the com- mand in cliief of the national guard, Jan. 10, 1851 Death of the duchess of AngoulGme, daughter of Louis XVI., at Frohudorf Oct. 19, 1851 Death of marshal Soult . Oct. 26, 1851 The legislative assemblj' dissolved ; uni- versal suffrage established, and Paris declared in a state of siege. The election of a president for ten years proposed, and a second chamber or senate Deo. 2, 1851 MM. Thiers, Changarnier, Cavaignac, Bedeau, Lamoricifere, and Charras arrested, and sent to the castle of Viuceunes Dec. 2, 1851 About ISO members of the assembly, with M. Berryerat their head, attempt- ing to meet, are arrested ; and Paris occupied by troops . . . Dec. 2, 1851 Consultativccommissionfounded.Dec. 12, 1851 Voting throughout Franco for the elec- tion of a president of the republic for ten years ; affirmative votes 7,439,216, negative votes 640,737 . Dec. 21, 22, 1851 Installation of the prince-president in the cathedral of Notre-Dame ; the day ob- served as a national holiday at Paris, and Louis-Napoleon takes up his resi- dence at the Tuileries . . Jan. 1, 1852 Gens. Changarnier. Lamoricifere, and others, conducted to the Belgian frontier jun. 9, 1852 And 83 members of the late legislative assembly banished, and 575 persons aiTested for resistance to the coup-d'- itat of Dec. 2, and conveyed to Havre fortransportationtoCayenne,* Jan. 10, 1852 The national guard disbanded, and re- organised anew, and placed xmder the control of the executive, the president appointmg the officers . . Jan. 10. 1852 A now constitution published by the prince-jircsident . . . Jan. 15, 1852 Decree obliging the Orleans family to sell all tliuir real and jicrsonal property in France within a year . . Jan. 23, 1852 Second decree, annulling the settlement made by Louis-Philippe upon his family previous to his accession in 1830, and annexing the property to the domain of the state .... Jan. 23, 1852 The birth-day of Napoleon, first emperor (Aug. 15), to be the only national holiday Feb. 17, 1852 The departments of France released from a stiite of siege . . . March 28, 1852 Installation of tlic legislative chambers, March 29, 1852 A permanent Crystal palace authorised to be erected in the Champs ElysOesat Paris .... March 30, 1852 Plot to assassinate the prince-president discovered at Paris . . July 1, 1852 President's visit to Strasburg . July 19, 1852 M. Tliiers and other exUes permitted to return to France . . Aug. 8, 1852 The French senate prays "the re-estab- lishment of the liereditary sovereign power in the Bonaparte family," Sept. 13, 1852 Enthusiastic reception of the prince- president at Lyons . . Sept. 19, 1852 Infei-nal machine intended to destroy the prince-president, seized at Marseilles, Sept. 23, 1852 Prince-president visits Toulon, Sept. 27, 1852 Ho \'isits Bordeaux, where he says "the empire is peace." . . Oct. 7, 1852 He releases Abd-el-Kader. (See article Algkrs) Oct. 16, 1853 He convokes the senate for November, to deliberate on a change of government, when a senatus consultum will be pro- posed for the ratification of the French people Oct. 19, 1852 Protest of the comto de Chaiubord, Oct. 25, 1852 In his message to the senate, the prince- president announces tlie contemplated restoration of tlie empire, and orders the people to be consulted upon this change of government . . Nov. 4, 1852 Votes for the empii-e, 7,804,189 ; noes, 253,145; null, 63,326 . . Dec. 1, 1852 The prince-president is declared emperor, and assumes the title of Napoleon 1 1 1. (&'« the succeeding List of Sovercvjns of France.) .... Dec 2, 1852 Marriage of the emperor with Eugenia, countess Teba, a Spanish lady, daugliter of the countess of Montejo, at tlie cathe- dral of Notre-Dame : the ceremony performed by the archbishop of Paris, Jan. 30, 1853 4312 political offenders pardoned Feb. 2, 1853 Bread riots Sept. 1853 MiliUiry camp at Satory, near Paris, Sept. 1853 Emperor and empress visit the pro- vinces ; (many political prisoners dis- charged) Oct. 1853 Arago died .... Oct. 2, 1853 Attempted assassination of the empei'or ; ten persons condemned to transporta- tion for life .... Nov. 1853 Reconciliation of the two branches of the Bourbons at Frohsdorf . Nov. 20, 1853 Marshal Ney's statue iuaiigurated ex- actly thirty-eight yeai-s after his death on the spot where it occurred, Dec. 7, 1853 War declared against Russia. (See Kusm- Tarhish war.) . . . March 27, 1854 • " Liberty, RpiaHt;/, Fratcrnitij," are ordered by the minister of the interior to be forthwith erased wherever the words are inscribed, throughout France, and the old names of streets, public buildings, and places of resort, to be restored. The trees of liberty, once so dear to the French people, are every- where hewn down, and their trunks and branches borne aw.ay by the versatile populace, or bui-nt ou the spot where they stood. FRA 266 FRA FRANCE, continued. Visit of Prince Albert at Boulogne, Sept. 5, 1854 Death of Marshal St. Arnaud, Sept. 29, 1854 The Emperor and empress visit London, Aprilie— 21, 1855 Attempted assassination of the emperor by Piauori .... April 28, 1S55 Queen Victoria and Prince Albert visit Paris, Aug. 18, 1855 KINGS OF FRANCE. MEROVINGIAN RACE. 418. 427. 448. 458, 481. 511. 534. 648. 558. 561. 575. 584. 500. 61.3. 628. 638. 656, 670, 691. 695, 711, 716, 719, Pharamoud. Clodion, or Clodius, the Hairy ; supposed son of Pharamond. Merovaius, or Merovfe, son-in-law of Olodiou : this race of kings called from him Merovingians. Childeric, sou of Merovde. Clovis the Great, his son, and the real founder of the monarchy. — Henautt. He left four sons, who divided the empire between them : — Childebert; Paris. Clodomir; Orleans. Thierry ; Metz ; and Clotaire, or Olotharius ; Soissons. Theodebert ; Metz. Theodebald, succeeded in Metz. Clotaire; now sole ruler of France. Upon his death the kingdom was again divided between his four sons : viz, Charebert, ruled at Paris. Gontran in Orleans and Burgundy Siegebert at Metz, and > both assassi- Chilperic at Soissons. j nated. [France continued at times afterwards to be ruled in various divisions by separate kings.] Childebert II. Clotaire II. ; Soissons. Thierry 11. son of Childebert; in Orleans. Theodebert II. Metz. Clotaire II. : became sole king. Dagobert the Great, son of Clotaire II. : he divided tlie kingdom, of which he had become sole monarch, between his two sons : — Clovis II. who had Burgundy and Neu- stria ; and Sigebert II. who had Austrasia. Clotaire III. son of Clovis II. Childeric II. : he became king of the wliolc realm of France : assassinated with his queen, and his son Dagobert, in the forest of Livri. — Henaidt. [At this time Thierry III. rules in Bur- gundy and Neustria, and Dagobert II. son of Sigebert, in Austrasia. Dago- bert is assassinated, and Thierry reigns alone. — Henault.^ Clovis III. Pepin, mayor of the palace, rules the kingdom, in the name of this sovereign, who is succeeded by his brother. Childebert III., surnamed the Just : in this reign Pepin also exercises the royal power. Dagobert III., son of Childebert. Chilperic II. (Daniel) : he is governed, and at length deposed, by Charles Martel, mayor of the palace, whose sway is now unbounded. Clotaire IV., of obscure origin, raised by Charles Martel to the throne : dies soon after, and Chilperic is recalled from Aquitaine, whither he had fled for refuge. — Hena idt. 720. Chilperic II,, restored : he shortly after- wards dies at Noyon, and is succeeded by — Thierry IV., son of Dagobert III., sur- named de Chelles : died in 737. Charles Martel now rules under the new title of " duke of the French." — Henaidt. 737. Interregnum, till the death of Charles Martel, in 7-11 ; and until 742. Childeric III., son of Chilperic II., sur- named the Stupid. Carloman and Pepin, the sons of Charles Martel, share the government of the kingdom, in this reign. THE CAELOVINGIANS. 752. Pepin the short, son of Charles Martel : he is succeeded by his two sons, 768. *Chaiiemagne and Carloman : the for- mer, surnamed the Great, crowned em- peror of the West, by Leo III., in 800. Caiioman reigned but three years. 814. Louis le Bcbonnaire, emperor : dethroned but restored to his dominions. 840. Charles, surnamed the Bald ; emperor in 875 : poisoned by Zedechias, a Jew physician. — Heyiault. 877. Louis the Stammerer, son of Charles the Bald. 879. Louis III. and Carloman II. : the former died in 882; and Carloman reigned alone. 884. Charles le Gros; a usurper, in prejudice to Charles the Simple. 887. Eudes or Hugh, count of Paris. 893. Charles III. the Simple : deposed, and died in prison in 929 : he had married Edgina, daughter of Edward the Elder, of England, by whom he had a sou, who was afterwards king. 922. Robert, brother of Eudes : crowned at Rheims ; but Charles marched an army against him, and killed him in battle. — Htnaidt. 923. Rodolf, duke of Burgundy : elected king ; but he was never acknowledged by the southern provinces. — Henaidt. 936. Louis IV. d'Oiitremer, or Transmarine (from having been conveyed by his motherinto England), son of Charles III. and Edgina : died by a fall from his horse. 954. Lothaire, his son : he had reigned jointly with his father from 952, and succeeds him, at 15 years of age, under the pro- tection of Hugh the Gi'e.at : iioisoned. 9S6. Louis V. the Indolent, son of Lothaire : also poisoned, it is supposed by his queen, Blanche. In this prince ended the race of Charlemagne. THE CAPETS. 987. Hugh Capet, eldest son of Hugh the * This great prince wore only a plain doublet in winter, made of an otter's skin, a woollen tunic, fringed with silk, anil a blue coat or cassock : his hose consisted of transverse bands or fillets of differerii colours. He would march with the greatest rapidity from the Pyrenean mountains into Germany, and from Gerraauy into Italy. The whole world echoed his name. He was the tallest and the strongest man of his time. In this respect he resembled the heroes of fabulous story : but he differed from them, as he thought that force was of use alone to conquer, and that laws were necessary to govern. Accordingly, he enacted several laws after the form observed in those days, that is, in mixed assembUes, composed of a number of bishops and the principal lords of the nation. — Eyinhard. FRA 267 FRA » FRANCE, continued. Abbot, aud the Great, count of Paris, &c.: be seized the crown, iu prejudice to Charles of Lorraine, uncle of Louis Transmarine. From him this race of kings is called Capevingians, and Capetians. 996. Robert II., surnamed the Sago, son of Ilugh : died lamented. 1031. Henry I. son of Robert. 1060. Philip I. tlie Fair, and I'Amoureux ; suc- ceeded at eight years of age, and ruled at fourteen. 1108. Louis VI., surnamed the Lusty, or k Gros : succeeded by his son, 1137. Louis VII., svu'namedthe Young, to dis- tinguish him from his father, with whom he was for some years associated ou the throne. IISO. Philip II. (Augustus); succeeds to the crown at fifteen; crowned at Rheims in his father's lifetime. 1223. Louis VIII., CceurdeLioii, sou of Philip: succeeded by 1226. Louis IX. , called St. Louis; ascended the throne at fifteen, under the guardian- ship of his mother, who was also regent ; died in his camp before Tunis, and was canonized. 1270. Philip III., the Hardy; sonof Louis IX.: died at Pei-pignan. 1285. Philip IV., the Fair: ascended the throne in his 17th year. 1314. Louis X., surnamed Hutin, an old French word signifying headstrong, or muti- nous. — llenault. 1316. John, a posthumous son of Louis X.: lived a few days only. — Philip v., the Long (on account of his stature) ; brother of Louis X. 1322. Charles IV., the Handsome: this king and Louis X., John, and Phihp V., were kings of Navarre. HOUSE OF VALOIS. 1328. Philip VI., de Valois, grandson of Philip the Hardy. He was called the For- tunate ; but this must have been be- fore the battle of Cressy. 1350. John II., the Good: died suddenly in the Savoy in Loudon. 1304. Charles V., surnamed the Wise : the first prince who had the title of lia.u.Yihm.—Fi'eret. 13S0. Charles VI., the Beloved. 1-122. Charles VII., the Victorious. 1401. Louis XI.; detested for his atrocious cnielties. 1483. Charles VIII., the Affiible. 1498. Louis XII., duke of Orleans, surnamed the Father of his People. 1515. Francis I. of AugoulOme; called the Father of Letters. 1547. Henry 1 1. : died of a wound received at a tournament, when celebrating the nuptials of hi.s sister witli the duke of Savoy, accidentally inflicted by the count dc Montmorency. 1559. Francis II.; married Mary Stuart, after- wards queen of Scots : died the year after liis accession. i5t)0. Charles IX. ; Catherine of Medicis, his mother, obtained the regency, which trust slic abused. 1574. Henry III., elected king of Poland : murdered, Aug. 1, 15S9, by Jacques Clement, a Dominican friar. In this prince was extinguished the house of Valois. HOUSE OF BOURBON. 1589. Henry IV. the Great, of Bourbon, king of Navarre ; murdered by Fiancis Ravaillac. IGIO. Louis XIII. the Just, son of the pre- ceding king. 1043. Louis XIV. tlio Great, also styled Dieu- doiine. This was a long and splendid reign. 1715. Louis XV. the Well-beloved ; but which surname he lost. 1774. Louis XVI. his grandson ; ascended the tlirone iu his 20th year ; manied the archduchess Marie -Antoinette, of Austria, in May, 1770. Dethroned iu the great revolution, whicli com- menced with the destruction of the Bastile, July 14, 1789 ; the king was guillotined, Jan. 21, 1793;* aud his queen, Oct. 16 following. 1793. Louis XVII. sonof Louis XVI. Though numbered with the kings, this prince never reigned : he died inprison, sup- posed by poison, June 8, 1795, aged ten years and two months. FRENCH EMPIRE. 1801. Napoleon Bonaparte, born Aug. 1-5, 1709. Klected by tlie republic consul for ten years. May 8, 1SU2 ; made first consul for life, Aug. 2, same year ; and de- clared emperor. May IS, 1804. Divorced his first wife, the empress Josephine; andmarried Maria-Louisa of Austria, April 7, 1810. The reverses of Napo- leon compelled him to renounce the thrones of France and Italy, and accept the isle of Elba for his retreat, April 5, 1814. 1815. Napoleon again appears in France, March 1. He is defeated at Waterloo ; and finally abdicates in favour of liis infant son, June 22. Banished to St. Helena, whore he dies, May 5, 1821. BOURBONS RESTORED. 1814. Louis XVIII. {cmnte de Prorence), next brother of Louis XVI. ; bom Nov. 17, 1755 ; married Marie - Josephine- Louise, of Savoy. Entered Paris, and took pos.^cssiou of the throne. May ?•, 1814 ; obliged to flee, March 20, 1815 ; returned .Inly 8, same year : died Sept. 16, 1824, leaving no issue. 1824. Charles X. (cowfc d'Arloin), his brother; born Oct. 9, 1757; married Marie-The- rlise, of Savoy. Conflicts in Paris be- tween the pojiulace (ultimately aided by the national guard)and tlie army, commence JiUy 27, and the kingis de- posed July 30, 1S30. He .subsequently tiikes refuge in England ; and dies at I Gratz, in Hungary, Nov. 6, 1S36. * On Monday, the 21st of January, 179.'?, at eight o'clock in the morning, this unfortimate monarch was summoned to his fate. Ho ascended the scaflold with a firm air and step ; and raising his voice, he s.aid, "Frenchmen, I die innocent of the oflfenccs imputed to me. I pardon all my enemies, .and I implore of Heaven that my beloved France ;" At this instant the inhuni.an Santerre ordered the drums to beat, and the executioners to perform their office. When the guillotine descended, the priest exclaimed, "Son of St. Louis ! ascend to heaven." The bleeding head was then held up, and a few of the populace shouted, " Vire In Rtipuhtiqiu: .' " The body was interred in a grave that was immediately afterwards filled up with quick lime, aud a strong guard was placed around until it should be consumed. — Hist. French Revolution. FRA 268 FRA FItENCH EMPIRE REVIVED. 1S21. Napoleon II. (?) Napoleon-Joseph, son of Bonaparte and Maria-Louisa, arch- duchess of Austria ; born March 20, ISll ; created king of Rome. On the abdication of his father, he was made duke of Reichstadt, iu Austria ; and died at the palace of Schoeubrunn, July 22, 1832, aged 21. [This prince, having neither reigned nor been acknowledged, the assumption of Louis-Napoleou (the present em- peror) to designate him as Napoleon II. in order to continue the Bona- partean dynasty, is purely prepos- terous ; for wlien Bonaparte abdicated in his infant son's favour, he had not the right to nominate a successor to the throne of France, having been deposed, and France being, at the time, a conquered country.] 18.52. Napoleon III. Dec. 2. Thepresent(lS55) emperor of the French. — On Dec. 18, 1S52, the succession iu default of issue from the emperor, was deter- mined in favour of prince Jerome- Napoleon and his heirs male. (See preceding annals.) FRANCE, continued. HOUSE OF ORLEANS. 1830. Louis-Philippe, son of the celebrated duke of Orleans, called Eyallte ; born Oct. 6, 1773 ; married, Nov. 25, 1809, Maria-Amelia, daughter of Ferdi- nand I. (IV.) king of the Two Sicilies. Raised to the throne, as king of the I'rench, Aug. 9, 1830 ; deposed Feb. 24, 1848. Died in exile, in England, Aug. 26, 1850. NEW REPUBLIC. 184S. The revolution commenced in a popular insurrection at Paris, Feb. 22, 1848. The royal family escaped by flight to England, a provisional government was established, monarchy abolished, and Fi'ance declared a republic. Louis - Napoleon - Charles Bonaparte, (born April 20, 1808), .sou of Louis Bonaparte, some time king of Hol- land, and nephew of the late emperor Napoleon: elected president of the republic, by 6,048,872 votes, out of 8,040,604 ; having a majority of 4,600,770 votes over his great rival, general Cavaignac, Dec. 11, 1848. Louis-Napoleon declared by the Nation- al Assembly (Dec. 19) president of the republic of France ; and pro- claimed next day, Dec. 20. \t/>«\ C L-H ti . r? 1^ FRANCHISE. A privilege, or exemption from ordinary jurisdiction ; and anciently an asylum or sanctuary where the person was secure. In Spain, churches and monas- teries were, until lately, franchises for criminals, as they were formerly in England. See Sanctuaries. The elective franchise was conferred for counties on persons having 40s. a-year in laud, 39 Hen. VI. 1460. — Ruffltead's Statutes. See Electors. FRANCIS' ASSAULT on the QUEEN. John Francis, a youth, fired a pistol at queen Victoria as she was returning to Buckingham palace down Constitution-hill, in an open barouche, accompanied by prince Albert, May 30, 1842. The queen was uninjured. Previous intimation having reached the palace of the intention of the criminal, her majesty had commanded that none of the ladies of her court should attend her in her drive. Francis was tried and condemned to death, June 17 following ; but was afterwards transported for life. FRANCISCANS, ORDER of. An order of friars, called also Grey friars, in the Church of Rome, founded by Francis de Assise in a.d. 1209, or, according to some authorities, about 1220. Their rules were chastity, poverty, obedience, and very austere regimen of life. In 1224 they are said to have appeared in England, whei-e, at the time of the dissolution of monasteries by Henry VIII. they had fifty-five abbeys Or other houses, A.D. 1536-38. Most of their communities lived on alms, begging from door to door. FRANKFORT. Many ages a free city ; it was taken and retaken several times during the wars of the late and present centuries, and felt the iron rule of Bonaparte from 1803 to 1813, when its independence was guaranteed by the allied sovereigns. The diet of the princes of Germany was established here by the Rhenish Confederation in 1806. The Frankfort diet published a federative constitution, March 30, 1848. The restricted diet of the German Confederation was constituted at Frankfort, Aug. 10, 1850. The plenipotentiaries of Austria, Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, Wurtemberg, Meeklenburgb, &c. assembled here and constituted themselves the council of the Germanic diet, Sept. 1, 1850. Prussia refused to recognise it. See Germany. FRANKING op LETTERS. The privilege of letters passing free of postage was claimed by parliament (almost from the regular institution of the post-ofiice), a.d. 1660. Various statutes were enacted to regulate franking, and correct the abuses of it in the late reigns. The privilege of franking abolished by the introduction of the uniform penny postage, which came into operation January 10, 1840. The queen (Victoria) was among the first to relinquish the privilege of receiving her letters free. See Postage. FRANKLIN, SIR JOHN, his ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Sir John Franklin, with cap- tarns Crozier and Fitzjames, in H. M. ships Erebm and Terror (carrying in all 138 FRA 269 FRA persons) sailed on an arctic expedition of discovery and survey, from Greenhithe, on May 24, 1845. Their last despatches were from the Whalefish islands, dated July 12, 1845. Their protracted absence caused intense anxiety throughout Europe, and numerous expeditions wei'e sent from England and elsewhere in search of them to various parts of the polar regions. Quantities of coals, provisions, clothing, and other comforts, were deposited in such places in the Arctic seas as the crews of the Erebus and Terror discovery ships might visit, so as to' afford them immediate relief, by our own and by the American government, by lady Franklin, aud numerous private persons. The Truelove, captain Parker, which arrived at Hull, Oct. 4, 1849, from Davis's Straits, brought intelligence (not afterwards confirmed) that the natives had seen sir John Franklin's ships as late as theprevious March, beset or frozen up by the ice in Prince Regent's inlet. Other like accounts were equally illusory. Her majesty's government, on March 7, 1850, offered a reward of 20,000/. to any party, of any country, that should render efficient assistance to the crews of the missing ships. Sir John's first winter quarters were found at Beechey Island by captains Ommanuey and Penny. SEARCH FOR SIR JOHN FRANKLIN. 