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A16489 Relations of the most famous kingdomes and common-wealths thorowout the world discoursing of their situations, religions, languages, manners, customes, strengths, greatnesse, and policies. Translated out of the best Italian impression of Boterus. And since the last edition by R.I. now once againe inlarged according to moderne observation; with addition of new estates and countries. Wherein many of the oversights both of the author and translator, are amended. And unto which, a mappe of the whole world, with a table of the countries, are now newly added.; Relazioni universali. English Botero, Giovanni, 1540-1617.; Johnson, Robert, fl. 1586-1626. 1630 (1630) STC 3404; ESTC S106541 447,019 654

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first was once a Monarchy and secondly since the decay of that it hath ever continued a rich a great an active and a glorious kingdome which neither Assyria Macedonia nor Rome it selfe can boast of This one thing let me note that the glory of these Northerne Princes hath beene much more powerfull but nothing comparable to the state and Majestie of the Easterne Monarchs That of Assyria was planted in the very garden and treasurie of the world both for wealth and delicacie and whereas the meanest subject may put a petition into the hands of one of our Princes the Kings of Persia kept such state that it was death even for the Queene herselfe to come neere the throne untill Ahashuerosh held forth the golden scepter The King of Spaine weares at this day perchance a homely Cassocke of blacke Serge many a Curate in his Country having a better whereas the King of China gives not presence but rarely at the great suit of his people and that out at the window of a gilded chamber himselfe gloriously shining in Rubies in Gold and Diamonds and that at such time too as the Sunne shining upon him even dazles the eyes of his adoring subjects with the glitter of the reflection and this they thinke the Sunne doth in favour of him whence they call him The Sonne of the Sunne No Northerne or Westerne Prince at this day keeps state but the Emperour of Russia and the great Turke nor are any so obeyed but their governments as those of Assyria and Persia of old and the great Mogore and China at this day are rather Tyrannies than Monarchies Now most certaine it is that all these Monarchies and mighty kingdomes arrived not to that height of Empire but by time by meanes and by degrees Time indeed perfected the designe but t was the meanes that effected it Let this be therefore laid for the ground of our discourse that there be many though secret yet irresistable causes of enlarging of Empire which being made the right use of by a wife Architect of State presently shewes the advantage to lie on his side that hath the true knacke of King-craft T is true That no man by taking thought can adde one cubite unto his stature but yet in that vast frame of common-wealths by observing off me naturall and casuall advantages and by introducing of some good ordinances and constitutions there may be found out that Art of Themistocles To make a small towne to become a great Citie and to sowe greatnesse to posteritie And these means conducing unto the enlargement of Empire we will reduce unto seven heads First numbers of men Secondly valour of the Natives Thirdly pretence of Religion Fourthly plentie of money Fifthly advantage of weapons Sixthly happinesse of situation Seventhly the prudent apprehending of an opportunitie The inlarging of Dominion is the uniting and establishing of divers Territories under one Soveraigne government whereunto is necessarily required such numbers of men and those not mercenarie if it may be avoided as may exceed the fatall dangers and doubtfull chances incident to casualties For small numbers are soone consumed by diseases or oppressed by a more mighty enemy overthrowne in one battell or extenuated by a long warre to which inconveniences great numbers and populous Nations are not so subject By these advantages the Barbarians the Aegyptians the Assyrians and the Persians have for the most part brought their attempts to happy ends The Romanes if in respect of their honour they did not ordinarily use huge Armies yet they alwayes prevailed by reason of their populous territories or their indefatigable continuance being thereby able the second and third time to reinforce their Legions and finally with fresh supplies to overcome their enemies being weakned with overcomming And to multiplie and maintaine these numbers as they sometimes received into their territories their very enemies so at other times they sent forth Colonies of their owne people By meanes whereof and other such like policies they grew to such multitudes that in the eighth yeare of the reigne of the Emperour Claudius the people were numbred to be six millions a number at this present not to be found in the bounds of all Italy whereby they became conquerours of the parts of the world then