1849 1850 1. H.M.S. Plover, capt. Moore, (.aftor- ■w.ards under capt. Maguire) sailed from Sheerness, to Behriug's Straits, in se;u-ch Jan. 1, 1848 2. Land expedition under sir John Rich- ardson aud Dr. Rae, of the Hudson's Bav Company, left England, March 25, 1848 (Sir John Richardson returned to England in 1849, and Dr. Rae con- tinued his search till 1851.) 3. Sir James Ross, with the Enterprise and III vestiijator (June 12, 1848), having.also sailed in search, to Barrow's Straits, returned to England (Scarborough) Nov. 3, 4. The Enterprise, capt. Collinsnn, and Investigator, commander M 'Clure, sailed from Plymouth, for Behring's Straits .... Jan. 20, [Both of these ships proceeded throufch to the eastward.] 5. Capt. Austin's expedition, viz. : AesoliUe, capt. Austin, C.B. , Assistance, capt. Ommannoy, Intrepid, lieut. (now commander) Bertie Cator, and Pioneer, lieut. (now commander) Sherard OsVjorn, sailed from England, for Barrow's Straits April 25, [Returned Sept. 1851.] 6. The LadT/ Frank-Hn, capt. Penny, and Sophia, capt. Stewart, sailed from Aberdeen for Barrow's Straits April 13, [Returned home Sept. 1851.] 7. The American expedition in the Ad- vance and Rescue, under lieut. De Haven and Dr. Kane(sou ofthe judge), towards which Mr. Grinnell subscribed 30,000 dollai-«, sailed for Laiicustcr Sound and Barrow's Straits ; after drifting in the pack down Baffin's Bay, the ships were released in 1851 uninjured, May 25, 1850 8. The Felix, sir John Ross, fitted out chiefly by the Hudson Bay Company, Siiiled to the same locality . May 22, 1850 [Returned in 1S.51.] 9. H.M.S. iSorlh Star, commander Saim- dcrs, which h,ads,ailcd from Engl.md in 1840, wintered in Wolstenholmc Sound, and returned to Spithead . Sept. 28, 1850 10. H.M.S. Herald, capt. Kellett, C.B., which had sailed in 1848, made three voyages to Behring's Straits, and re- turned in 1851 Lieut. Pim went to St. Petersburg with the intention of travelling through Siberia to the mouth of the river 1850 1850 Kolyma ; but was dissuaded from jwo- ceediug by the Russi;xn government, Nov. 18, 1851 [The Enterprise and Investigator not having been heard of for two years.] 11. Sir Edward Belcher's expedition, con- sisting of — Assistance, sir Edward Belcher, C.B., Resolute, capt. Kellett, C.B., North Star, capt. Pullen, Intrepid, capt. M'Clintock, ,and Pioneer, capt. Sherard Osborn, sailed from Woolwich . Ajml 15, 1852 [This expedition had anived at Beechey Lsland, Aug. 14, 1852. The Assistance and Pioneer pro- ceeded through Wellington Chan- nel, and the Resolute and Intrepid to Melville Island ; the North Star remaining at Beechey Island.] LADY FR.\NKLIN's EQIUI'MKNTS. Lady Franklin, from her own resources, aided by a few friends (and by the " Tasmanian Tribute" of 15001.% equipped four separate private expe- ditions: 12. The Prince Albert, capt. Forsyth, sailed from Aberdeen to Barrow's Straits .... June 5, 1850 [Returned Oct. 1, 18.50.] 13. 'The Prince Atbeil, Mr. Kennedy, accompanied by lieut. Bellot of the French navyand John Hepburn, sailed from Stromness to Prince Regent's Inlet . ... Juno 4, 1851 [Returned Oct. 1852.] 14. The Isabil, con^mandcr Tnglcfield, sailed for the head of Baffin's Bay, Jones's Sound, and the Wellington Channel . July 0, and returned, Nov. 1852 15. M*\ Kennedysaiied .igain in thelsabel on a renewed search to Behring's Strait, 1853 16. H.M.S. Rattlesnake, comTnander Trol- lope, despatched to assist the Plover, capt. Maguire (who succeeded capt. Jloore), at Point Barrow in April, met with it ... . August, 1853 17. The second Americ.vn expedition, the Advance, under Dr. Kane, early in . 1853 18. The I'ha-nix (with the Breadalbane transport), commander Inglefield, ac- companied by lieut. Bellot, sailed in May, and returned in . . Oct. 1853 19. The PhoMix, North Star, and Talbot, under the command of captain Ingle- field, sailed in May, and returned in Oct. 1854 FRA 270 FRE FRANKLIN, SIR JOHN, his ARCTIC EXPEDITION, continued. 20. The third Ameeican expedition, in search of Dr. Kane in tlie Advance, is now in preparation. It will consist of the barque Eringo, and another vessel under the command of lieut. H. J. Ilartsteue, accompanied by a brother of Dr. Kane as surgeon . July, 1SJ5 In 1853, eight years had elapsed since the receipt of any authentic intelligence of Franklin and his companions, and anxiety was beginning to be felt respecting the state of the expeditions under captain Collinson and sir E. Belcher (see Nos. 4 arid 11, above). In October, captain Inglefield returned in the Phceyiix, bringing despatches from sir E. Belcher, &c. The /wwsfi^fa^or, and sir E. Belcher's squadron, were safe; but no traces of Franklin's party had been met with. Lieutenant Bellot was unfortunately drowned in August while voluntarily conveying despatches to sir E. Belcher. — Captain M'Clure had left the Herald (10) at Cape Lisburne, July 31, 1850. On Oct. 8, the ship was frozen in and so continued for nine months. On Oct. 26, 1850, while on an excursion party, the captain discovered an entrance into Barrow's Straits, and thus established the existence of a N.E.- — N.W. passage. In Sept. 1851, the ship was again fixed in ice, and so remained till lieutenant Pim and a party from captain Kellett's ship, the Ecsolute (11), fell in with them in April, 1853. The position of the Enteo-prise (4) was still unknown. — In the spi-ing of 1853, Dr. Rae again proceeded towards the magnetic pole, and in July, 1854, he reported to the Admiralty that he had purchased from a party of Esquimaux a number of articles, which had belonged to sir J. Franklin and his party, namely, sir John's star or order, part of a watch, silver spoons, and forks with crests, &c. He also reported the statement of the natives, that they had met with a party of white men about four winters previous and had sold them a seal, and that four months later, in the same season, they had found the bodies of thirty men (some buried) who had evidently perished by stai'vation ; the place appears, from the description, to have been in the neighbourhood of the Great Fish River of Back. Dr. Rae arrived in England in Oct. 22, 1854, witli the melancholy relics, which have since been deposited in Greenwich Hospital. — After mature deliberation, in April 1854, sir E. Belcher determined to abandon his ships, and gave orders to that effect to all the captains under his command ; and captain Kellett gave similar orders to captain M'Clure of the Investigator. The vessels had been abandoned in June when the crews of the Phosnix and Talbot (under captain Inglefield) arrived (19). On their return to England the captains were all tried by court-martial and honourably acquitted, Oct. 17-19, 1854. — The fate of capt. Collinson in the Enterj)7-ise (4) , was still uncertain, and another expedition was in contemplation, when intel- ligence came, in Feb. 1855, that he had met the Rattlesnake (16) at Fort Clarence, in August 21, 1854, and had sailed immediately in hopes of getting up with captain Maguire in the Plover, (1) which had sailed two days previously. Captain Collinson having failed in getting through the ice in 1850 with cajitain M'Clure, returned to Hong Kong to wiutei-. In 1851 he passed through Pi-ince of Wales's straits, and remained in the Arctic regions without obtaining any intelligence of Franklin till July 1854, when, being once more released from the ice, he sailed for Port Clarence, where he arrived as above mentioned. Captains Collinson and Maguire arrived in England in May, 1855. — All appear to have nobly and ably performed their allotted work in the above expeditions ; and the loss of life has been exceedingly small. No more ships will be sent out, but the Hudson's-Bay Company have decided that an overland expedition shall proceed in search of any further remains of Franklin's party. — See North- West Passage. FREDERICKSHALL, SIEGE of. Rendered memorable by the death of Charles XII. of Sweden, who was killed by s cannon-shot before its walls, and while in the trenches, loaning against the parapet, examining the works. He was found in that position, with his hand upon his sword, and a prayer-book in his pocket, Dec. 11, 1718. It is now generally supposed that a pistol fired by some traitorous hand closed the career of this monarch, aptly styled the " Madman of the North." FREEHOLDERS. Those under forty pounds sterling per annum were not qualified to vote for members of parliament, a.d. 1429. Those for members for counties obliged to have forty shillings a year in land, 39 Henry VI. 1460. — Ruffhead's Statutes. Various acts have been passed for the regulation of the franchise at difiTerent periods. Among the more important recent acts were, the act to regulate polling, 9 Geo. IV. 1828. Bill for the disqualification of freeholders in Ireland, which deprived those of forty shillings of this privilege, passed April 13, 1829 ; Reform Bill, 2 & 3 Will. IV. 1832. County elections act, 7 Will. IV. 1836. FRE 271 FRI FREEMASONRY. Of great antiquity. Writers on masonry, themselves masons, affirm that it has had a being " ever since symmetry began, and harmony displayed her charms." Masonry is traced by some to the building of Solomon's temple ; and it is said the architects from the African coast, Mahometans, brought it into Spain, about the sixth century, as a protection against Christian fanatics. Its introduction into tliese realms has been fixed at the year A.D. 674 ; by others it is assigned an earlier date. The grand lodge at York was founded a.D. 926. Freemasonry was interdicted in England, a.d. 1424; but it afterwards rose into great repute. In 1717, the grand lodge of England was established ; that of Ireland was established in 1730; and that of Scotland in 1736. Freemasons were excommunicated by the pope in 1738. The Freemasons' hall, London, was built 1775 ; the charity was instituted 1788. FRENCH LANGUAGE. The language of France and many of the French laws and customs were first introduced into England by William I. 1066. The language and fashions in dress and diet of France were then very general in England from this time. Law pleadings were changed from French to English, in tlie reign of Edward III. 1362. — Stoioe. It does not appear that our statutes and other public acts had been written in French until about the time of Edward l.—T'mdal. FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY CALENDAR. In the year 1792, the French nation, in their excessive desire to change all the existing institutions, adopted a new calendar founded on philosophical principles ; but as they were unable to produce any plan more accurate and convenient than that previously in use, they were contented to follow the old plan under a different name, merely changing some of the minor details and subdivisions, and commencing the year at a different period of time. The first year of the era of the republic began on the 22nd of September, 1792. AUTUMK.- -VendiSmiaire . . Vintage month . from Sept. 22 to Oct. 21. Bnxmaire . . Fog mouth . . from Oct. 22 to Nov. 20. Frimaire . Sleet mouth . from Nov. 21 to Dec. 20. WlNTER.- — Nivose . Snow mouth . . from Dec. 21 to .Tau. 10. Pluviose . Rain mouth . from Jan. 20 to Feb. IS. Ventose . . Wind mouth . . from Feb. 19 to March 20. Sprino.- —Germinal . Sprouts' mouth . from March 21 to April 19. Plor^al . Flowers' mouth . from Apiil 20 to M,ay 19. Prairial . . Pasture mouth . from May 20 to Juue IS. SUMMER. — Messidor . . Harvest mouth . from Juue 19 to July IS. Fervidor . Hot mouth . . from July 19 to Aug. 17. Fructidor . . Fruit month . . from Aug. IS to Sept. IG. SANSCULOTTIDES, OR FEASTS DEDICATED TO Les Vevtus . The Virtues . Sept. 17. L'Opiuion . . . Opiuion . . Sept. 20 Lo GiSnie . . Genius . . Sept. 18. Les Recompenses . Rewards . . Sept. 21 Le Travail . Labour . Sept. 19. As all the public acts of the French nation were dated according to this altered style for a period of more tlian twelve years, its record here may be useful. Though this era commenced on the 22nd of Sept. 1792, its establishment was not decreed until the 4th Frimaire of the year IL (24th Nov. 1793.) The revolutionary calendar existed until the 10th Nivose, year of the republic XIV., being the 31 .st Dec. 1805, when the Gregorian mode of calculation was restored at the instance of Napoleon. FRENCHTOWN, Canada. This town was taken from the British by the American general Winchester, Jan. 22, 1813, the period of the late (the second) war with the United States of America. It was retaken by the British forces under General Proctor, immediately afterwards, and the American commander and the whole of his troops were made prisoners. FRIDAY. The sixth day of the week ; so called from Friga, a goddess worshipped by our forcfatliers on this day, commonly supposed to be the same witli Venus. Friga was the wife of Thor, and goddess of peace, fertility, and riches. This goddess, with Thor and Odin, composed the court or supreme council of the gods, and the three were objects of worship among the Scandinavians. Good Friday is a fast in the Church of England in memory of our Saviour's crucifixion. See Good Friday. FRIKDLAND, BATTLE of. Between the allied Russian and Prussian armies on the one side, and the Freucli, commanded by Napoleon in person, who completely van- quished the allies, with the loss of eighty jneces of cannon, and 50,000 men, June 14, 1807. This victory led to the peace of Tilsit, by which Russia lost no teri'itory, but Prussia was obliged to surrender nearly half her dominions. FRIENDLY ISLES. They lie in the Southern Pacific, and consist of a gronp of more than 150 isles, forming au archipelago of very considei-able extent. These islands FRI 272 FRO were discovered by Tasman, a.d. 1642. Visited by Wallis, who called them Keppel Isles, 1767 ; and by Captain Cook, who called them by their present name on account of the friendly disposition of the natives, 1773. But subsequent voyagers have dis- pelled this illusion, and describe them as capable of the most ferocious conduct. FRIENDLY SOCIETIES. These useful institutions originated in the clubs of the industrious classes ; and since they began to spring into importance they have been regulated and protected by various legislative enactments. They have now, with other similar institutions, more than twenty millions sterling in the public funds. Laws regarding Friendly Societies consolidated by statute, June, 1829. Statute to amend the laws relating to Friendly Societies, 4 WiU. IV. 1834. Friendly Societies' act, 3 & 4 Vict. c. 73, Aug. 1840. Act to amend, 9 & 10 Vict. c. 27, July, 1846. Acts consohdated, 13 & 14 Vict. c. 115, passed Aug. 15, 1850. FRIESLAND. Formerly governed by its own counts. On the death of prince Charles Edward, in 1744, it became subject to the king of Prussia ; Hanover disputed its possession, but Prussia prevailed. It was annexed to Holland by Bonaparte, in 1806, and afterwards to the French empire; but Prussia regained the country in 1814. The term Chevaux deFrise (sometimes, though rarely, written Chcval de Frise, a Friesland Horse) is derived from Friesland, where it was invented. FROBISHER'S STRAITS. Discovered by sir Martin Frobisher, the first Englishman who tried to find a north-west passage to China, in 1576. After exploring the coast of New Greenland, he entered this strait, which has ever since been called by his name. Frobisher i-eturned to England, bringing with him a quantity of black ore, which was supposed to contain gold, and which induced queen Elizabeth to patronise a second voyage, and lend a sloop of war for the purpose. The delusion was even kept up to a third expedition ; but all of them proved fruitless. FROGMORE. This charming estate near Windsor, held on lease from the Crown by the hon. Mrs. Egerton, was purchased in 1792 by the consort of George III. by whom it was gi-eatly improved. The grounds are adorned with several ornamental buildings, some of which were designed by Wyat, and others by the princess Elizabeth. Her majesty had a private printing-press here, under the superintendence of her librarian. FROSTS. The Euxine Sea frozen over for twenty days, a.d. 401. — Univ. Hist. A frost at Constantinople which commenced in Oct. 763, and continued until February of the next year ; the two seas there were frozen a hundred miles from the shore. — Univ. Hist. A frost in England on Midsummer-day was so violent that it is said to have destroyed the fruits of the earth, 1035. — Speed. 1063 Thames frozen for 14 weeks . . a.d. Dreadful frosts in England from Nov. to April (Mat. Paris) . The Categat entirely frozen . The Baltic passable to foot travellers and horsemen, for six weeks . . . The Baltic frozen from Pomerania toDen mark, for some weeks . . . , In England, when all the small birds perished, 9 Henry IV 1407 The ice bore riding upon it from Lubeck to Prussia 1426 Awfully severe frost, when even the large fowl of the air sought shelter in the towns of Germany The river frozen below bridge to Graves- end, from Nov. 24 to Feb. 10 The Baltic frozen, and horse passengers crossed from Denmark to Sweden ; the vineyards destroyed The winter so severe in Flanders, that the wine distributed to the soldiers was cut by hatchets .... One so intense, that caiTiages passed over from Lambeth to Westminster The wine in Flanders again frozen into solid lumps 1544 Sledges drawn by oxen travelled on the sea from Rostock to Denmark. . . 1548 1076 1294 1323 1402 1433 1434 1460 1468 1515 1565 1594 1607 The Scheldt frozen so hard as to sustain loaded waggons .... The Rhine, the Scheldt, and even the sea at Venice, frozen Fires and diversions on the Thames The rivers of Europe frozen, and even the Zuyder Zee ; a sheet of ice covered the Hellespont 1622 Charles X. of Sweden crossed the Little- Belt over the ice from Holstein to Den- mark, with his whole army, horse and foot, with large trains of artillery and baggage a.d. The forest trees, and even the oaks in England, split by the frost ; most of the hollies were killed; the Thames was covered with ice eleven inches thick; and nearly all the birds perished.* .... The wolves driven by the cold, entered Vienna, and attacked the cattle, and even men ..... Three months'frost with heavy snow from December to March, 8 Anne . . . 1709 A fair held on the Thames, and oxen roasted ; this frost continued from Nov. 24 to Feb. 9 . .... 1716 One which lasted 9 weeks, when coaches pUed upon the Thames, and festivities 1658 1684 1691 *" The frost of this year was terrible. It began in the beginning of December, 1683. The people kept trades on the Thames as in a ffair, till February 4, 1684. About forty coaches daily plied on the Thames as on drye laud. Bought this book at a shop upon the ice in the middle of the Thames." — Eivtry in tlce memoranda of a Citizen. FRO 273 FUN IWO 17S9 witli the intermission of one day's sud- den thaw .... Jan. 23, 1795 Intense frost in all December . . . 1796 Booths erected on the Thames ; the winter very severe in Ireland . . Jan. 1814 The ft-ost so intense in parts of Norway, that quicksilver freezes, and persons exposed to the atmosphere lose their breath Jan. 2, 1819. FROSTS, continued. and diversions of all kinds were euj oy ed upon the ice. This season was called the " hard winter " . . . . , Prom Dec. 25, to Jan. 16, and from Jan 18 to 22 ; most terrible in its effects 1766 One, general throughout Europe. The Thames was passable opposite the Cus- tom House, fi'om Nov. to Jan. . . One from Dec. 2-1, 1704, to Feb. 14, 1795, The frost in Russia in 1812 surpassed in intenseness that of any winter in that country for many preceding year.s, and was very destructive to the French army in its retreat from Moscow, at the close of that memorable year. Napoleon commenced his retreat on the 9th November, when the frost covered the ground, and the men perished in battalions, and the horses fell by hundreds on the roads. Wliat with her loss in battle, and the effects of this awful and calamitous frost, France lost in the campaign of this year more than 400,000 men. FRUITS OF FOREIGN COUNTRIES. Several varieties of fruit arc mentioned as having been introduced into Italy, 70 B.C. et seq. Exotic fruits and flowers of various kinds, previously unknown in England, were brought thither in the reigns of Henry VII. and VIIL, and of Mary and Elizabeth, between the yeai's 1500 and 1578. ^qq Gardening and Flowers. Among others of less note, were musk lemons, plum trees, and currant plants of sundry sorts, the musk and damask roses, tulips, &c. ; also saffron, woad, and other drugs for dyeing, but these last were attempted to be cultivated without success. — Halduyt ; Lord Kaimes. Tiie following are among the fruits whose intro- duction into England has been traced : — &c. FRUITS, Almond-tree, Barbary . . . a.d. 1548 Apples, Syria 1522 Apple, the custard. North America . 1736 Apple, the osage, ditto . . . . 1818 Apricots, Epirus .... 1540 Chen-y-trees, Pontus 100 Cherries, finest kinds, Flanders . . 1540 Cornelian cli'.'rry, Austria . . . . 1596 Currants, Xante 1533 Currant, the hawthorn, Canada . . 1705 Fig-tree, south of Europe, before . . 1548 Fig, the Botany-bay, New South Wales . 1789 Gooseberries, Flanders, before . . 1540 Grapes, Portugal 1528 Lemons, Spain 1554 Limes, Portugal 15.W Lime, the American, before . . . 1752 Melons, before 1540 Mock or.ange, south of Europe, before . 1596 Mulberry, Italy 1520 FUENTES DE ONORE, BATTLE of, Mulberry, white, China, about a.d. 1596 Mulberry, the red, from N. America, bef. 1629 Mulberry, the paper, from Japan, before 1754 Nectarine, Persia 1562 Olive, the Cape, Cape .... 1730 Olive, the sweet-scented, China . . . 17T1 Oranges 1595 Peaches, Persia 1562 Pears, from various climes . . . *** Pine-apple, Brazils 1568 Pippins, Netherlands .... 1525 Plums, Italy 1522 Plum, the date, Barbary .... 1596 Pomegranate, Spain, before . . . 1548 Quince, Austria 1573 Quince, the Japan 1796 Raspberry, thetloweriug,North America. 1700 Raspberry, the Virginian, ditto, before . 1696 Sti'awberry, Flanders Strawberiy, the Oriental, Levant 1530 1724 1629 Walnut, t!ie black, N. America, before On May 2, Massena crossed the Agueda, with 40,000 infantry, 5000 horse, and about 30 pieces of artillery, to relieve Almeida. He expected every day to be superseded in his command, and he wished to make a last effort for his own military character. Lord Wellington could muster no more than 32.000 men, of which force only 1200 were cavalry. He, however, determined to fight rather than give up the blockade of Almeida. After much fighting, night came on, and put an end to the battle. Next day, Massena was joined by Bessi6res with a body of the Imperial guard ; and on the 5th, the enemy made his grand attack. The battle raged throughout a vast plain, and in all the war there was not a more dangerous hour for England. The fight lasted until evening, wlicn the lower part of the town was abandoned by both parties — the British maintaining the chapel and crags, and the French retiring a cannon-shot from the stream. Mnv 5, 1811. — Sir W. F. P. Napier. FUMIGATION. The purifying the air by burning sweet woods, flowers, gums, &c. Acron, a physician at Agrigcntum, is said to have been the first who caused great fires to be lighted, and aromatics to be thrown into them to purify the air; and by this process ho put a stop to the plague at Athens and other places in Greece about 473 B.C. — Univ. Diet. FUNDS. To the Venetians is ascribed the origin of tlie funding system, in a.d. 1171, Public funds were raised by the Medici family at Florence, in 1340. Our funding system, or the method of niising the supplies for the public service m England, by anticipations of the public revenues (the origin of the national debt), was introduced T FUN 274 GAL ill the llevolutiou, 1689. — Mortimers Broker. 1'he funding system is coeval with the commencement of the Bank of England. — Anderson. The Three per cent, annuities were created in 1726. The Three j3er cent, consols were created in 1731. The Three per cent, reduced, 1746. Three per cent, annuities, payable at the South Sea-house, 1751. Three-and-a-half ^er cent, annuities created, 1758. Long annuities, 1761. Four per cent, consols, 1762. Five ^ler cent, annuities, 1797, and 1802. Five per cents. reduced to four, 1822. Old Four per cents, reduced to three-and-a-half in 1824. Further reductions were made in 1825, 1830, 1834, 1841, and 1844 : the maximum being now three-and-a-half per cent. FUNERAL GAMES. They are mentioned by most early writers. Among the Greeks they were chiefly horse races ; and among the Romans, processions, and the mortal combats of gladiators around the funeral pile. These games were abolished by the emperor Claudius, a.d. 47. Funeral orations have a heathen origin. Solon was the first who spoke one, 580 B.C. They were indispensable among the Romans ; the custom of led horses took place a.d. 1268. A tax was laid on funei'als in England, 1793. FUNERAL ORATIONS. The Romans pronounced harangues over their dead, when people of quality, or eminent for great deeds and virtues. Theopompus obtained a prize for the best funeral oration in praise of Mausolus, 353 B.C. Popilia was the first Roman lady who had an oration pronounced at her funeral, which was done by her son Crassus ; and it is observed by Cicero that Julius Caesar did the like for his aunt Julia and his wife Cornelia. In Greece, Solon was the first who pronounced a funeral oration, according to Herodotus, 580 B.C. FUNERALS, PUBLIC. Among the late instances of public funeral honours being paid to illustrious men of Great Britain, and voted by Parliament as national demonstrations of respect, are the following : Duke of Rutland's funeral in Ireland, Nov. 17, 1787 ; lord Nelson's funeral, Jan. 9, 1806 ; Mr. l^itt's funeral, Jan. 22, 1806 ; Mr. Fox's funeral, Oct. 10, 1806 ; that of Richard Brinsley Sheridan, July 13, 1816 ; of the right hon. George Canning, Aug. 16, 1827 ; and of the most illustrious duke of Wellington, Nov. 18, 1852. FUR. The refined nations of antiquity never used furs : in later times, as luxury advanced, they were used by princes as linings for their tents. They were worn by our first Henry, about A.D. 1125. Edward III. enacted that all such persons as could not spend lOOZ. a year, should be prohibited this species of finery, 1337. G. GABELLE. The old duty upon the consumption of salt. First imposed on the subjects of France in 1435. — Dufresnoy. The assessments were unequal, being very heavy in some provinces and light in others ; owing to privileges and exemptions purchased from the sovereigns in early periods.— iVecI'ar on the Finances of France. GAGGING BILL. A bill properly so called, but meant to protect the king and govern- ment from the harangues of seditious meetings, was enacted in 1795 ; at which time the popular mind was in a very excited state. In Nov. 1819, soon after the memora'ole Manchester affray, a bill among others, for the purpose of stifling discontent, and restraining public meetings and cheap periodical publications, was popularly called a "gagging bill." More recently statutes coercing popular assemblies, particularly in Ireland, and restraining the expression of public opinion, have been so designated. GALLEYS. The ancient galleys with three rows of rowers, tri-remes, were invented by the Corinthians, 786 B.C.— Blair. They were built at Athens, 786 B.C. Galleys were mentioned by most of the Roman authors. They are chiefly used, in modern times, by the states bordering on the Mediterranean. The terms "galley slave," and "condemned to the galleys," arose from these "sea-vessels" having from 25 to 30 benches on each side, manned by four or five slaves to each bench, sentenced to this slavery as a punishment for crime. In France they had a general of galleys, of whom the baron de la Garde was the first, 1544. — Henaidt. GALLIPOLI. A seaport in Turkey in Europe, 128 miles west of Constantinople. It was taken by the Turks in 1357, and afterwards fortified by Bajazet I. — The first division of the French army engaged in the Russo-Turkish war, under General Canrobert, arrived here March 31, 1854, and established a camp. They were GAL 275 GAR immediately afterwards followed by the English army, who encamped at Scutari. The allied armies left for Varna in May following. GALVANISM. The discover}' of it is recent ; it was first noticed in 1767, by Saltzer; but it was not till about 1789 that Madame Galvani, wife of Dr. Galvani, of Bologna, acci- dentally discovered its extraordinary effects on animals ; and from the name of the discoverer it was called Galvanism. This lady having observed the convulsions produced in the muscles of frogs by the contact of metals, directed her husband's attention to the phenomenon ; and in 1791, Galvani announced the result of his observations on this subject. Since that period a groat manj^ experiments have been made, and many curious facts observed, which have excited much attention among philosophers. lu 1808, Napoleon presented Volta, on account of his discoveries in galvanic electricity, with a gold medal and 3000 livres. GALWAY, Ireland. The ancient settlers here were divided into thirteen tribes, a distinction not forgotten to this day. In 1690 Gahvay declared for king James, but it was invested and taken by general Ginckel immediately after the decisive battle of Aughrim, July 12, 1691.- — Here is one of the new colleges endowed by government for the advancement of learning in Ireland, pursuant to act 8 & 9 Vict. c. 66, July 31, 1845. The college was inaugurated Oct. 30, 1849. See Colleges. GAME LAWS. The laws restricting the killing of game ai'e peculiar to the north of Europe, and pai'take of the nature of the forest laws imposed by William tlie Conqueror, who, to preserve his game, made it forfeiture of property to disable a wild beast ; and loss of eyes, for a stag, buck, or boar. Of these laws the clergy were zealous promoters; and they pi-otested against amelioi-ations under Henry III. The iirst game act passed in 1496. Game certificates were first granted with a duty in 1784-5. Numerous statutes have been passed on this subject from time to time. An act to prevent the destruction of game passed July 19, 1828. An act to amend the various laws relating to game passed 2 Will. IV. Oct. 5, 1831. Act 7 & 8 Vict, passed July 4, 1844. Act relating to killing hares, 11 & 12 Vict. July 22, 1848. GAMING, EXCESSIVE. Introduced into England by the Saxons ; the loser was often made a slave to the winner, and sold in traffic like other merchandise.— Camden ; Stow. Act, prohibiting gaming to all gentlemen (and interdicthig tennis, cards, dice, bowls, &c., to inferior people, exce)t at Christmas time), 33 Hen. VIII. 1541. Gaming-houses were licensed in London in 1620. Act to prevent excessive and fraudulent gaming, when all 2irivate lottei-ies, and the games of Faro, Basset, and Hazard were suppressed, 13 Geo. II. 1739. — Ruff head's Statutes. The profits of a well-known gaming house in London for one season have been estimated at 150,000^. In one night a million of money is said to have changed hands at this place. — Leig/i. GAMING, STATUTES against. Any person losing, by betting or playing, more than 100/. at any one time, is not compellable to pay the same, 16 Charles II. 1663. Bonds or other securities given for money won at play, not recoverable ; and any person losing more tlian 10/. may sue the winner to recover it back, 9 Anne, 1710. Several other laws have been made from time to time, but ineflectually, to restrain this vice. The Lord Chancellor refused a bankrupt his certificate, because he had lost five pounds at one time in gaming, July 17, 1788. — Phillips. Three ladies of quality con- victed in penalties of .'iO/. each for playing at Faro, March 11, 1797. — Idem. Gaming- houses were licensed in Paris until 1836. The act to amend the laws against games and wagers, 8 & 9 Vict. c. 109, passed Aug. 1845. GAMES. Those of Greece and Rome will be found under their respective heads. The candidates for athletic games in Greece used to be dieted on new cliecse, dried figs, and boiled grain, with warm water, and no meat. The games were leaping, foot-races, darting, quoits, wrestling, and boxing. See the Capitolinc, Isthmian, Olympic, Pythian, Secular, and other Games. GARDENING. The first garden, Eden, was planted by God. See Eden. Gai-dening was one of the first arts that succeeded tlio art of building houses. — Walpole. Noah planted a vineyard and drank of the wine. Of fruit, flower, and kitchen-gardens, the Garden of Eden was no doubt the pi-ototype. — Idem. There wants notbing but the embroidery of a parten-e to make a garden in the reign of Trajan serve fur a description of one in that of our William III. — Idem. The art of gardening became better understood in England about a.D. 1500, before which time many of our vegetables were imported fi'om Brabant. The eraof the art was the reign of Elizabeth; T 2 GAR 276 GAR but the modern mode of gardening was introduced about 1700. from the countries respectively named : — ROOTS AND VEGETABLES. Carrots . Flanders. Rice, from . Ethiopia. . Asia. Brocoli . C3T5rus. Buck-wheat . Beans . . Greece. Boi^age . Syria. Peas . . Spain. Cresses . Crete. FKUITS AND FLOWERS. Cauliflower . Cyprus. Jasmine . . Circassia. Asparagus . . Asia. Elder-tree . . Persia. Lettuce . . Brabant. Tulip . Cappadocia. Artichokes . . Holland. Daffodil . Italy. Garlic . The East. Lily . . Syria. Shallots . . Siberia. Tuberose . Java, &c. Horse-radish China. Carnation . Italy, &c. Kidney-beans . East Indies. Ranunculus . Alps. Gourds . Astracan. Apples . Syria. Lentils . . France. Apricots . Epirus. Chervil . . Italy. Currants . . Zante. Celery . . Flanders. Damask-rose . Damascus. Potatoes . . Brazil. Hops . Artois. Tobacco . America. Gooseberries . Flanders. Cabbage . . HoUand. Gilly-flowers . Toulouse. Anise . . Egypt. Musk-rose . Damascus. Parsley . . Egypt. Plums . . Damascus. 1700. The following Oranges . Spain. Lemons . . Spain. Pink Italy. Provence-rose Marseilles. Convolvulus . Canaries. Arctopus Cape. Bell-flower Canaries. Cherries Poutus. Figs . Italy. Date-plum . Barbary. Mulberry . Italy. Nectarine . Persia. Passion-flower Brazil. Pomegranate Spain. Rosemary . Italy. Laburnum Hungary. Laurel . . Levant. Lavender . Italy. Peaches Persia. Quince Austria. came WeepingWillow Levant. Fennel . . . Canaries. Musk-melons and other rich fruits that are now cultivated in England, and the pale gooseberry, together with salads, garden roots, cabbages, &c., were brought from Flanders, and hops from Artois, in 1520. The damask-rose was brought hither by Dr. Linaci'e, physician to Henry VIII. about 1540. Pippins were bi'ought to England by Leonard Mascal, of Plumstead, in Sussex, 1525. Currants or Corinthian grapes were first planted in England in 1533, brought from the Isle of Zante. The musk- rose and several sorts of plums were brought from Italy by lord Cromwell. Apricots came from Epirus, 1540. The tamarisk plant was brought from Germany, by arch- bishop Griudal, about 1570 ; and about Norwich, the Flemings planted flowers unknown in England, as gilly-flowers, carnations, the Provence-rose, &c. 1567- Woad came originally from Toulouse, in France. Tulip roots from Vienna, 1578 ; also beans, peas, and lettuce, now in common use, 1600. See Flowers ; Fruits. GARTER, ORDER of the. This institution outvies all other similar institutions in the world. It owes its origin to Edward III. who conquered France and Scotland, and brought their kings prisoners to England. Edward, with a view of recovering France, which descended to him by right of his mother, was eager to draw the best soldiers of Europe into his interest, and thereupon projecting the revival of king Arthur's round table, he proclaimed a solemn tilting, to invite foreigners and others of quality and courage to the exercise. The king, upon ISTew Year s day, 1344, published royal letters of protection for the safe coming and returning of such foreign knights as had a mind to venture their reputation at the jousts and tournaments about to be held. The place of the solemnity was Windsor; it was begun by a feast, and a table was erected in the castle of 200 feet diameter, in imitation of king Arthur's at Winchester, and the knights were entertained at the king's own expense of lOOZ. a week. In 1346, Edward gave his garter for the signal of a battle that had been crowned with success (supposed to be Ci-essy), and being victorious on sea and land, and having David, king of Scotland, a prisoner ; and Edward the Black Prince, his son, having expelled the rebels in Castile, and enthroned the lawful sovereign, Don Pedro, he, in memory of these exploits, instituted this order, April 23, 1349-50. The following were the Sir John Lisle. Barth, lord Burghersh. John, lord Beauchamp. John.lord Mohun, of Dunstar. Hugh, lord Courtenay. Thomas, lord HoUand. Lord Grey, of Codnore. Sir Richard Fitz-Simon. Sir Miles Stapletou. Edward gave the garter pre-eminence among the ensigns of the order ; it is of blue velvet bordered with gold, with the inscription in old French — " Honi soit qui mal y f>ewse,"_ Evil to him who evil thinks. The knights are always installed at Windsor ; and were styled Equites aurece Periscelidis, knights of the golden garter. — Beatson. GARTER KING at ARMS. This office was instituted by king Henry V. in 1420, and is one of considerable honour ; he carries the rod and sceptre at every feast of ORIGINAL KNIGHTS, 1350. Edward, prince of Wales, (called the Black Prince). Henry, duke of Lancastei". Thomas, earl of Warwick. Piers, captal de Buch. Ralph, earl of Stafford. William, earl of Salisbury. Roger, earl of Mortimer. Sir Thomas Wale. Sir Hugh Wrottesley. Sir Nele Lorin. John, lord Chandos. Sir James Audley. Sir Otho Holland. Sir Henry Eam. Sir San. Daubrichcourt. Sir Walter Pavely. GAR 277 GEN St. George, — Speiman. The order of the garter in Ireland, to which a similar functionary was attached, was instituted m imitation of that of England, by Edward IV. in 1466 ; but it was abolished by an act of parliament, 10 Hen. VII. 1494. — Ashmole's Instit. GAS-LIGHTS. The inflammable aeriform fluid was first evolved from coal by Dr. Clayton, in 1739. — Phil. Trans. Its application to the purposes of illumination was first tried by Mr. Murdoch, in Cornwall, in 1792. Tiie first display of gas-lights was made at Boulton & Watt's foundry, in Birmingham, on the occasion of the rejoicings for peace, in 1802. Gas was permanently used, to the exclusion of lamps and caudles, at the cotton-mills of Phillips & Lee, Manchester, where 1000 burners were lighted, 1805. Gas-lights were first introduced in London, at Golden-lane, Aug. 16, 1807. They were used in lighting Pall Mall, in 1809; and were general through London in 1814. They were first used in Dublin in 1816, and the streets there generally lighted in Oct. 1825. The gas-pipes in and round London extend upwards of 1100 miles, and are daily increasing. GATESHEAD, a borough in Durham, on the south bank of the Tyne, opposite New- castle. At Gateshead-fell, William I. defeated Edgar Atholing in 1068. It was made a parliamentary borough by the reform bill in 1832. — Between twelve and one o'clock, Oct. 6, 1854, a fire broke out in a worsted manufactory here, which shortly after ignited a bond warehouse containing a great quantity of nitre, sulphur, &c. causmg a terrific explosion, felt at nearly twenty miles' distance, totally destroying many buildings, and burying many persons in the ruins. At the moment of explosion large masses of blazing material flew over the Tyne and set fire to many warehouses in Newcastle. About fifty lives were lost, and very many persons were seriously wounded. The damage was estimated at about a million pounds. GAUGING. To measure the contents of any vessel of capacity. The gauging of wine and other liquids, was established by a law, 27 Edw. III. 1352. GAUNTLET. An iron glove, first introduced in the 13th century, perhaps about 122.5. It was a part of the full suit of armour, being the armour for the hand. The gauntlet was of thin iron, with several plates jointed for the fingers ; it was afterwards made of strong and thick leather. It wtxs commonly thrown down as a challenge to an advei'sary, like the glove. GAUZE. This fabric was much prized among the Roman people, about the beginning of the first century. "Brocadoes and damasks, aud tabbies and gauzes, have been lately brought over" (to Ireland). — Dean Swift, in 1698. The manufacture of gauze and articles of a like fabric, at Paisley, in Scotland, where they maintain great repute, was commenced about 1759. GAVEL-KIND. The custom of dividing paternal estates in land equally among male children, without any distinction, is derived from the Saxons, about a.d. 550. This usage is said to exist in parts of Kent, where it was first practised. By the Irish law of gavel-kind even bastards inherited. — Bavies. Not only the lauds of the father were equally divided among all his sons, but the lands of the brother also among all his brethren, if he had no issue of his own Law Diet. GAZETTE. A paper of public intelligence and news of divers countries, first printed at Venice, about the year 1620, and so called (.some say) because una (/azetta, a small piece of Venetian coin, was given to buy or read it. Others derive the name from gazza, Italian for magpie, i.e. chatterer. — Truster. A gazette was priuted in Enmce iu 1631 ; and one iu Germany in 1715. — Nouv. Diet. Hist. GAZCTTE, THE LONDON. See NeicsjMpers. The first English gazette was published at Oxford, the court being there then on account of the plague, Nov. 7, 1665. On the removal of the court to the capital, the title was changed to the London Gazette, Feb. 5, 1666. London Gazettes Extraordinarij are used for the publication of extraor- dinary ofiicial news. One of these latter was forged with a view of affecting the funds. May 22, 1787. The fraud succeeded, but the planuors of it were never discovered. — Phillips. The Dublin Gazette was fir.st published iu an official form about 1767. GENERAL ASSEMBLY of tue CHURCH of SCOTLAND. The first General Assembly of the Church w;\s held Dec. 20, 1560. Tlie General Assembly con- stitutes the highest ecclesiastical court iu the kingdom; it meets annually in Edinburgh in May, and sits about ten days. It consists of a grand commissioner, appointed by the sovereign, and delegates from presbyteries, royal boroughs, and universities, some being laymen. To this court all appeals from the inferior eccle- siastical courts lie, aud its decision is final. See Church of Scotland. GEN 278 GEO GENERALS. This rank has been given to commanders from very remote times. Matthew de Montmorency was the first officer honoured with the title of general of the French armies, a.d. 1203. — Henault. It is observed by M. Balzac that cardinal Richelieu first coined the viovd Generalissimo, upon his taking the supreme command of the French armies in Italy, in 1629. See Commanders-in-Chief. GENEVA. Part of the empire of Charlemagne, about a.d. 800. The Republic was foimded in 1512. After a variety of changes it became subject to Savoy, but threw off that yoke in 1526. It became allied to the Swiss Cantons in 1584. Memorable insurrection here, Feb. 1781 : about 1000 Genevese, in consequence of it, applied, in 1782, to earl Temple, lord-lieutenant of Ireland, for permission to settle in that country : the Irish parliament voted 50,000?. to defray the expense of their journey, and to purchase them lands near Waterford. Many of the fugitives came to Ireland in July, 1783, but they soon after abandoned it ; at this period many Genevan families settled in England. Another revolution, July 1794. Incorporated with France in 1798. Geneva was admitted by the diet into the Swiss Confederation, Dec. 30, 1813, GENOA. Its ancient inhabitants were the Ligures, who submitted to the Romans, 115 B.C. It underwent the revolutions of the Roman empire till a.d. 950. The Genoese revolted against their count, chose a doge, and became an aristocratic repubhc, 1030 to 1034. Several revolutions occurred up to 1528, when the celebrated Andrew Doria rescued his country from the dominion of foreign powei-s. Bombarded by the French in 1684, and by the British in 1688 and 1745. Genoa was taken by the Imperialists, Dec. 8, 1746 ; but their oppression of the people was such, that the latter suddenly rose, and expelled their conquerors, who again besieged the city the next year, Aug. 17, without effect. The celebrated bank failed, 1750. The city sustained a siege by a British fleet and Austrian army, until literally starved, and was evacuated by capitulation, May 1800; but it was sui-rendered to the French soon after their victory at Marengo. The Ligurian republic was foimded upon that of Genoa, in 1801, and the doge solemnly invested, Aug. 10, 1802. Genoa was annexed to the French empire, May 25, 1805. It surrendered to the combined English and Sicilian army, April 18, 1814 ; and was transferred to the king of Sardinia in 1816. The city was seized by insurgents, who, after a murderous struggle, drove out the garrison and proclaimed a republic, April 1850 : in the end the insurgents surrendered to general Marmora in the same month and year. GENS-D'ARMES, or GENDARMES. These were anciently the French king's horse- guards only, but afterwards the companies of the king's gardes-du-corps, the musqueteers, and light-horse, were reckoned among them. There was also a com- pany of gentlemen (whose number was about 250), bearing this name. Scots guards were about the person of the kings of France from the time of St. Louis, who reigned in 1226. They were organised as a royal corps by Charles VII. about 1441. The younger sons of Scottish nobles were usually the captains of this guard. The gendarmerie took precedence of all other French cavalry. GENTLEMEN.— The Gauls observing that, during the empire of the Romans, the Scutarii and Gentiles had the best appointments of all the soldiers, applied to them the terms ecuyers and gentilshommes. This distinction of gentlemen was much in use in England, and was given to the well descended, about a.d. Um.— Sidney. A gentleman is a man raised above the vulgar by his character or ^ost.—Shakspeare. GENTLEMEN-AT-ARMS, CORPS of. This corps (formerly styled the Band of Gentle- men Pensioners) is the oldest corps in England, with the exception of the Yeomen of the Guard. It was instituted by Henry VIII. in 1509, -and was originally composed entirely of gentlemen of noble blood, whom he named his pensioners or spears. William IV. commanded that this corps should be called his Majesty's Honour- able Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms, March 17, 1834.— fty^tam Curling. GEOGRAPHY. The first correct record we have of geographical knowledge is from Homer. He describes the shield of Achilles as representing the earth, surrounded by the sea. He accurately describes the countries of Greece, islands of the Archi- pelago, and site of Troj.— Iliad. The priests taught that the temple of Apollo at Delphos was the centre of the world. Anaximander of Miletus was the inventor ot geographical maps, about 568 B.C. Hipparchus attempted to reduce geography to a mathematical basis, about 135 B.C. It was first brought to Europe by the Moors of Jiarbary and Spain, about a.d. 1201.— Lenglet. The invention of the mariner's com- pass is the important connecting link between ancient and modern geography. The GEO 279 GEO modern maps and charts were introduced into England by Bartholomew Columbus to illustrate his brother's theory respecting a western continent, a.d. 1489. — The Royal Geographical Society was established in 1830. GEOLOGY. The science of the earth has been the subject of philosophical speculations from the time of Homer ; and is said to have been cultivated in China many ages before the Cliristian era. It occupied the attention of Pliny, Avicenna, and the Arabian writers. In 1574 Mercati wrote concerning the fossils in the pope's museum. Cesalpino, Majoli, and others (1597); Steno (1669), SciUa (1670), Quirini (1676), Plot and Lister (1678), Leibnitz (1680), recorded observations, and put forth theories on the various changes in the crust of the earth. Hooke (1668), in his work on Earthquakes, said that fossils, " as monuments of nature, were more certain tokens of antiquity than coins or medals, and, though difficult, it would not be impossible to raise a chronology out of them." Burnet's " Theory of the Earth " appeared in 1690, Whiston's in 1696, and Buffon's in 1749. Buftbn's views were censured by the Sorbonne in 1751, and recanted in consequence. The principle he renounced was that the px'esent condition of the earth is due to secondary causes, and that these same causes will produce further changes. His more eminent fellow- labourers and successors were Gesner (1758), Michell (1760), Raspe (1762-73), Pallas and Saussure (1793-1800). — Werner (1775) ascribed all rocks to an aqueous origin, and even denied the existence of volcanoes in primitive geological times ; and had many followers, Kirwan, De Luc, &c. — Hutton (1788), supported by Playfair (1801), warmly opposed Werner's views, and asserted that the principal changes in the earth's crust are due to the agency of fire. The rival parties were hence termed Neptuuists and Vulcauists.— In 1790 William Smith, the ftither of British geology, published his "Tabular View of British Strata."— In 1807 the Geological Society of London was established, which by collecting a great mass of new data greatly tended to check the . disposition to theorise, and led to the introduction of views midway between those of Werner and Hutton. To its Transactions and Journal we must refer for the future history of Geology.— In 1803 the Royal Institution had the best geological collection in Loudon, which had been formed by Davy, Hatchett, and others ; and sir John St. Aubyn, sir Abraham Hume, and the right hon. C. F. Greville proposed to establish a school of mines there, but failed.— In 1835, Mr. (afterwards sir Henry) De la Beche, suggested the establishment of the present Museum of Geology in Jermyn-street. The building was erected by Mr. Pennethorne, and opened in 1851. Attached to the museum are the Mining Records Office, a lecture theatre, laboratories, &c. Sir H. De la Beche, the first director, died April 13, 1855, and was succeeded by Sir R. I. Murchison. — The English standard works on geology at the present time are those of Lyell, Phillips, De la Beche, Murchison, Mantell, and Ansted. The strata composing the earth's crust may be divided into two great classes — 1st, those due tij aqueous agency ; 2ndly, those resulting from igneous action ; which may be classed as follows : — Aqueous formations, stratified, rarely crys-f Sedimentary or Fossiliferous rocks, talline 1 Mewmorphic or Uufossililerous. Igneous formation, unstratified. crystaUinc ^ Snl^as Ste^&c. Fossiliferous, or Sedimentary Rocks, are divided into three great scries, — The Palaeozoic (most ancient forms of life) or The Xeozoic or Cainozoic (more recent forms Primary. of life), or Tertiary. The Mesozoic (middle life period) or Secondary. TABULAR VIEW OF FOSSILIFEROUS STRATA. NEOZOIC : I. Post-Tertiary : A. Post-Puocene : 1. Reciiit : Peat with human remains, &c. — Deltas of rivers. 2. Post-Pli'icene : Ancient beach of Brigh- ton ; Bluffs of Mississippi. II. Tertiary or Cainozoic Series: — B. Pliocene: 3. Aeicir Pliocene, or Pleistocene : Mam- malian Beds, Drift Deposits, Norwich Crag, Australian Breccias. {Ele- phants, Bears, ttc] 4. OtdT Pliocene : Red and Coralline Crag (Suffolk, Antwerp, Normandy). C. 5. Miocene : no British ; part of Bour- deaux beds ; Virginia sands. [Masto- don, Gigantic Elk, Salamander, &c.\ D. 6, 7, 8. Eocene Group : Lower and Middle : Freshwater and Marine Beds; Barton Clays ; Braeklesham Sands ; London, Plastic, and Thanet Clays. [Palms, Birds, mmarians. A society of grammarians was formed at Rome so early as 276 B.C. — Blair. Apollodorus of Atheus, Varro, Cicero, Messala, Julius Cffisar, Nicias, ililius Donatus, Remmius Palemon, Tyrannion of Pontus, Athenrous, and other distinguished men, were of this class. — Cobbott declared Mr. Canning to have been the only purely grammatical orator of his time ; and Dr. Parr, speaking of a speech of Mr. Pitt's, said, " We threw our whole gr-ammatical mind upon it, and could not discover one error." GRAMPIAN HILLS, BATTLE of. This is a celebrated engagement between the Scots and Picts, the former under Galgacus, and the latter under Agricola, fought A.D. 79. These hills take their name from a single hill, the Mens Grampius, of Tacitus, whore Galgacus waited the approach of Agricola, and where the battle was fought so fatal to the bravo Caledonians. GRAMPOUND, BRIBERY at. Memorable case of bribery and other corrupt practices in this borough, wlien several persons were convicted, and among them was sir Manasseh Lopez, who was sentenced by the court of king's bench to a fine of 10,000^. and two years' imprisonment. The boi-ough was disfranchised by the house of commons, Nov. 15, 1819. — Ann. Reg. GRANARIES. The Romans formed granaries in seasons of plenty, to secure food for the poorer citizens; and all who wanted it were provided with corn from these reservoirs, in necessitous times, at the cost of the public treasury. There were three hundred and twenty -seven granaries in Rome. — Univ. Ilist. Twelve new granaries were built at Bridewell to hold 6000 quartera of corn, and two storehouses for sea- coal to hold 4000 loads, tberel)j' to prevent the sudden dearuess of these articles by the great increase of inhabitants, 7 James I. \Q\Q.—Stoiv. GRAND ALLIANCE. Signed at Vienna between England, the Emperor, and the States General ; to which Spain and the duke of Savoy afterwards acceded. May 12, 1689. GRAND JUNCTION CANAL. This canal joins several others in the centre of the country, which thence form a communication between the liver Tliames, Severn, Mersey, and Trent, and, consequently, an inland navigation to the four principal sea- ports, Loudon, Liverpool, Bristol, and Hull. The canal commences at Braunston, on the west borders of Northamptonshire, and enters the Thames near London, 1790. GRAND PENSIONARY. A title held by chief state functionaries in Holland, in the sixteenth century. In the constitution given bj' France to the Batavian Republic, previously to the erection of that state into a kingdom, the title of Grand Pensionary u 2 GRA 292 GRE was revived and given to tlie head of the government, April 29, 1805. The eminent statesman, Rutger Jan Schimmelpennick, previously Batavian ambassador to London, was made the Grand Pensionary. The republic became a kingdom under Louis, the brother of Napoleon, the next year. The office of Grand Pensionary was subsequently restored. See Holland. GRANICUS, BATTLE of. In which Alexander the Great signally defeated the Persians. The Macedonian troops crossed the Granicus in the face of the Persian army, although the former did not exceed 30,000 foot, and 5000 horse, while the Persian army amounted to 600,000 foot, and 20,000 horse. — Justin. Yet the victors lost in this great battle but fifty-five foot soldiers, and sixty horse. Sardis capitulated, Miletus and Halicarnassus were taken by storm, and numerous other great towns submitted to the conqueror, 334 B.C. — Bossuet. GRAPES. The fruit of the vine. Previously to the reign of Edward VL grapes were brought to England in large quantities from Flanders, where they were first cultivated, about 1276, The vine was introduced into England in 1552; and was first planted at Bloxhall, in Suffolk, in that year, and in other places in the neighbourhood of London soon after. In the gardens of Hampton-court palace is a celebrated vine, allowed to surpass any in Europe ; it is 72 feet by 20, and has in one season produced 2272 bunches of grapes, weighing 18 cwt. ; the stem is 13 inches in girth; it was planted in 1769. — Leigh. GRATES. The hearths of the early Britons were fixed in the centre of their halls. The fire-place originally was perhaps nothing more than a large stone depressed below the level of the ground to i-eceive the ashes. There were arched hearths among the Anglo-Saxons ; and chafing dishes were most in use until the general introduction of chimneys, about a.d. 1200. See Chimneys. GRAVITATION. This, as a supposed innate power, was noticed by the Greeks, and also by Seneca, who speaks of the moon attracting the waters, about a.d. 38. Kepler enlarged upon it, about a.d. 1615 ; and Hook published Gravitation as a system. The principles of gravity were demonstrated by Galileo at Florence about 1633 ; but the great law on this subject was laid down by Newton, about 1687. GREAT BRITAIN, or BRITISH EMPIRE. England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. See England, d;c. GREAT BRITAIN Steam Ship. This stupendous iron steam vessel, commanded by captain Hosken, formerly a naval officer, sailed from the Mersey river, Liverpool, bound for New York, in the forenoon of Sept. 22, 1846. She carried a large cargo of goods and 185 passengers, the greatest number that had ever sailed to America by steam. The same evening, having had the wind quite iu her favour all day, and having made rapid progress, the passengers were suddenly alarmed by a concussion, as if the vessel had struck upon a rock, and soon discovered that she was aground in Dundrum bay, in Ireland. They were landed at that place in safety, but all attempts to get the Oreat Britain off at the time were ineSectual. She lay stranded in Dundrum bay until Aug. 27, 1847, when Messrs. L Brunei, jun., and Bremner, the engineers, succeeded in getting her off, she having sustained little damage from the shock, or the waves rolling over her for nearly a year. GREAT SEAL op ENGLAND. The first seal used by Edwai'd the Confessor, was called the broad seal, and affixed to grants of the crown, a.d. 1048. — Baler's Chron. The most ancient seal with arms on it is that of Richard I. The great seal of England was stolen from the house of lord chancellor Thurlow, in Great Ormond-street, into which some thieves broke, and carried it, with other property, away, March 24, 1784, a day before the dissolution of parliament ; it was never recoverei A new seal was brought into use on the union with Ireland, Jan. 1, 1801. A new seal for Ireland was brought into use, and the old one defaced, Jan. 21, 1832. GR^CIA, MAGNA. That part of Italy in which the Greeks planted colonies ; but the boundaries of Magna Graecia are very uncertain. Some say that it comprehended all the southern parts of Italy : and others suppose that Magna Gracia comprehended only Campania and Lucania. To these was added Sicily, which country was likewise peopled by Greek colonists. — Lempriere. Mitford. GREECE. The first inhabitants of this justly-celebrated country of the ancient world were the progeny of Javan, fourth son of Japheth. Greece was so called from a very ancient king named Grsecus; and another king named Hellen gave his subjects the appellation of Hellenists. Homer calls the inhabitants, indifferently. Myrmidons, Hellenists, and Achaiaus. Greece anciently consisted of the peninsula of the Pelopon- II GRE 293 GRE nesus, Greece outside of the Peloponnesus, Thessaly, and the islands. The limits of modern Greece are much more confined. Greece became subject to the Turkish empire in the 15th century, ;uid has but recently again become a separate state. The ti'caty of London, on behalf of Greece, between England, France, and Russia, was signed in Oct. 1827 ; count Capo d'Istria * was declared president in Jan. 1828 ; and the Porte acknowledged the independence of Greece in April 1830. It was afterwards erected into a kingdom, of which Otho I. of Bavaria was made kinj?. ac. 2089 2042 1S56 1796 1773 1773 1764 Sicyon founded (EiisebiuK) Ui-anus aiTives in Greece (Lcngkt) Revolt of the TitaDS War of the Giants Kingdom of Argos begun (Eiisebius) Reign of Ogyges in Bujotia (idcn) Sacrifices to the gods first introduced in Greece by Phoroneus . According to some authors, Sicyon was now begun {Lenglet) Deluge of Ogyges (ichich see) . A colony of Arcadians emigrate to Italy under (Enotrus: the country first called (E/iotria, afterwards Magna Grmcia (Eusebius) 1710 Chronology of the Arundelian marbles comvaeuces- (Eusebius) .... 1582 Cecrops comes into Attica {idem) . . 1556 The Areopagus instituted . . . 1506 Deluge of Deucalion (Emebius) . . . 1503 Reign of Hellen (idem) .... 1459 Pauathena^an games instituted . . . 1495 Cadmus, with the Phojniolan letter.s, settles in Ba3otia ..... 1493 Lelex, first king of Laconia, afterwards called Sparta 1490 Arrival of Danaus with the first ship ever seen in Greece .... He introduces the use of pumps . . He gets possession of Argos. His fifty daughters (see Flambeaux) . First Olympic games celebrated at Elis, by the IdaA Dacti/li {EnMbius) . . . Iron discovered by tlie Jdmi Dactyli Corinth rebuilt, and so named . . . Ceres airives in Greece, and teaches the art of making bread .... The Isthmian games instituted . . . Mycenaj created out of Argos . Argonautic expedition (v:hich see) . . The Pythian games by Adrastus . War of the seven Greek captains . . The Amazonian war ; these martial females penetrate into Greece Rai)e of Helen by Theseus . . . . Raiw of Helen by Paris .... Commencement of the Trojan war . . Troy taken and destroyed on the night of the 7th of the month Thargeliou (27 May, or 11th June) .... iEneas sets sail, winters in Thrace, and arrives in Italy . . Mijrration of the iEolian colonies, who build Smyrna, &c. Settlement of the louiansfrom Greece in Asia Minor The first laws of navigation originate with the Rhodians .... Homer flourishes about this time (Arun- delian ilarldes) ... • . . Olympic games revived at Elis The first Messeuian war . . . . The Messenian war .... The capture of Ira The Messcuians emigrate to Sicily, and give their own name Messene to Zancle (now called Messina) . . . . a-fight, the first on record, between the Corinthians and the inhabitants of Corcyra 604 658 14S5 1485 1475 1453 1400 1384 1383 1326 1313 1263 1263 1225 1213 1213 1198 1193 1184 1181 1124 1044 916 907 884 743 685 670 668 Byzantium built by the Argives b c. Sybaris in Magna Grajcia destroyed, 100,000 Crotonians under Milo defeat 300,000 Sybarians Sardis taken and burnt, which occasions the Persian invasion . . . . Thrace and Macedonia conquered . Battle of Marathon {u-hich see) . . . Xerxes invades Greece, but is checked at Thei-mopyte by Leonidas Battle of Salamis (which see) . . . Mardonius defeated at Platasa Battle of Euiymedon .... The third Messenian war . . . . Athens begins to tyrannise over the other states of Greece .... Peloponnesus overrun by Pericles . . The first Sacred war .... Herodotus reads his history in the Coun- cil at Athens 445 The sea-fight at Cnidus . . . .394 Battle of Mantinea 363 Sacred war ended by Philip, who takes all the cities of the Phoceans Battle of Chseronea (which $ee) . . . Alexander, the son of Philip, enters Greece ; subdues the Athenians, and destroys the city of Thebes Commencement of the Macedonian or Grecian Monarchy Alexander goes to Susa, and sits on the throne of Darius 508 504 496 490 480 480 479 470 465 459 455 448 348 338 335 331 330 Alaric invades Greece . . . a.d. 395 The empue imder Nicephorus com- menced 811 Greece mastered by the Latins . . . 1204 Reconquered 1261 Invaded by the Turks . . . . 1350 Its final overthrow. See Eastern Empire . 1353 [This country, so long illustrious for the militai-yexploits, the learning, andarts of its people, became of late years the scene of desperate conflicts with the Turks, in order to regain its indepen- dence, and the councils of the great powers of Europe were friendly to the design.] Groat struggle for independence . . 1770 The first decided movement, in these latter times, by the Servians . . . 1800 The Servians defeat the Turks at Nyssa, April 2, 1807 100,000 Turks, under Cliourschid Pa.sha, overrun the country, committing the most dreadful excesses . . . 1813 Minder of C/.erni Geoi-go . . . . 1817 lusurroetiou in Moldavia and Wallachia, in which the Greeks join . . . 1821 Proclamation of Prince Alexander to shake off the Turkish yoke, March, 1821 The Greek patriarch put to death atCon- stmtinople .... April 23, 1821 10,000 Christians perish in Cypnis, al- though not engaged in the revolt . 1821 Massacre of tli e inhabitants of Bucharest ; oven women and children not spared . 1821 * This distinguished statesman was shortly afterwards murdered by the brother and son of Mavro- michaehs, a Maiuoto chief, whom ho had imprisoned. The wretched ass-ossins were sentenced to be immured within close brick walls built around them up to their chins, and to be supplied with food n this hugering torture until they died. GRE 294 GRE April 10, lS-23 June, 1823 1824 1825 1825 GREECE, conlinued. Independence of Greece formally pro- claimed .... Jan. 27, 1822 Siege of Corinth . . . Feb. 1822 Bombardment of Scio ; its capture ; most horrible massacre recorded in modern history" .... April 23, 1822 Victories of the Greeks at Larissa, Tliermopylae, and Salouica . July 8, 1822 National Congress at Argus . Victories of Marco Botzaris Lord Bjrron lands in Greece, to devote himself to its cause . . August, 1823 Lamented death of lord Byron, at Mis- solonghi .... April 19, 1824 Signal defeat of the Capitan Pacha, at Samos .... August 16, 1824 The Provisional Government of Greece, instituted .... Oct. 12, Landing of Ibrahim Pachabetween Coron and Modon . . . Feb. 20, The Greek fleet defeats that of the Capitan Pacha . . . June 2, The Provisional Government of Greece determines to invite the protection of England .... July 24, 1825 Siege of Missolonghi ; the besieging Turks are defeated in a formidable attack upon it . . . August 1, 1826 The Greeks disperse the Ottoman fleet, Jan. 28, 1826 Ibrahim Pacha takes Missolonghi by assault .... April 23, 1826 The Greeks land near Salonica ; battle witli Omer Pacha . . June 1, 1826 Ibrahim Pacha signally defeated by the Mainotes . . . August 8 and 9, 1826 Reschid Pacha takes Athens, August 15, 1826 Treaty of London betvreen Great Britain, Russia, and France, onbehalf of Greece, signed July 6, 1827 Battle of Navarino(tcfticAsee); theTurkish fleet destroyed . . . Oct. 20, 1827 Count Capo d'Istria arrives as president of Greece .... Jan. 18, 1828 Attack on Carabusa, by sir Thomas Staines, in the IsU frigate, to check the piracies .... Jan. 31, 1828 The Panhellenion or Grand Council of State established . . . Feb. 2, National Bank founded . Feb. 14, Greece divided into departments, viz. Argolis, Achaia, Elis, XJpper Messenia, Lower Messenia, Laconia, and Arcadia; and the islands formed also into de- partments .... April 26, 1828 The Greeks are defeated in an attack on Anatolia .... May 23 Convention of the viceroy of Egypt with sir Edward Codrington, for the evacua- tion of the Morea, and delivery of the Greek captives . . . Aug. 6, Patras, Navarino, and Modon surrender to the French .... Oct. 6, 1831 1831 1S33 1833 1844 1849 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 KING OF GREECE. Final evacuation of the Morea by the Turks Oct. 30, 1828 Missolonghi surrenders . May 17, 1829 Greek National Assembly commences its sittings at Argos . . July 23, 1829 The Porte acknowledges the independ- ence of Greece . . . April 25, 1830 Prince Leopold finally declines the sove- reignty May 21, 1830 Count Capo d'Istria, president of Greece, assassinated by the brother and son of Mavronaichaelis, a Mainote chief, whom he had imprisoned . . . Oct. 9, The assassins put to death (see article Buryiiui Alive) . . . Oct. 29, Otho I. elected king of Greece Jan. 25, Colocotroni's conspiracy . Oct. 27, A bloodless revolution at Athens, to en- force ministerial responsibility and national representation, is consum- mated Sept. 14, 1843 The king accepts the new constitution, March 16, Admiral Parker, in command of the British Mediterranean fleet, anchors in Basika Bay . . . Oct. 28, He blockades the harbour of the Pirseus, the Greek government having refused his demand for the payment of moneys due to British subjects, and refused to surrender the islands of Sapienza and Cabrera .... Jan. 18, 1850 France interposes her good offices, and the blockade is discontinued, March 1, Negotiations between baron Gros and Mr. Wyse, the British minister, ter- minate, and the blockade of Athens is renewed .... April 25, A settlement of the Greek question con- cluded in London . . April 19, 1850 An arrangement made at Athens gives umbrage to France, whose minister is recalled from London; but the dispute between France and England is accom- modated by England consenting to sub- stitute for the convention at Athens, that signed in London . June 21, [See Athens, Macedon, Sparta, Tlirace, and other states of Greece.] Insurrections against the Porte in Thes- saly and Epirus, favoured by the Greek court . . Jan., Feb., and Mar. Rupture between Greece and Turkey, March 28, After many remonstrances, the English and French governments send troops, which arrive at the Piraeus ; change of ministiy ensues, and the king pro- mises to observe a strict neutrality. May 25, 26, 1854 See Tv.rkey, 1850 1850 18-00 1854 1854 1832. Otho I., prince of Bavaria, bom June 1, 1815 ; under a regency two yeara ; the present king (1855), * The slaughter lasted 10 days : 40,000 of both sexes falling victims to the sword, or to the fire which raged until every house, save those of the foreign consuls, was burned to the ground. 7000 Greeks, who had fled to the mountains, were induced to surrender by a promise of amnesty, guaranteed by the consuls of England, France, and Austria ; yet even they were, every man of them, butchered ! The only exception made dm-ing the massacre was in favour of the young and more beautiful women and boys, 30,000 of whom were reserved for the markets. The narrative of plunder, violation, and crime, while the infidel army was let loose upon the captured city, is too long and too shocking for transcrip- tion here. When Scio, until now so great an object of admiration to travellers, was entirely consumed, the Turks fired the villages, hemming in on all sides the innocent inhabitants, mostly women and children, to perish amid the flames of their dwellings, or to fall beneath the swords and daggers of the soldiers, as they attempted to escape. From the details of this horrible aflair, given by Mr. Blaquiere and other writers, and their descriptions of individual woe, it is not wonderful that the heart of Byron ■was touched by them, and his spirit fired, and his energies devoted to the cause of that classic land, in which he so meetly died. I I GPwE 295 GRE GREEK CHURCH. A difference arose in the eighth century between the eastern and western Churches, which in the course of two centuries and a half tei-minated in a separation. This Church is called Qreelc in contradistinction from the latter, ov Roman Church. The Greek Church claims priority as using the language in which the Gospel was first promulgated, and many of its forms and ceremonies are similar to those of the Roman Catholics ; but it disowns the supremacy of the pope. It is the established religion of Russia. GREEK FIRE. A composition of combustible matter invented by one Callinicus, an ingenious engineer of Heliopolis, in Syria, in the seventh centurj-, in order to destroy the Saracens' ships, which was efifected by the general of the emperor Pogonat's fleet, and 30,000 men were killed. The property of this fire was to burn briskest in water, to diffuse itself on all sides, according to the impression given it. Nothing but oil, or a mixture of vinegar, urine, and sand, could quench it. It was blown out of long tubes of copper, and .shot out of cross-bows, and other spring instruments. The invention was kept a secret for many years by the court of Constantinople ; but is now lost. GREEK LANGUAGE. The Greek language was fii-st studied in Europe about a.d. 1450 — in France, 1473. William Grocyn, or Grokeyn, a learned English professor of this language, travelled to acquire its time pronunciation, and introduced it at Oxford, where he had the honour to teach Erasmus, 1490. — Wood's Athen, Oxon. England has produced many eminent Greek scholars, of whom may be mentioned professor Porson, who died in 180S ; Dr. Parr, who died in 1825; and Dr. C. Burney, who died 1817. GREEN-BAG INQUIRY. This inquiry arose out of the famous Oreen Bag, full of documents of alleged seditious, laid before Parliament by lord Sidmouth, Feb. 2, 1817. Secret committees presented their reports, Feb. 19 ; and bills were brought in on the 21st of the same mouth, to suspend the Habeas Corpus act, and prevent seditious meetings, at the time very general throughout the kingdom. GREEN CLOTH, BOARD of. In the department of the lord-steward of the household. The state of the household of the sovereign is entirely committed to the discretion of the lord-steward. Attached to this board was a court, one of the most ancient in England, whicli had jurisdiction of all offences committed in tlie king's palaces, and verge of the court. It is called the Green Cloth, from the table whereat they sat being covered with a green clotli ; and witliout a warrant from this court, none of the king's servants can be arrested for debt. GREENLAND. Discovered by some Norwegians from Iceland, about a.d. 980, and thus named on account of its superior verdure compared with the latter country. It was visited by Frobishcr, in 1576. The first ship from England to Greenland was sent for the whale-fishery by tlie Muscovy company, 2 James I. 1604. In a voyage performed in 1630, eight men were left behind by accident, and suffered incredible hardships till the following year, when the company's ships brought them home. — Tindal. The Greenland Fishing Company was incorporated in 1693. GREENOCK, Scotland. The origin of this town is well authenticated. Prior to 1697, it was an inconsiderable fishing station, but during that year, the Scottish Indian and African Company resolved to erect salt-works in tlie Frith, and hence arose the attention of sir John Shaw, its superior, to the maritime advantages of its situation. It was erected into a burgh of barony in 1757. The fisheries, and particularly that for licrrings, and the Newfoundland fishery, are carried on here to a great extent. GREEN PARK. Forms a part of the ground inclosed by Henry VIII. ; and is united to St. James' and Hyde parks by the fine road named Constitution-hill. On the north side is a reservoir of the Chelsea water-works. It was re-constructed in 1829, with a curious filtering apparatus. The promenade round this basin, and other pai'ts of this small but beautiful park, possesses, for a town scene, unequalled attractions. On the Piccadilly side, the oUl wall wiiich sluit up the view of the park a great 1-ength of way was thrown down, and a light iron railing erected, much to tlie gratification of passengers, in 1839. See Paris. GREENWICH HOSPITAL. One of tlie noblest structures of the kind in the world. It stands upon the spot where formerly stood the royal palace of several of our niouarciis. Tlie palace was erected bj* Humphrey, duke of Gloucester ; wiis enlarged by Henry VII. and completed by Henry VIII. ; and in its chambers queen Mary and queen Elizabeth were born, and Edward VI. died. Charles II. intended to build a new palace here on a very gi-and scale, and accordingly erected one wing of this grand edifice, but died before any other part of the design was finished. In this GRE 296 GRE state it remained till William III. formed the present plan of making the palace useful to the kingdom, and the hospital was instituted in 1694. The forfeited estate of the attainted earl of Derwentwater was bestowed upon it, in 1716. Sixpence per month was first contributed by every seaman, and the payment was advanced to one shilling, from June, 1797. This hospital lodges about 3000 old and disabled seamen (2710 in 1853), and possesses a revenue exceeding 70,000^. per annum. A charter was granted to it in Dec. 1775. The chapel, the great dining-hall, and a large portion of the buildings appropriated to the pensioners, were destroyed by fire, Jan. 2, 1779. The chapel was rebuilt, and opened Sept. 20, 1789. GREENWICH OBSERVATORY. Built at the solicitation of sir Jonas Moore and sir Christopher Wren, by Charles II., on the summit of Flamstead-hill, so called from the great astronomer of that name, who was the first astronomer-royal here. The English began to compute the longitude from the meridian of this place, 1675 ; some make the date 1679. This observatory contains a transept circle by Troughtou ; a transit instrument of eight feet by Bird ; two mural quadrants of eight feet, and Bradley's zenith sector. The telescopes are forty and sixty inch achromatics, and a six-feet reflector ; and among other fine instruments and objects is a famous camera obscura. In 1852, the electric telegraph signal ball and illuminated clock in the Strand were completed and put in connection with those at Greenwich Observatory. ASTRONOMERS ROYAL. John Flamstead 1675 Dr. Bradley 1742 Dr. N. Bliss 1762 Dr. Nevil Maskelyuo .... 1765 Joliu Pond ISll George Biddell Airy . . • . . Ifj35 (The present Astronomer Royal, 1S55.) GREGORIAN CALENDAR. The calendar, so called, was ordained to be adopted by pope Gregory XIII., from whom it derives its name, having been reformed under him, A.D. 1582. It was introduced into the Roman Catholic states of Europe in that year; into most other states, 1699 to 1710. England, Denmark, and Sweden had rejected this calendar; but England adopted it (by act of parliament) Sept. 14 (3rd), 1752. To the time of Gregory, the deficiency in the Julian calendar had amounted to ten days; and in the year 1752 it had amounted to eleven days. See Calendar, and Neiv Style. GRENADA. Conquered by the Moors, a.d. 715; it was the last kingdom possessed by them, and was not annexed to the crown of Castile until 1491.- — New Grenada was first visited by Columbus, who was followed by various Spanish adventurers, who conquered it in 1536. — Grenada, in the West Indies, was discovered by Columbus in 1498, and was settled by the French, 1650. It was taken from them by the English in 1762, and was ceded to England in 1763. The French possessed themselves of it again in 1779 ; but it was restored to the English at the peace of 1783. In 1795 the French landed some troops, and caused an insurrection in this island, which was not finally quelled till June, 1796. GRENADES. A powerful missile of war, so named, from Granado, Spanish, or from Pomum granatuvi. It is a small hollow globe, or ball of iron, about two inches in diameter, which being filled with fine powder and set on fire by a fusee at a touch- hole, the case flies into shatters, to the damage of all who stand near. This shell was invented in 1594. — Harris. GRENADIERS. A tall foot-soldiery, of whom there is one company in every regiment. — Gay. The Grenadier corps was a company armed with a poucli of hand-grenades, established in France in 1667 ; and in England in 1685. — Brown. GRENVILLE ADMINISTRATION. Rt. hon. George Grenville, first lord of the treasury and chancellor of the exchequer ; earl Granville (succeeded by the duke of Bedford), lord president ; duke of Marlborough, privy seal ; earls of Halifax and Sandwich, secretaries of state; earl Gower, lord chamberlain ; lord Egmont, admiralty; marquess of Granby, ordnance ; lord Holland (late Mr. Fox), paymaster ; rt. hon. Welbore Ellis, secretary-at-war ; viscount Barrington, treasurer of the navy; lord Hillsborough, first lord of trade ; duke of Rutland, lords North, Trevor, Hyde, &c. Lord Henley (afterwards earl of Northington), lord chancellor. May et seq. 1763. Terminated by the Rockingham Administration, which see. GRENVILLE'S, LORD, ADMINISTRATION. See "All the Talents." GRESHAM COLLEGE. Founded and endowed by sir Thomas Gresham, in 1575. He was the founder of the Royal Exchange, and left a portion of his property in trust to the city and the Mercers' Company to endow this college for, among other uses, lectures \ GRE 297 GRO in divinity, astronomy, music, and geometry, and readers in civil law, physic, and rhetoric, and to promote general instruction ; he died 1579. The lectures commenced in Gresham's house near Broad-street, June 1597 ; where the Royal Society first met in 1645, and continued till 1710. The buildings were pulled down in 1708, and the E.xcise Office erected on the site. The lectures were then read in a room over the Koyal Exchange for many years ; on the rebuilding of the present exchange, the Gresham Committee erected the present building in Basinghall-street, which was designed by G. Smith, and opened for Lectures, Nov. 2, 1843. It cost above 7000^. GRETNA-GREEN MARRIAGES. The famous parish of Graitney is the nearest and most easily accessible point in Scotland from the sister kingdom ; and in its neigh- bourhood fugitive marriages were contracted. The trade was founded by a tobacconist, named John Paisley, who lived to a great age, and died so late as the year 1814. The common phrase, Gretna Green, arose from his first residence, which was at Megg's Hill, on the common or green betwixt Graitney and Springfield, to the last of which villages he removed in 1782. A man named Elliott was lately the principal officiating priest. The ceremony was brief and simple. The parson (atobacconist or blacksmith) asked the anxious lovers whence they came, and what parish they belonged to, in order to register their answers; they were next asked if thoy were willing to receive each other for better, for worse, &c. This being ascertained, and a wedding- ring passed between them, they were declared to be married persons. The fees paid to the parson are said to have been sometimes very handsome — so much as a hundred pounds having been occasionally paid him for his five minutes' work. The General Assembly, in 1826, attempted to suppress this system ; but without effect. — M'Diarmid. A bill to make these marriages illegal was thrown out in the House of Commons May 9, 1855. GREY'S, EARL, ADMINISTRATION. Earl Grey, first lord of the treasury; viscount Althorpe, chancellor of the exchequer; marquess of Lausdowne, president of the council ; earl of Durham, privy seal ; viscounts Melbourne, Palmerston, and Goderich, home, foreign, and colonial secretaries ; sir James Graham, admiralty ; lord Auckland and Mr. Charles Grant (afterwards lord Glenelg), boards of trade and control; lord Holland, duchy of Lancaster; lord John Russell, paymaster of the forces ; duke of Richmond, earl of Carlisle, Mr. Wynne, &c. Lord Brougham, lord chancellor. Nov. 1830. This ministry, which carried the Reform bill, terminated July, 1834. GRIST MILLS. They were invented in Ireland, and their origin ig thus related : Ciemond, the fairest woman of her time, and concubine of Cormock M'Kart, monarch of Ireland, was compelled by the queen, her rival, to grind nine measui-es of corn in a hand-mill. But the monarch, in commiseration of that hard treatment of her, invented the grist-mill, a.D. 214. — llht. of Ireland. GROATS. This name has been proverbial for a small coin. — ShaJcspeare. It is from the T>\iich groat, and is a coin of the value of fourpence. — Ray. Groats were the largest silver currency in England until after 1351, and were coined in almost all reigns. The modern fourpence is the diminutive groat. Of these there were coined, in 1836, to the value of 70,884Z. ; in 1837, 16,038/. ; and largo amounts since. GROCERS. The business of grocer is one of the oldest trades in England. The word anciently meant " iugrossers or monopolisers," as appears by a statute, 37 Edw. III. 1374. The Grocers' Company is one of the twelve chief companies of the city of London, and was incorporated in 1429. GROCHOW, BATTLE of. Near Praga, a suburb of Warsaw, between the Poles and Russians. After an obstinate contest, continuing the whole of one day, and great part of the next, the Poles remained masters of the field of battle. The Russians shortly after retreated, having been foiled in their attempt to take Warsaw by this battle, in which they ai-e stated to have lost 7000 men, and the Poles 2000, Feb. 20, 1831. GROG. The sea term for rum and water, arose from admiral Vernon, who was called Old Grof/. having first introduced it on board ship, about A.D. 1743. This bravo admiral did great service in the West Indies, by taking Porto Bello, Chagre, &c., but by his disagreement with the commander of the land-forces, the expedUion ao-ainst Carthagena failed. He commanded in tiie Downs in 1745, and next year was dismissed the service by his majesty's command, for writing two pamphlets, by which the secretary of state's and secretary of the admiralty's letters were made known. He died in 1757. GUA 29S GUI GQADALOUPE. Discovered by Columbus, a.d. 1493. It was colonized by the French in 1635. Taken by the English in 1759, and restored in 1763. Again taken by the English in 1779, 1794, and 1810. The allies, in order to allure the Swedes into the late coalition against France, gave them this island. It was, however, by the consent of Sweden, restored to France, at the peace, in 1814. GUANO, OR HUANO. The Peruvian term for manure. The excrement of sea-birds that nestle in prodigious swarms along the Peruvian shores. This substance is used as a manure, and is found chiefly on certain small islands, called the Lobos, lying off the coasts of Peru and Bolivia. Humboldt was the first, or one of the first, by whom it was brought to Europe, on ascertaining its value in agriculture, and it has recently been introduced into England. — M'Culloch. The importations into the United Kingdom ajjpear to have commenced in 1842. As many as 283,000 tons of guano were imported in 1845, of which 207,679 tons were from the western coast of Africa. In the subsequent years, the importations have been equally large. They amounted to 243,016 tons in 1851; of these latter, 6522 tons came fi'om Western Australia. GUARDS. The custom of having guards is said to have been introduced by Saul, 1093 B.C. — Eusehius. Guards about the persons of European kings is an early institution. Body guards were appointed to attend the kings of England, 2 Hen, VII. 1485, Horse Guai-ds were raised 4 Edw. VI. 1550. The three regiments, the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Foot Guards, were raised a.d. 1660, and the command of them given to colonel Russell, general Monk, and lord Linlithgow. The second regiment, or Coldstream, was the first raised. See Coldstream. The Horse Grenadier Guards, first troop, raised in 1693, was commanded by general Cholmondeley ; the second troop was raised in 1702, and was commanded by lord Forbes : this corps was reduced in 1783, the officers retiring on full pay. See Horse Guards and Yeomen of the Guard. GUELPHS AND GHIBELINS. These were party names, and are said to have been derived from Hiewelf and Hiegibelin, the names of towns. The designation began in Italy, A.D. 1139, and distinguished the contending armies during the civil wai-s in Germany ; the Guelphs were for the pope ; the Ghibelins for the emperor. Guelpli is the name of the present royal family of England. See Brwnswiclc. The Guelphic order of knighthood was instituted for the kingdom of Hanover, by the prince regent, afterwards Geo. IV. in 1816. GUILDHALL, London. This celebrated edifice was built a.d. 1411. It was so damaged by the memorable fire of 1666, that its re-erection became necessary, an undertaking which was completed in 1669, no part of the ancient building remaining, except the interior of the porch and the walls of the hall. The front was not erected until 1789. Beneath the west window are the colossal figures of Gog and Magog, said to represent a Saxon and an ancient Briton. The magnificent hall has contained 7000 persons, and is used for city feasts. GUILLOTINE. The inventor of the guillotine (about 1785) was Joseph Ignatius Guil- lotin, an eminent physician, distinguished as a senator, and esteemed for his humanity; his design was to render capital punishment less painful by decapitation ; and he felt greatly annoyed at this instrument of death being called by his name. He was imprisoned during the revolutionary troubles, and ran some hazard of being subjected to its deadly operation ; but he (contrary to a prevailing opinion) escaped, and lived to become one of the founders of the Academy of Medicine at Paris, and died in 1814, greatly respected. — An instrument somewhat similar may be seen in an engraving accompanying the Symholiccc Qucestiones of Achilles Bocchius, 4to, 1555 (see the Travels of Father Labat in Italy) ; it is there called the Mannaia. At Halifax, England (see Halifax and Maiden), and in Scotland, it was likewise in use, and served to behead its introducer, the regent Morton. GUINEA SLAVE TRADE. The name of Hawkins is, unhappily for his memory, branded on the page of history as the first Englishman, after the discovery of America, who made a merchandise of the human species. — Bell. The first opening of the slave trade on this coast was by sir John Hawkins, assisted in his enterprise by a number of English gentlemen, who subscribed money for the purpose. Hawkins sailed from England with three ships ; purchased negroes, sold them at Hispaniola, and returned home richly laden with hides, sugar, ginger, and other merchandise, 5 Eliz. 1563. This voyage led to other similar enterprises. — HaMuyt. The slave trade, so long a stigma on the English character, was abolished by act of parliament, March 25, 1807. See Slave Trade. GUI 299 GYM GUINEAS. An English gold coin, so named from their having been first coined of gold brought from the coast of Guinea, a.d. 1673. They were then valued at 30s. and were worth that sum in 1696. They were reduced in currency from 22s. to 21s. by parliament in 1717. Broad pieces were coined into guineas in 1732. The original guineas bore the impression of an elephant, on account of their having been coined of this African gold. Since the first issue of sovereigns, in the year 1816, guineas have not been coined. GUN-COTTON. Among the several discoveries that excite wonder, made in the year 1846, that of gun-cotton, a new explosive power, attracted the greatest interest through- out Eui'ope, as having double tlie projectile force of gun-powder. Tliis discovery was made by professor Schccubein, and being protected by a patent, it was consequeutly for a time secret. The professor attended the meeting of the British Association in September, 1816 ; but the fame of his explosive had travelled much faster than himself, and was known some time before his visit to this country. Gun-cotton is, to all appearance, common cotton wool, both as seen by the naked eye and under a strong lens, and is purified cotton steeped in a mixture composed of equal parts of nitric and sulphuric acid, and afterwards di'ied ; but the explosive power is produced by other chemical combinations nearly similar, by which the strength is increased or diminished at pleasure. Mr. Grove and numerous other persons made experi- ments in England, with successful results. Dr. Boettinger and others also lay claim to the discovery.* GUNPOAVDER. The invention of gunpowder is generally ascribed to Bertholdus or Michael Schwartz, a Cordelier monk of Goslar, south of Brunswick, in Germany, about A.D. 1320. But many writers maintain that it was known much earlier in various parts of the world. Some say that the Chinese possessed the art a number of centuries before. Its composition, moreover, is expressly mentioned by our own famous Roger Bacon, in his treatise Be Nullitate Magice, which was published at Oxford, in 1216. GUNPOWDER PLX)T. The memorable conspiracy known by this name, for spriuging a mine under tlie houses of parliament, and destroying the three estates of tlie realm — king, lords, and commons, there assembled, was discovered on Nov. 5, 1605. Tliia diabolical scheme was projected by Robert Catesby, and many high persons were leagued in the enterprise. Guy Faux was detected in the vaults under the House of Lords preparnig the train for being fired on the next day. Catesby and Percy (of tlie family of Northumberland) were killed; sir Everard Digby, Rockwood, Winter, Garnet, a Jesuit, and others, died by the hands of the executioner, as did Guy Faux, Jan. 31, 1606. The vault called Guy Faux cellar, in which the conspirators lodged the barrels of gunpowder, remained in the late houses of parliament till 1825, when it was converted into ofliices. GUY'S HOSPITAL. This celebrated London Hospital is indebted for its origin to Thomas Guy, an eminent and wealthy bookseller, who, after having bestowed immense sums on St. Thomas's, determined to bo the solo founder of another hospital. At the age of seventy-six, in 1721, he commenced the erection of the present building, and lived to see it nearly completed. It cost him 18,793?. in addition to which he left, to endow it, the immense sum of 219,499?. A splendid bequest, amounting to 200,000Z. was made to this hospital by Mr. Hunt, to provide additiontil accommodation for 100 patients ; his will was proved Sept. 24, 1829. GYMNASIUM. A place among the Greeks where all the public exercises were per- formed, and where not only wrestlers and dancei-s exhibited, but also philosophers, poets, and i-hctoriciaus repeated their compositions. In wrestling and boxing, the athletes were often naked, whence the word Gymnasium — yvuvos, mains. They anointed themselves with oil to brace their limbs, and to render their bodies slipjiery, and more difficult to be grasped. The first modern treatise on the subject of Gymnastics was published in Germany in 1793. London society formed, 1826. GYMNOSOPHIST.'E. A sect of philosophers in India. The Gymnosophistaj lived naked, as their name implies : for thirty-seven years they exposed themselves in * The diet of Frankfort voted, October 3, lS4r), a recompense of 100,000 florins to professor Schoen- bein and Dr. Brettiuger, as the inventors of the cotton i)owdor, provided tlie authorities of Mayenco, after sccinnf it tried, pronounced it superior to Runpowder as an explosive ; but its use, as a substitute for guui>owder, in punnoiy. is .still a matter of uncertainty, as the ignition of the cotton is not under the same control. Of its utility, however, in blasting and mining operations, not the slightest doubt can exist. Though cheaper and more powertul than gunpowder, it is still inferior to it in many respects. GYP 300 HAG tbe open air, to the heat of the svin, the inclemency of tlie seasons, and the coldness of tlie night. They were often seen in the fields, fixing their eyes full upon the disc of tlie sun from the time of its rising till the hour of its setting. Sometimes they stood whole days upon one foot in burning sand. Alexander was astonished at the sight of a sect of men who seemed to despise bodily pain, and who inured themselves to sufi'er the greatest tortures without uttering a groan, or expressing any marks of fear. The Brahmins were a branch of the sect of the Gymnosophist£e, 334 B.C.— Pliny. GYPSIES, OR EGYPTIANS. A strange commonwealth of wanderers and peculiar race of people, who made their appearance first m Germany, about a.D. 1517, having quitted Egypt when attacked by the Turks. They are the descendants of a great body of Egyptians who revolted from the Turkish yoke, and being defeated, dispersed in small parties all over the world, while their supposed skill in the black art gave them a universal recej^tion in that age of credulity and superstition. Although expelled from France in 1560, and from most countries soon after, they are yet ibund in every part of Europe, as well as in Asia and Africa. Having recovered their footing, they have contrived to maintain it to this day. In England an act was made against their itinerancy, in 1530 : and in the reign of Charles I. thirteen persons were executed at one assizes for having associated with gypsies for about a month, contrary to the statute. The gypsy settlement at Norwood was broken up, and they were treated as vagrants. May, 1797. There were in Spain alone, pre- viously to the year 1800, moi'e than 120,000 gypsies, and many communities of them yet exist in England ; and notwithstanding their intercourse with other nations, they are still, like the Jews, in their manners, customs, visage, and appearance, wholly unchanged. H. HABEAS CORPUS. The subjects" Writ of Right, passed for the security and liberty of individuals. May 27, 1679. This act is next in importance to Magna Charta, for so long as the statute remains in force, no subject of England can be detained in prison except in cases wherein the detention is shown to be justified by the law. The Habeas Corpus act can alone be suspended by the authority of parliament, and then for a short time only, and when the emergency is extreme. In such a case, the nation parts with a portion of its liberty to secure its own permanent welfare, and suspected persons may then be arrested without cause or purpose being assigned. — Blackstone. Act suspended for six months during the Scots' rebellion .... a.d. 1715 Suspended for six months owing to the same cause 1716 Suspended for twelve months . . 1722 Suspended for six mouths . . . . 1744 Suspended for one year .... 1745 Suspended for six months . . . . 1779 Again by Mr. Pitt, owing to a message from the king 1794 Suspended in Ireland, on account of the great rebellion 1798 Again, and in England . . Aug. 28, 1799 Suspended on a division, 189 against 42, majority 147 . . . . April 19, 1801 Again, on account of Irish insurrection . 1803 Again, owing to alleged secret meetings (see Green Bag) . . . Feb 21, 1817 Bill to restore the Habeas Corpus brought into parliament . . . Jan. 28, 1818 Suspended in Ireland, owing to the in- surrection in that kingdom . July 25, 1848 Restored there, the rebellion having been suppressed . . March 1, 1849 HACKNEY COACHES. They are of French origin. In France, a strong kind of cob-horse (haquenee) was let out on hire for short journeys : these were latterly harnessed (to accommodate several wayfarers at once) to a plain vehicle called coche-a-haquenee ; hence the name. The legend that traces their origin to Hackney, near London, is a vulgar error. They were first licensed in 1662, and subjected to regulations, 6 Will. & Mary, 1694. — Survey of London. The number plying in London fixed at 1000, and their fares raised, 1771. The number increased in 1799, and frequently since. Office removed to Somerset-house, 1782. Coach-makers made subject to a licence, 1785. Hackney chariots licensed in 1814. Lost and Found office for the recovery of property left in hackney coaches, established by act 55 Geo. III. 1815. This office, formerly held at Somerset-house, was removed to the Excise-office, Broad-street. The number of hackney coaches ceased being limited after 5th Jan. 1833, by statute 2 Will. IV. 1831. The cabriolets are of Parisian origin, and were licensed 1823. All public vehicles are now regulated by the Acts 16 & 17 Vict. c. 33, 127 (June and Aug. 1853), by which they are placed under the control of the Com- missioners of Police, See Cabnolets and Omnibuses. HAG 301 HAL HAGUE. Once called the finest villaye in Europe : the place of meeting of the States General, and residence of the former earls of Holland, the princes of Holland, &c. Here the States, in 1586, abrogated the authority of Philip II. of Spain, and held a conference in 1610, upon the five articles of the remonstrants, which occasioned the synod of Dort. Treaty of the Hague entered into with a view to preserve the equilibrium of the North, signed by England, France, and Holland, May 21, 1659. De Witt was torn in pieces here, Aug. 20, 1762. The French took possession of the Hague in Jauuaiy, 1795 ; favoured by a hard frost, they marched into Holland, whei-e the inhabitants and troops declared in their favour, a general revolution ensued, and the stadtholder and his family were compelled to leave the country and escape to England. The Hague was evacuated in Nov. 1813, shortly after the battle of Leipsic and the stadtholder returned to his dominions and arrived here in Dec. that year. HAILEYBURY COLLEGE. An institution of the East India Company, wherein students are prepared for the company's service in India. It was founded in 1800, and has been regulated by various acts of Parliament. By statute 1 Vict. July, 1837, it is enacted " that no person is to be admitted to the college as a student whose age shall exceed twenty-one years, nor any person appointed or sent out to India as a writer in the Company's service whose age shall exceed 23 years." — Statutes. Many alterations have been proposed with respect to this college, which, it is said, will be eventually abolished. HAINAULT FOREST, Essex. One of the celebrated forests of England. In this forest stood the ancient Fairlop oak {which see), blown down in February, 1820. It is said to have been 1800 years old. An act of parliament was passed, 14 & 15 Vict. c. 43, for disafforesting Hainault ; the deer to be removed, and all persons having forestal or other rights to have compensation. It is then to be in- closed, and roads made, Aug. 1, 1851. HAIR. By the northern nations, and in Gaul, hair was much esteemed, and hence the appellation Gallia comata ; and cutting off tlie hair was inflicted as a punishment among them. The royal family of France had it as a particular mark and privilege of the kings and princes of the blood, to wear long hair artfully dressed and curled. The clerical tonsure is of apostolic institution. — Isidovus llispalensis. Pope Anicetus forbade the clergy to wear long hair, a.d. 155. Long hair was out of fashion during the Protectorate of Cromwell, and hence the term Round-heads. It was again out of fashion in 1795 ; and very short hair was in mode in 1801. Hair-powder came into use in 1590 ; and in 1795 a tax was laid upon persons using it, which yielded at one time 20,000Z. per annum. HALIDON-HILL, BATTLE of. Fought near Berwick, between the English and Scots, in which the latter were defeated with the loss of upwards of 13,000 slain, while a comparatively small number of the English suffered, reign of Edward III. July 19, 1333. After this great and decisive victory, Edward placed Edward Baliol on the throne of Scotland. — Rohertson. HALIFAX, YoKKSHiRE. Here prevailed a remarkable law. The woollen manufacture being very great, and prodigious quantities of cloths, kerseys, shalloons, &c. being continually on the tenters and liable to be stolen, the town, at its first incorporation, was empowered to punish capitally any criminal convicted of stealing to the value of upwards of thirteen pence halfpenny, by a peculiar engine, which beheaded the offender in a moment ; but king James Lin the year 1620, took this power away ; and the town is now under the ordinary course of justice. See Maiden. HALIFAX, EARL of. His ADMINISTRATION. The earl of Halifax became minister in the first year of the reign of George I. His ministry was composed of the following members : Ciiarles, earl of Halifax, first lord of the treasury (succeeded on his death by the earl of Carlisle) ; William, lord Cowper, afterwards earl Cowpcr, lord chan- cellor ; Daniel, earl of Nottingham, lord president ; Thomas, marquess of Wharton, privy seal ; Edward, earl of Oxford, admiralty ; James Stanhope, afterwards earl Stanhope, and Charles, viscount Townshend, secretaries of state ; sir Richard Onslow, chancellor of the exchequer; dukes of Montrose and Marlborough, lord Berkeley, rt. hon. Robert Walpolc, Mr. Pultcney, lume of feathers. It is from this reign that the general use of hats and caps is to be dated, at Iciist in France, which henceforward began to take place of the chape- rons and hoods that had been worn before in France. — Ucnault. Hats were first manufactured in England by Spaniards, in 1510: before this time both men and women wore close-knit woollen caps. — Stow. Very high-crowned hats were worn by queen Elizabeth's courtiers; and high crowns were again, introduced in 1783. A stamp-duty was laid upon hats in 1784, and again in 1796 ; it was repealed in 1811. IIAVRE-DE-GRACE. This place was defended for the Huguenots by the EngHsh, in 1562. It has been bombarded several times by the British navy. It was success- fully attacked for three days from July 6 to 9, 1759. Again bombarded in 1794 and 1795. Bombarded by sir Richard Strachan, May 25, 1798. Declared to be in a state of blockade, Sept. 6, 1803. The attempts of the British to burn the shipping here failed, Aug. 7, 1804. "^^^ ^ HAWKERS AND PEDLARS. First licensed to sell their commodities in 1697. They were anciently esteemed fraudulent persons, who went from place to place to sell or buy any commodity in a clandestine or unfair and unlicensed manner ; but now they X HAT 306 HEA are those who sell about the streets by vh-tue of a license from commissioners who are appointed for that purpose. HAYMARKET, London. The hay-market in this street was opened 1664, in the reign of Charles II. — Stow. The Haymarket-theatre was originally opened in 1702. The bottle-conjuror's dupery of the public occurred at this theatre, Jan. 16, 1748. See Bottle Conjioror. Mr. Foote's patent, 1747. The theatre purchased by the late Mr. Coleman of Mr. Foote, for a life annuity, Jan. 1, 1777. — Rebuilt 1767 ; again by Mr. Nash, the present structure, in 1821. — A fatal accident occurred in endeavouring to gain admission, Feb. 3, 1794 ; sixteen persons were trodden to death, and numbers bruised and wounded, many of whom afterwards died. See Theatres. The late market here for hay was removed to Cumberland-market, Jan. 1, 1831. HAYTI, OR Haiti. The Indian name of St. Domingo. Discovered by Columbus in 1492. Before the Spaniards finally conquered it, they are said to have destroyed in battle or cold blood 3,000,000 of its inhabitants, including women and children. It remained in the hands of the Spaniards till 1630, when the Flibustiers and French Buccaneers seized and held great part of it till 1697, when the French government took possession of the whole colony. The negroes revolted against France, Aug. 23, 1791, and massacred nearly all the whites in 1793. The French directory recognised Toussaint I'Ouverture as general-in-chief in 1794. Toussaint established an inde- pendent republic in St. Domingo, July 22, 1801. He surrendered to the Fi-ench, May 7, 1802, and was conducted to France where he died in 1803. A new insurrection having broke out under the command of Dessalines, the French quitted the island in Nov. 1803. Dessalines made a proclamation for the massacre of all the whites, March 29, 1804. See St. Domingo. Dessalines was crowned emperor by the title of Jacques I. Oct. 8, 1804. He was assassinated Oct. 17, 1806, when the isle was divided. Henry Christophe, a man of colour, became president in Feb. 1807, and was crowned emperor by the title of Henry I. in March, 1811 ; while Pethion ruled as president at Port-au-Prince. Numerous black nobility and prelates were created same year. Pethion died, and Boyer was elected in his room, in May, 1818. — Christophe com- mitted suicide in Oct. 1820. Independence declared at St. Domingo in Dec. 1821. Decree of the king of France confirming it, April, 1825. Hayti was proclaimed an empire under its late president Solouque, who took the title of Faustin I. Aug. 26, 1849; crowned April 18, 1852. His son came to England for education in Dec. 1853, and assumed the name of Dalval. The peace of the island has since been frequently disturbed. HEAD ACT. The most iniquitous and merciless statute ever passed by a parliament. — Scully. It was enacted in Ireland by the Junto of the Pale, at the town of Trim, the earl of Desmond being lord deputy, 5 Edward IV. 1465 ; and under it indis- criminate murder of the native Irish was committed, and the murderers pardoned. — Taaffe's Hist, of Ireland. For the nature and objects of this act, see note to article Ireland. HEALTH, GENERAL BOARD of. The Public Health act, for the promotion of the public health, was passed 11 & 12 Vict. (c. 63), Aug. 31, 1848. It directs the appoint- ment of local boards throughout England for the purposes of the act. This statute, which is minute in its provisions, and already salutary in its operation, has been followed by other acts of equally sanitary regulation, whereof one is the common Lodging Houses', and another the Lodging Houses' acts, both passed in July, 1851. This Board was reconstructed in Aug. 1854, and Sir B. Hall was placed at its head with a salary of 2000?.; succeeded by the rt. hon. W. F. Cowper, Aug. 1855. HEARTH, OR CHIMNEY TAX. An oppressive and unpopular tax upon every fire- place or hearth in England, imposed by Charles II. in 1662. It was abolished by William and Mary at the Revolution. It was afterwards imposed again, and again abolished. This tax was levied in Ireland, but it has been abolished, with a number of other imposts, since the termination of the late war. HEATHEN TEMPLES. Erected in the earliest times. The Egyptian temples are described by Strabo as having been of great magnitude and extent. The construction of temples was adapted by the ancients to the nature and functions of the deities to whose worship they were raised : those of Jupiter Fulminans, Coelum, the Sun, Moon, and Deus-Fidius, were uncovered. The temples of Minerva, Mars, and Hercules, were of the Doric order, which suited the i-obust virtue of these divinities. The Corinthian was employed for Venus, Flora, Proserpine, and the aquatic Nymphs. The Ionic was used in the temples of Juno, Diana, and Bacchus, as a just mixture HEB 307 HEL of elegance and majesty. The heathen temples were ordered to be destroyed by Constantme, a.d. 331. See Temples. HEBRIDES, NEW. Discovered by the navigator Quiros, who, under the impression that they were a part of a southern continent, called them Tierra Australia del Espiritu Santo, a.d. 1606. Bougaiuvillc visited them in 1768, and found that the land was not connected, but composed of islands, which he called the great Cyclades. Cook, in 1774, ascertained the extent and situation of the whole group, and gave them the name they now bear. HECATOMB. This was a sacrifice among the ancients of a hundred oxen ; but it was more particularly observed by the Laceda3monians when they possessed a hundred capital cities. In the course of time this sacrifice was reduced to twenty-three oxen ; and in the end, to lessen the expense, goats and lambs were substituted for oxen. — Potter. HECLA, MOUNT. Its first eruption is recorded as having occurred a.d. 1004. About twenty-two eruptions have taken place, according to Olasson and Paxilson. The most dreadful and multiplied convulsions of this great volcanic mountain occurred in 1766, since when a visit to the top in summer is not attended with great difficulty. For particulars of this eruption, see Iceland. The mount was in a violent eruption in April, 1846. Three new craters were formed, from which pillars of fire rose to the height of 14,000 English feet. The lava formed several hills, and pieces of pumice stone and scoria) of 2 cwt. were thrown to a distance of a league and a half ; the ice and snow which had covered the mountain for centuries were wholly melted into prodigious floods. HEGIRA, ERA of the. Dates from the flight of Mahomet from Mecca to Medina, which event took place in the night of Thursday, the 15th July, a.d. 622. The era commences on the following day, viz. the 16 th of July. Many chronologists have computed this era from the 15th July. But Cantemir has given examples pi'oving that, in most ancient times, the 16th was the first day of the ei'a ; and there is now no doubt it is so. See Mahometisni and Medina. HEIDELBERG, and HEIDELBERG TUN. Heidelberg, in Germany, was formerly the capital of the Palatinate: the proteistant electoral house becoming extinct in 1693, a bloody war ensued, in which the famous castle was ruined, and the elector removed his residence to Mannheim. Here was the celebrated Heidelberg Tun, con- structed in 1343, when it contained twenty-one pipes of wine. Another was made in 1664, which held 600 hogsheads. This was emptied and knocked to pieces by the French in 1688 ; but a new and a larger one was afterwards fabricated, which held 800 hogsheads, and was formerly kept full of the best Rhenish wine ; and the electors have given many entertainments on its platform ; but this convivial monument of ancient hospitality is now mouldering in a damp vault, quite empty. Walker. HEIGHTS OF ROMAINVILLE, BATTLE of. On the heights of Romainville and Belleville, the French army out of Paris, under Joseph Bonaparte, Marmont, and Mortier, was defeated by the allied army, which entered Paris the next day, iind thus was completed the memorable and glorious campaign of this year, and the over- throw of Bonaparte's power in Europe and rule in France, March 30, 1814. HELDER POINT, in Holland. The fort and the whole of the Dutch fleet lying in the Texel, surrendered to the British forces under the duke of York, and sir Ralph Abercromby, for the service of the prince of Orange. In the action, 540 British were killed, Aug. 30, 1799, The place was, however, relinquished, after a short possession, in October following. See Bergen. HELEN, RAPE of, which caused the Trojan war, 1204—1184 B.C. HELIGOLAND. This island formerly belonged to the Danes, from whom it was taken by the British, Sept. 5, 1807, and formed a depAt for British merchandise intended for the Continent during the war. Confirmed to England by the treaty of Kiel, Jan. 14, 1814, the same treaty by which Norway was ceded to Sweden. Though a mere rock, it is an important possession of the British crown. HELIOMETER. A valuable scientific instrument for measuring the stars, invented by M. Bougucr, in 1774. The helioscope (a peculiar sort of telescope, prepared for observing the sun so as not to afiect the eye) was invented by Christopher Scheiner in 1625. There are now various improved instruments for these purposes in optical science. X 2 HEL 308 HER HELLESPONT. A narrow arm of the sea, betwixt Europe on the west, Asia on the east, the Propontis, or Sea of Marmora, northward, and the iEgean Sea, now the Ai'chi- pelago, southward. The present name is the Strait of the Dardanelles. The Hellespont took its original name from Helle, daughter of Athamas, king of Thebes, ■who was drowned here. It is celebrated for the loves of Hero and Leander : these two lovers were so faithful to one another, that Leander, m the night, escaped from the vigilance of his family, and swam across the Hellespont, while Hero, in Sestos, directed his course by holding a burning torch on the top of a high tower. After many interviews of tenderness, Leander was drowned in a tempestuous night as he attempted his usual course, and Hero, in despair, threw herself down from her tower, and perished in the sea, 627 B.C. — Straho ; Herodotxis. See Xerxes. HELL-FIRE CLUBS. These were impious associations in London, which existed for some time, but were ultimately suppressed by an order in Council. There were three, to which upwards of forty persons of quality of both sexes belonged. They met at Somei'set-house, at a house in Westminster, and at another in Conduit-street, Hanover- square. They assumed the names of the patriarchs, prophets, and martyrs, in derision ; and ridiculed, at their meetings, the doctrine of the Trinity and the mysteries of the Christian religion, 7 Geo. I. 1721. — Salmon. H I*]LMETS. They were worn, it is said, by the most savage tribes. Among the Romans the helmet was provided with a vizor of grated bars, to raise above the eyes, and a bever to lower for eating ; the helmet of the Greeks was round, and that of the Romans square. Richard I. of England wore a plain round helmet ; and after this monarch's reign most of the English kings had crowns above their helmet. A lexauder IIL of Scotland, 1249, had a flat helmet, with a square grated vizor, and the helmet of Robert I. was surmounted by a crown, 1306. — Gwillim. HELOTS. The people of Helos, against whom the Spartans bore desperate resentment for refusing to pay tribute, 883 B.C. The Spartans, not satisfied with the ruin of their city, reduced the Helots to the most debasing slavery ; and to complete their infamy, they called all the slaves of the state, and the prisoners of war, by the degrading name of Ifelotce, and further exposed them to every species of contempt and ridicule, 669 B.C. But in the Peloponnesian war the Helots behaved with uncommon bravery, and were rewarded with their liberty, 431 B.C. Yet this act of justice did not last long ; and the sudden disappearance of 2000 manumitted slaves was attributed to the Lacedaemonians.— i/erotZoZits. HEMP AND FLAX. Flax was first planted in England, when it was directed to be sown for fishing-nets, a.d. 1533. Bounties were paid to encourage its cultivation in 1783 ; and every exertion should be made by the government and legislature to accomplish such a national good. In 1785 there were imported from Russia, in British ships, 17,695 tons of hemp and flax. — Sir John Sinclair* The annual importation of these articles now amounts to about 100,000 tons. More than 180,000 lb. of rough hemp are used in the cordage of a first-rate man-of-war, including rigging and sails. H 15PTARCH Y. The Heptarchy (or government of seven kings) in England was gradually foi-med from a.d. 455, when Hengist became the king of Kent, and that kingdom was erected. The Heptarchy terminated in a.d. 828, when Egbert reduced the other kingdoms, and became sole monarch of England. For the several kingdoms of the Heptarchy, see Britain, and Octarchy. HERACLID^, The. The return of the Heraclidse into the Peloponnesus is a famous epoch in chronology considered to constitute the beginning of profane history, all the time preceding that period being accounted fabulous. This return happened 100 years after the Heraclida) wore expelled, eighty years after the destruction of Troy, and 328 years before the first Olympiad, 1104 B-C— Herodotus. HERALDRY. Signs and marks of honour were made use of in the first ages of the world. — Nishet. The Phrygians had a sow ; the Thracians, Mars ; the Romans, an eagle ; the Goths, a bear ; the Flemings, a bull ; the Saxons, a horse ; and the ancient French, a lion, and afterwards the fleur-de-lis, which see. Heraldry, as digested into an art, and subjected to rules, may be ascribed, in the first instance, to Charle- * Five acres .are employed in the production of a single ton of flax or hemp ; so that our present exports would warrant our appropriation of 500,000 acres to this purpose. We should thereby add to the profit of the land— a sure employment to many thousands of the peasantry; and, instead of enriching Russia, a country with which we have been frequently at war, usefully dispense at home the several millions of pounds sterling per annum now sent to Russia for these articles. — Sir John Sinclair. HER 309 HER ma^e, about the year 800 ; and iu the next to Frederick Barbarossa, about the year 1152; it began and gi-e\v with the feudal law. — Sir Georyc Mackenzie. It was at length methodised and perfected by the crusades and tournaments, the former commencing in 1095. HERALDS' COLLEGE. We trace its institution to Edward III. 1340. Richard III. endowed the college in 1484 ; and Philip and Mary enlarged its privileges, and con- firmed them b^' letters patent. Formerly in many ceremonies the herald represented the king's person, and therefore wore a crown, and was always a knight. This college has an carl marshal, 3 kings at arms (Garter, Clarencieux, and Norroy), 6 heralds (Richmond, Lancaster, Chester, Windsor, Somerset, and York), 4 pursuivants, and 2 extra heralds. See Earl Marshal. HERARA, BATTLE of, in Arragon. In this battle Don Carlos, of Spain, in his struggle for his hereditary right to the throne of that kingdom, encountered, at the head of 12,000 men, and defeated general Buerens, who bad not much above half that number of the queen of Spain's troops. Buerens lost about 1000 in killed and wounded, Aug. 24, 1837. HERCULAN'EUM. An ancient city of Campania, overwhelmed, together with Pompeii, by an eruption of Vesuvius, Aug. 24, a.d. 79. Herculaneum was buried under streams of lava, and successive eruptions laid it still deeper under the surface. All traces of them were lost until a.d. 1711, from which year to the present time many curiosities, works of art, and monuments and memorials of civili.sed life, have been discovered. 150 volumes of MSS. were found in a chest, in 1754 ; ,and many antiquities were purchased by sir William Hamilton, and re-purchased by the trustees of the British Museum, where they are deposited ; but the principal antiquities are preserved in the museum of Portici. HEREFORD, BISHOPRIC of. Formerly suffragan to St. David's ; but when the country was conquered by the Saxons it came to the province of Canterbury. The cathedral was founded by a nobleman named Milfrido, in honour of Ethelbei't, king of the East Saxons, who was treacherously made away with by his intended mother-in-law, the queen of Mercia. The see is valued in the king's books at 768i. per annum. HERETICS. Formerly the term heresy denoted a particular sect ; now heretics are those who propagate their private opinions in opposition to the Roman Catholic Church. — Bacon. Tens of thousands of them have suffered death by torture in Roman Catholic countries. — Bwraet. See Inquisition. Simon Magus was the first heretic; he came to Rome A.D. 41. Thirty heretics came from Germany to England to propagate their opinions, and were bi-anded in the forehead, whipped, and thrust naked into the streets in the deptli of winter, where, none daring to relieve them, they died of hunger and cold, 1160. — Speed. In the reign of Henry VIII. at one period, to be in possession of Tindal's Bible constituted heresy. The laws against heretics were repealed, 25 Henry VIII. 1534-5. HERITABLE RIGHTS and MOVABLE RIGHTS. In the Scottish law denoting what in England is meant by real and pereonal property ; real property in England answer- ing nearly to the heritable riglits in Scotland, and personal property to the movable rights. Scotch heritable jui'isdictions {i.e. feudal rights) were bought up and abolished valued at 164,232Z. in 1747. HERMITS. The name first given to those that retired to desert j^laccs, to avoid perse- cution, where they gave themselves up to prayers, fasting, and meditation. They were also called anchorets ; and commonly lodged in dark caves, where their food was such roots as n;ituro bestowed freely without culture. From these came the monks, and almost all the sorts of religious assemblies that live in monasteries. In the seventh pei-secution of the Christians, one Paul, to avoid the enemies of his faith, retired into Thebais, and became the first example of a monastic life, about a.d. 250. HERO AND LEANDER; toeir amour. The fidelity of these lovers was so great, and their attachment to each other so strong, that Leander iu the night frequently swam across the Hellespont, from Abj-dos to Sestos, to have secret interviews with Hero, a beautiful priestess of Venus, she directing his course by a burning flambeau. After many stolen intei-views, Leander was drowned iu a tempestuous night, and Hero threw herself from her tower, and perished in the sea, 627 B.C. — Livy ; IlerodoUcs. HERO, BRITISH MAN-OF-WAR. The Hero, of 74 guns, lost in a tremendous storm (with several other ships) off tlie Tosel, when the whole of her crew, amounting to nearly (iOO men, perished, Dec. 24, 1811. The English were this year veiy successful in their various expeditions by sea ; but the fleet, by staying too late in the Baltic, in HER 310 HIB its return suffered severely. The St. Georrje, of 98 guns, and the Defence, another ship of the line, and a frigate, with 2000 men on boai'd, perished in the storm. HERRING-FISHERY. This fishery was largely encouraged by the Scotch bo early as the ninth century. The herring statute was passed in 1357. The mode of preserving herrings by pickling was discovered about 1390, and gave rise to the herring-fishery as a branch of commerce. — Anderson. The British Herring-Fishery company was instituted Sept. 2, 1750. HERRINGS, BATTLE op the. This battle, fought when the English were besieging Orleans, obtained its ludicrous, yet lasting name, from an incident occurring at the time : the due de Bourbon, in attempting to intercept a convoy on the road to the English camp before Orleans, was severely beaten ; it was a convoy of salt fish, and the action by which this supply of provisions to the besieging army was prevented from falling into the hands of the French, was called the battle of the herrings, a name it has borne ever since, 1429. — Vertot. HERSCHEL TELESCOPE, the. Sir W. Herschel's seven, ten, and twenty-feet re- flectors were made about 1779. He discovered the Georgium Sidus {lokicli see) March 21, 1781, and a volcanic mountain in the moon, in 1783; and about this time laid the plan of his great forty-feet telescope, which he completed in 1789, when he discovered two other volcanic mountains, emitting fire from their summits. In 1802, he, by means of his telescopes, was enabled to lay before the Royal Society a catalogue of 5000 new nebulae, nebulous stars, planetary nebulae, and clusters of stars which he had discovered. The great telescope was taken down in 1822, and one of 20 feet focal length erected by sir J. Herschel, who afterwards took it to the Cape of Good Hope and with it made his valuable observations. HESSE, HOUSE of. The house is very illustrious : its various branches derive their origin from Gerberge, daughter of Charles of Lorraine, uncle of Louis V. of France, who was descended from Louis the Courteous. She was married to Lambert II., earl of Louvain, from whom the present landgraves of Hesse-Cassel (by Henry V. first of the family who bore the title of landgrave) are descended. Henry, surnamed the Infant of Brabant, was succeeded by 0th o, in 1308. There is no family in Germany more noble by their alliances than this ; and it gives place to none for tlie heroes and statesmen it has produced. — Beatson. HESSE-CASSEL. The sovereign bore the title of landgrave until 1803, when that of elector was conferred. The coimtry was seized by the French in 1806, and the elector continued in exile at Prague until 1813, when he was acknowledged by the allied sovereigns, and again received with enthusiasm by his subjects. Hesse-Cassel fell lately into a state of dangerous inquietude, for which see note.* HESSIAN TROOPS. Six thousand Hessian troops arrived in England, in consequence of an invasion being expected, in 1756. The sum of 471,000^. three per cent, stock, was transferred to the landgrave of Hesse, for Hessian auxiliaries lost in the American war, at 30L per man, Nov. 1786. The Hessian soldiers were again brought to this realm at the close of the last century, and served in Ireland during the memorable rebellion there in 1798. HEXHAM, BISHOPRIC of. The see of Hexham was founded in the infancy of the Saxon Church ; it had ten bishops successively, but by reason of the spoil and rapine of the Danes, it was discontinued ; the last prelate was appointed in a.d. 810. The Battle of Hexham, in which the Yorkists (army of Edward IV.) obtained a complete victory over the Lancastrians, the army of Henry VI., was fought May 15, 1463. HIBERNIA, The SHIP. The Hihernia, captain Breun, bound from Liverpool to New South Wales, with 232 persons on board, of whom 208 were passengers going out as settlers, destroyed at sea by fire, kindled through the negligence of the second mate, * The elector of Hesse had, iu 1S50, remodelled the constitution given to his people in 1831, (by ■which the chamber had the exclusive right of voting the taxes), and did not convene the chamber until the usual time for closing the session had arrived, when his demand for money for the ensuing year, 1851, was laid before it. The chamber called, unanimously, for a regular budget, that it might examine into, and discuss, its items. The elector, upon this, dissolved the chamber, and declared the whole of his dominions in a state of siege and subject to martial law, Sept. 7, 1S50. In tlie end, he was obliged to flee to Hanover, and subsequently to Frankfort ; and on Oct. 14, he formally applied to the Frank- fort diet for assistance to re-establish his authority in Hesse. On Nov. 6, following, an Austro- Bavarian force of 10,000 men with 20 pieces of artillery, entered the territories of Hesse-Cassel, under the command of Prince Thumund-Taxis, who fixed his head-quarters in Hanau ; and on the next day a Prussian force entered Cassel. The elector returned to his capital, Dec. 27, 1850, the taxes having been previously collected under pain of imprisonment. The Austro-Bavarian and Prussian troops afterwards evacuated the electorate. HIE 311 HOH in W. long. 22° and S. lat. 4°. ]50 lives were lost tliroup:h the insufficiency of the boats to contain more than a third of the people on board, Feb. 5, 1833. HIEROGLYPHICS. The first writing men used was only the pictures and engi-avings of the things they would represent. — Woodward. Hieroglyphic characters were invented by Athothes, 2112 B.C. — UnJier. The earliest records of them were the Egyptian, the first step towards letters, and some monuments whose objects were described by exaggerated tradition, or when forgotten, imagined. — Phillips. HIGH CHURCH and LOW CHURCH PARTIES. These were occasioned by the pro- secution of Dr. Sacheverel, preacher at St. Saviour's, Southwark, for two seditious sermons, the object of which was to rouse the apprehensions of the people for the safety of the Church, and to excite hostility against the dissenters. His friends were called High Church, and his opponents Low Church, or modei-ate men, 8 Anne, 1710. The queen, who favoured Sacheverel, presented him with the valuable rectory of St. Andrew's, Holborn. He died in 1724. HIGH TREASON. The highest offence known to the law, and in regulating the trials for which was enacted the memorable statute, so favourable to British liberty, the 25th of Edward III. 1552. By this statute two living witnesses are required in cases of high treason ; and it arose in the refusal of parliament to sanction the sentence of death against the duke of Somerset : it is that which regulates indictments for treason at the present day. By the 40th Geo. III. 1800, it was enacted that where there was a trial for high treason in which the overt act was a direct attempt upon the life of the sovereign, such trial should be conducted in the same manner as in the case of an indictment for murder.* HIGHNESS. The title of Highness was given to Henry VIL ; and this, and sometimes Your Grace, was the manner of addressing Henry VIII. ; but about the close of the reign of the latter-mentioued king, the title of " Highness " and " Your Grace " were absorbed in that of "Majesty." Louis XIIL of France gave the title of Highness to the prince of Orange, in 1614 ; this prince had previously only the distinction of Excel- lency. — Henault. Louis XIV. gave the princes of Orange the title of High and Mighty Lords, 1644. — Idem. HINDOO ERA, or ERA of the CALIYUG. Began 3101 B.C., or 756 before the Deluge, in 2348. The Hindoos count their months by the progress of the sun through the zodiac. The Samoat era begins 57 B.C. ; and the Saca era, a.d. 77. They are all used by the Hindoo nations. See Caliyug Era. HISTORY. Previously to the invention of letters the records of history are vague, traditionary and erroneous. The chronicles of the Jews, the Parian Chronicle, the histories of Herodotus and Ctesias, and the poems of Homer, are the foundations of early ancient history. Later ancient history is considered as ending with the destruction of the Roman empire in Italy, a.d. 476 ; and modern history dates from the age of Charlemagne, about a.d. 800. There was not a professorship of modern history in either of our universities until the years 1724 and 1736, when Regius professorships were established by George I. and George II. HOBART TOWN, or H0BART(3N. A sea-port, and the capital of Van Diemen's Land. It stands on tlie west bank of the Derwent, at the foot of the Table Mountain, and was established in 1804, by Colonel Collins, the first lieutenant-governor of tlie island, who died here in 1810. See Van Diemen's Land. HOCHKIRCHEN, BATTLE op. Between the Prussian army commanded by Frederick II., and the Austrians commanded by count Daun. The king was surprised in his camp, and defeated by the Imperial general. In this battle an illustrious Scotsman, field- marshal Keith, in the service of Prussia, was killed ; and such was the respect and admiration which liis name inspired, that count Daun and Lacy, the Austrian generals , Bhed tears on beholding his corpse, and ordered its interment with military honours, Oct. 14, 1758. HOHENLINDEN, BATTLE of. Between the Austrian and French armies, the latter commanded by general Moreau. The Imperialists were defeated with great loss in * The last persons executed for high treason were William Cundell, alias Connel, and John Smith. They were tried ou a special commission. Fob. 6, 1S12, beinir two of fourteen British subjects taken in the enemy's service at the isles of France and H.>urbou. Mr. Abbott, afterwards lord tenterden and chief justice, and sir Vicary Gibbs, attorney-general, conducted the prosecution, and Mr. Brougham, now lord Brouijham, defended the prisonei-s. The defence was, tliat they (the prisoners) had assumed the French uniform for the purjiose of aiding their escape to England. The two above-mentioned were hanged and beheaded on the lodge of Horsemonger-lane gaol on March 16, 1.S12. All the other convicts were jiardoncd upon condition of scrnug in colonies beyond the seas. HOL 312 HOL this hard-fought battle, their killed and wounded amounting to 10,000 men, and their loss in prisoners to 10,000 more, Nov. 3, 1800. The forces opposed were nearly equal in numbers. HOLLAND. The original inhabitants of Holland were the Batavi, a branch of the Catti, a people of Germany, who, being expelled their own country on account of sedition, established themselves in this territory. —Tacitus. Gallia Belgica (the Roman name for the provinces now known as the Netherlands) was attached to the Roman empire until its fall; and for several ages afterwards it formed part of the kingdom of Austrasia. About the 10th century, Holland and other provinces were governed by their own counts or dukes. The Netherlands subsequently fell to Burgundy, next to Austria; and the emperor Charles V. annexed them to Spain. The tyranny of the bigot Philip II., and the barbarities of the duke of Alva, exasperated the people to a great height, and under the conduct of William, prince of Orange, was formed the fanious League of Utrecht, which proved the foundation of the Republic of the Seven United Provinces. The other ten provinces (there being seventeeu) returned under the then dominion of Spain. The Netherlands became a kingdom in 1815; the southern part, Belgium, separated from it, and became a kingdom in 1831. See Belgium, Sovereignty founded by Thien-y, first count of Holland . . . . a.d. The county of Holland devolves to tlie counts of Hainault It falls to the crown of Philip the Good, duke of BurgTindy . • . . 100,000 persons are drowned by the sea breaking in at Dort Burgundy and its dependencies become a circle of the empire .... They fall to Spain, whose tyranny and religious persecution causes a revolt in Batavia The revolted states, with William prince of Orange at theii- head, enter into a treaty at Utrecht They elect Willia-n as Stadtholder . . The Stadtholder William is assassinated . The Dutch East-India company founded After a struggle of thirty years, the king of Spain is obliged to declare the Bata- vians free The republic wars against Spjiin in the East, and in America ; the Dutch admi- ral, Peter Hen, takes several Spanish galleons, value 20,000,000^. sterling . Cromwell declares war against Holland, and many naval battles are fought ; Blake signally defeats Van Tromp . . William prince of Orange ha\'ing mar- ried Mary, daughter of James II., is called to the British throne The ofBce of Stadtholder is made here- ditary in the Orange family . . . Era of the Civil war .... The French republican army march into Holland; the people declare in their favour The Stadtholder expelled . Jan. 15, He an-ives in England . . Jan. 21, Battle of Camperdown, Duncan signally defeats the Dutch . . . Oct. 11, S68 1299 1436 1446 1521 1566 1579 15T9 1584 1602 1609 1635 1653 1688 1747 17S7 1793 1795 1795 1797 The Texel fleet, of twelve ships of the line, with thirteen Indiamen, surren- ders to the British admiral Diincan, without firing a gun . . Aug. 28, 1799 A new constitution is given to the Bata- vian republic ; the chief ofiicer (R. J. Schimmelpennick) takes the title of Grand Pensionary . . April 26, 1805 Holland erected into a kingdom, and Louis Bonaparte declared king, June 5, 1806 Louis abdicates . . . July 1, 1810 Holland united to France . July 9, 1810 Restored to the House of Orange, and Belgium annexed to its dominions Nov. 18, 1813 The prince of Orange is proclaimed so- vereign prince of the United Nether- lands Dec. 6, 1813 He receives the oath of allegiance from his subjects .... March 30, 1814 And takes the title of king as William I. March 16, 1815 The revolution in Belgium {which see) commenced .... Aug. 25, The Belgians take the city of Antwerp (which see) . . . . Oct. 27, Belgium is separated from Holland, and Leopold of Cobiirg is elected king July 12, 1831 Holland renews the war against Belgium Aug. 3, 1831 Conference in London on the affairs of Holland and the Netherlands ter- minates, see Belgium . . Nov. 15, Treaty between Holland and Belgium, signed in London . . Apnl 19, Abdication of William I. in favour of his son Oct. 8, Death of the ex-king William I. Dec. 12, Louis Bonaparte, count de St. Leu, ex- king of Holland, dies of apoplexy at Leghorn .... July 25, 1840 1830 1830 1831 1839 1840 1844 DUTCH STADTHOLDERS. 1579. William of Nassau ; first stadtholder. See article " Princes of Orange," below. 1587. Prince Maurice, of Nassau. 1625. Frederick Henry, of Orange. 1647. William II., of Orange. 1650. The stadtholderat suppressed, and the office administered by the states. 1672. William III , prince of Orange. In 16S9 he became king of England. 1702. The stadtholderat again resumed by the states on the death of William. 1747. William IV. The stadtholderat revived in William IV., and made hereditary in the house of Orange. PRINCES OP ORANGE. [The years ol the stadtholderat are not always in unison with those of the princes of Orange.] 1502. Philibert de Chalons. 1530, Rene de Nassau. 1544. William of Nassau, styled the Great, cousin to Rene. To this illustrious prince the Republic of the Seven United Provinces owedits foundation. Elected stadtholder in 1579; killed HOL 313 HOL HOLLAND, continued. by an assassin hired by Philip II. of Spain, Juno 30, 1584. 1584. Philip-William, his son : stolen away from the University of Louvain ; tiie Dutch would never suffer him to reside in their provinces : died in 1618. 1618. Maurice, the renowned general; stadt- holder in 1587 : he was a younger son of William by a second marriage. 1625. Frederick Henry. 1647. William II. : married Mary, daughter of Charles I. of England, by wlioni he had a posthumous .son, whj succeeded as 1660. William III. ; stadtholder in 1672. This prince married Mary, eldest daughter of James II. of England, and both afterwards ascended the Enghsh throne. 1702. William IV. 1711. 1751. 1795. 1806. 1806. 1810. 1S13. William V. William VI. ; retired on the invasion of the French in 1795 : died in 1S06. [Holland and Belgium united to the French republic. J WilUam- Frederick succeeded his father, the last king, as the rightful heir to the usurped throne. Louis Bonaparte, made king of Hol- l.'ind by his brother Napoleon, June 5, 1806; abdicated, July 1, 1810. [Holland again united to trance.] House of Orange restored. William- Frederick, prince of Orange, ])rc>- claimed Dec. 6, 1813 ; took the oath of fidelity as sovereign prince, March 30. 1814, and assumed the style of King of the Netherlands, Marcli 16, 1815. 1815. 1840. ceeded on his father's abdication ; died March 17, 1849. William III., sou of the preceding; born Feb. 19, 1817. The present (1855) king. KINGS OF THE NETHERLANDS. William (late the prince of Orange) first king : formally abdicated in favour of his sou, Oct. 7, 1840; died Dec. 12, 1849. 1843. William II. ; bom Dec. 6, 1792 ; suc- HOLLAND, NEW. See Australia aud Australasia. HOLMFIRTH FLOOD. The Bilbury reservoir above the village of Holmfirth, a few miles from Huddersfield, in Yorkshire, suddenly burst its banks, and levelled to the ground four mills, many ranges of houses and other buildings, destroying the lives of more than ninety persons, aud devastating property estimated at from half a million to 800,000^., throwing upwards of seven thousand individuals out of work, Feb. 5, 1852. HOLY ALLIANCE. The famous league, so called, between the emperors of Russia and Austria, and the king of Prussia, by which they ostensibly bound themselves, among other things, to be governed by Christian principles in all their political transactions and future conduct, with a view to perpetuating the peace they had achieved, and then enjoyed. This alliance was ratified at Paris, Sept. 26, 1815. HOLY MAID OP Kent. Elizabeth Barton, so styled, was spirited up by the Roman Catholic party to hinder the Reformation, by pretending to inspirations from Heaven ; foretelling that the king Henry VIII. would die a speedy and violent death if ho divorced Catherine of Spain, and married Anne Boloyn ; and predicting many direful calamities to the nation. Barton and her confederates were hanged at Tyburn, 24 Hen. VIII. April 20, 152i.—llu2nn. HOLY PLACES in PALESTINE. The possession of these places has been a source of contention between the Greek and Latin churches for several centuries. In the reign of Francis L they were placed in the hands of the Latin monks, under the protection of the French government, by a treaty with the then sultan ; but the Greeks from time to time obtained firmans from the Porte invalidating the rights of the Latins, who were at last in 1757 expelled from some of the sacred buildings, which were committed to the care of the Greeks by a hatti-scheriff, or imperial ordinance. In 1808 the holy sepulchre was partially destroyed by fire, and rebuilt by the Greeks, who thereon claimed additional privileges, and thus caused fresh dissensions. In 1819 the Russian and French governments interfered and sent envoys (M. Dashkotf and M. Marcellus) to adjust the dispute ; but an arrangement was prevented by the Greek revolution in 1821. In 1850 the subject was again agitated, and the Porte proposed that a mixed commission should adjudicate ou the rival claims. M. Titotf, the Russian envoy, acting on behalf of the Greeks, and M. Lavalette, the French envoy, on that of the Latins, took up tlie (piestion very warmly. The result of the commission was, that a firman was issued by the Porte, March 9, 1852, confirming and consoli- dating the rights previously granted to the Greek Christiaus, and declaring that the Latins had no right to claim exclusive possession of certain holy places specified, but permitting them to possess a key of the church at Bethlehem, &c., as in former times. The French government acquiesced in this decision, though with much dissatisfaction ; but the Russian envoy still desired the key to be withheld from the Latin monks! Shortly after, M. D'Ozerofif made a formal declaration of the right of Russia to protect the orthodox in virtue of the treaty of Kainardji in 1774, and demanded that the HOL 314 HOM firman of March 9, 1852, should be read at Jerusalem, although it militated against his pretensions, which was accordingly done. The dispute still continued, the Porte being exposed to the charges of both the Eussian and French governments, March, 1853. On Feb. 28, Prince MenschikofF arrived at Constantinople as envoy extraordinary, and in addition to the claims respecting the holy places, made those demands respecting the protection of the Greek Christians in Tui'key which led to the present war (1855). See Basso-Turkish War. HOLY ROOD. The festival of the Holy Cross. This feast is called also Holycross day. It was instituted on account of the recoveiy of a large piece of the Cross, by the emperor Heraclius, after it had been taken away, on the plundering of Jerusalem, about the year of Christ, 615, on the 14th Sept. — Brande. AtBoxley Abbey, in Essex, was a crucifix, called the Eood of Grace ; at the dissolution it was broken in pieces as an imposture by Hilsey, bishop of Rochester, at St. Paul's Cross, London. HOLYROOD HOUSE or PALACE, Edinburgh. The palace or abbey of Holyrood was for several centuries the residence of the monarchs of Scotland. The abbey, of which some vestiges remain, was founded by David I. in the year 1128, and in the burial-place within its walls are interred several of his successors. The palace is a large quadrangular edifice of hewn stone, with a court within surrounded by piazzas. In the north-west tower is the bedchamber which was occupied by queen Mary, and from an adjoining cabinet to which David Rizzio, her favourite, was dragged forth and murdered. The palace as it now stands is not of high antiquity. Its north-west towers were built by James V., but the remaining part of the palace was added during the reign of Charles II. See Edinburgh. HOLY WARS. The wars of the Christians against the Infidels. Peter the Hermit, a priest of the diocese of Amiens, in France, was the author of these cruel, bloody, and unjust religious wars. He himself led the way through Hungary, at the head of an undiscii^lined multitude of more than 300,000 men, a comparatively small number of whom survived to reach the holy city. He roused up Europe to the first crusade, A.D. 1094-5. See Crusades. HOLY WATER. Said to have been used in churches as early as a.d. 120. — Aslie. HOMELDEN, BATTLE of. Between the Scots, headed by the earl of Douglas, and the Percies, in which the Scots were defeated. In this fierce battle Douglas was taken prisoner, as were the earls of Angus, Murray, and Orkney, and the earl of Fife, son of the duke of Albany, and nephew of the Scottish king, with many of the nobility and gently : fought in 1403. — Hume. HOMERS ILIAD and ODYSSEY. The misfortunes of Troy furnish the two most perfect Epic * poems in the world, written by the greatest poet that has ever lived ; about 915 B.C. The subject of the first is the wrath of Achilles ; the second recounts the voyages and adventures of Ulysses after the destruction of Troy. Among the thousands of volumes burnt at Constantinople, a.d. 477, were the works of Homer, said to have been written in golden letters on the great gut of a dragon, 120 feet long. — Univ. Hist. HOMICIDE. This crime was tried at Athens by the Areopagites, 1507 B.C. He that killed another at any public exercise of skill, or who killed another that lay perdue to do a person mischief of a grievous nature, was not deemed guilty. He who kUled a man taken with another's wife, sister, daughter, or concubine, or he that killed a man_ who, without just grounds, assaulted another violently, was not deemed a homicide. Among the Jews, wilful murder was capital ; but for chance-medley, the offender should fly to one of the cities of refuge, and there continue till the death of the high priest. In the primitive Church, before the Christians had the civil power, wilful homicide was punished with a twenty years' penance. Our laws distinguish between justifiable homicide and homicide in its various degrees of guilt, and circum- stances of provocation and wilfulness. See Murder. HOMILIES. A homily signified a sermon or discourse upon some head or point of religion, commonly done in a homely manner, for its being more easily understood by the common people. At the time of the Reformation in England there were several made and printed, and ordered to be read in those churches that were not turnished -with, a sufficiently learned minister to compose proper discourses them- €>r,^ tho^w epic poems of Homer and Virgil, the Gierusalemme of Tasso, the Paradise Lost of Milton, HnlwQ "£ °5. ^°LTAiRE, are the noblest that exist ; and Milton's is considered to rank next to is not the fii t"B^\ ^ "^"^ *^^ greatest of epic poems," observes Dr. Johnson, " only because it HOM 315 HOR selves, and also as a prevention of unsound doctrine being taught in the more remote and less frequented country places. But in the primitive Church it rather meant a plain conference by way of question and answer, which was commonly done by the bishop, till the fifth century, when the learned priests were allowed to preach, catechize, &c., in the same manner as the bishops used to do. A book of homilies was drawn up by archbishop Cranmor, 1 Edw. VI. 1517 ; and another was prepared by an order of Convocation, 5 Eliz. 1563. — Stoio. HOMOEOPATHY. A medical hypothesis promulgated at the commencement of the present century by the late Dr. Hahnemann, of Leipsic, according to which every medicine has a specific power of inducing a certain diseased state of the system ; and if such medicine be given to a person suft'ering under the disease which it has a ten- dency to induce, such disease disappears, because two similar diseased actions cannot simultaneously subsist in the same organ. — Brande, The Hahnemann hospital was opened in Bloomsbury-square, Sept. 16, 1850. HONEY-MOON. Among the ancients a beverage prepared with honey, such as that known as mead, and as metheglin, in England, was a luxurious drink. It was a custom to drink of diluted honey for thirty days, or a moon's age, after a wedding- feast, and hence arose the term honey-moon, of Teutonic origin. Attila, the devas- tating Hun, who ravaged nearly all Europe, drank, it is said, so freely of hydromel on his marriage-day, that he died in the night of suffocation, 453 a.d. His death is, however, ascribed to another cause. See A tlila. HONG KONG. An island off the coast of China, ceded to Great Britain in 1812. Its chief town is Victoria, built in 1842, and erected into a bishopric in 1849. Sir John Bo wring is the present governor, appointed in 1854. " HONI SOIT QUI MAL Y PENSE." It is said that the countess of Salisbury, at a ball at court, happening to drop her garter, the king Edward III. took it up, and presented it to her with these words : " Hoiii soit qui mat y pense," " Evil be to him who evil thinks." They afterwards became the motto of the Garter ; but this state- ment of the origin of the motto is unsupported by sufiicieut authority. — Goldsmith. The order was instituted April 23, 1349. HONOUR. Honour was a virtue highly venerated by the ancients, particularly among the Romans, and temples were ultimately erected to Honour by that people as a divinity. The first temple was built by Scipio Africanus, about B.C. 197 ; and others were raised to her worship by C. Marius, about 102 B.C. These temples were so constructed that it was impossible to enter that to Honour without going through the temple of Virtue ; and Marius ordered his edifices not to be built too much elevated, or too lofty, thereby to intimate to the worshippers that humility was the true way to honour. HOOD. The ancient garment or dress for the head, worn by women uppermost, and made of stuffs, velvet, muslin, or silk. It was worn by men before the invention of hats, and was made of cloth, to button under the chin, somewhat like a monk's cowl; and is still retained among some of the monastic orders, particularly abroad. It dwindled to the coif, by which our serjeants-at-law have been distinguished : and the ancient hood of black silk, is still worn at funerals by women, when following the hearse of a relative. HOPS. Introduced from the Netherlands into England, a.d. 1524, and used in brewing ; but the physicians having represented that they were unwholesome, parliament was petitioned against them as being a wicked weed, and their use was prohibited in 1528. — Anderson. At present there are between fifty and sixty thousand acres, on an average, under the culture of hops in England. They are grown chiefly in Here- fordshire, Kent, and Worcestershire. In the year ending Jan. 5, 1853, there were 46,1578 acres under hops in England and Wales, which paid 447,144^!. duty; the quantity yielded was 51,102,494 lb. whereof 955,855 lb. were exported. HORATII AND CURIATII, the Combat of the, 669 b.c. The Romans and the Albans contesting for superiority, agi'ced to choose tlu-cc champions on each side to deter- mine to which it belonged ; and the three Horatii, Roman knights, and the three Curiatii, Albans, being elected by their respective countries, engaged in the celebrated combat which, by the victory of the Horatii, united Alba to Rome. HORN ; HORNPIPE. The horn is thought to be, next to the reed, the earliest wind instrument, and it has been found among all savage nations on the first intercourse with them of civilized man. The horn was first made of that substance, and hence HOR 316 HOS the name ; afterwards of brass, with keys, improved at various times. The dance called the hornpipe is supposed to be so named from its having been performed to the Welch ^w'S-corw, that is, hornpipe, about a.d. 1300. — Spencer. HORNE TOOKE, HARDY, THELWALL, &c. The trial of Messrs. Hardy, Tooke, Joyce, Thelwall, and others, on a charge of high treason, caused a great sensation in England. They were taken into custody on the 20th May, 1794 ; Mr. Hai-dy was the first who was put to the bar, Oct. 29, same year ; and after a trial which lasted eight days, he was honourably acquitted. John Home Tooke was next tried, and was acquitted, Nov. 20 ; and Mr. Thelwall, also, was acquitted, Dec. 5 ; when all the other accused parties were discharged. See Thelwall. HORSE. The people of Thessaly were excellent equestrians, and probably were the first among the Greeks, at least, who I'ode upon horses, and broke them in for service in war ; whence arose the fable that Thessaly was originally inhabited by centaurs. " And Solomon had 40,000 stalls of horses for his chariots, and 12,000 horsemen.'' — -1 Kings iv. 26. The power of the horse is equal to that of five men. — Smeaton. A horse can perform the work of six men. — Bossuet. The Greeks and Romans had some covering to secure their horses' hoofs from injury. In the nintli century horses were only shod in the time of frost. The practice of shoeing was introduced into England by William I. 1066. In England there are two millions of draught and pleasure horses, and one hundred thousand agricultural horses, which consume the produce of seven millions of acres. The horse-tax was imposed in 1784, and was then levied on all saddle and coach horses in England. Its operation was extended, and its amount increased in 1796 ; and again in 1808. The existing duty upon "horses for riding" only, in England, amounts to about 350,000^. per year. See Race Horses. HORSE GUARDS. They were instituted in the reign of Edward VI. I5^