discovered Conquest say I undertaken by them as much in regard of their numbers as of their valour A good Manroode is an inexhaustible stocke By populous armies did the Northerne Nations called officinae hominum the shops of men overrunne farre greater Nations than their owne Small numbers are quickly consumed by mortalitie or one overthrow whereas the Romanes by frequent re-inforcing their legions with new Recruites put Pyrrhus who had often overthrowne them to confesse at last That if he overcame the Romans once more he should be utterly undone Saepius possunt vinci quàm tu vincere Multitudes can indure to be overcome oftner than a few are able to overcome them But most expedient it is that the bodie and flower of the Armie be made up of the natives and not of strangers for he that trusts to mercenaries may suddenly rise and spread his feathers but he will mew them soone after The Auxiliaries that the Romanes made use of were either first made their owne by Indenization or as good as their owne by entring a league offensive and defensive against a common enemie Necessary it is withall that amongst those numbers there be a race of military men such be the Timariotes amongst the Turkes and most of the Gentry amongst the Polonians and Hungarians Let every Prince thinke soberly of his forces unlesse his militia of natives be good and valiant souldiers able and hardy bodies and stout and sturdy stomacks The plough 't is true breeds the souldier that is the Foot which makes the bodie of the Armie but they must expect much time to harden to drill and exercise them and therefore the sudden French nation though they must have an Infantery of Foot yet their maine trust and glory of service they lay upon their Cavallery which bee their Gentry which use themselves to horse and Armes continually But the chiefe secret of all for enlarging of Empire is the maintaining of a sufficient number in Armes such as hath beene on both sides in the Low Countries these 60. yeares and such an Army may well deserve the name of a Schoole of Warre and of a true Militia indeed The Venetians contrary to the former discipline doe with great wages levie sudden forces and when the service is done as suddenly disband them but they doe it meerely to keepe Empire and not to enlarge it their subjects be but few and therefore their dominion enlarges not True Valour consisteth partly in judicious apprehension whereby both convenient opportunities are discerned and entertained and all difficulties discovered and prevented and partly in the forward resolution of the minde by conjunction of which two Vertues great enterprizes are undertaken with good successe dangers
Citie of Placentia and therefore wholly depends thereupon having taken a secret oath to obey him in all commands Proceeding with all possible respect not to give the least occasion of offence by reason that the investiture of Placentia was not granted absolutely to the house of Farnesi but only to the fourth descendencie after which it returnes againe to the King of Spaine as Duke of Millan And therefore his Excellencie that hee may not separate himselfe from his Majesties good liking did lately refuse to linke himselfe in alliance with the great Duke lest hee should displease the King whose minde he saw was bent against 〈◊〉 The Duke of Vrbine being a Prince of small power wholly relies upon his Majestie as receiving his greatest benefit from him to whom he hath committed the charge of all his Italian Cavalrie The Common-wealth of Genoa is like a ship beaten at Sea and tost with contrary winds tempestuous stormes placed as it were betwixt two anchors which are Prince Doria a true borne Citizen and the Ambassadour of the Catholike King who hath the protection thereof in his Masters name to his great benefit If ever he chance to become Sole-Lord thereof it will adde a greater Dominion to his greatnesse for the nature and quality of the situation of that Citie whereof the Spaniards were wont to say That if the King their Master were but once Lord of Marsettes in Provence and of Genoa in Italy by the benefit of these two famous ports hee might easily arrive to the Monarchie of the whole World But howbeit the King of Spaine be not Lord thereof nor yet hath so great a part therein that he can assuredly say that it wholly rests at his command yet by favouring and upholding the greatnesse of the Prince Doria he maketh him the Instrument to serve his turne and by his meanes obtaineth what hee will or can in reason desire of that people deeply interessed in regard that his Majestie hath taken up great summes of money upon interest of them and therefore will take heed how they breake with him lest they be hindred of their gaines peradventure of their principall It hath beene thought that some Kings have beene behinde hand with them for more than a million and a halfe of gold How much Genoa depends upon him was seene in these late warres in which they were wholly protected by him Of the Religion of Malta the said King taketh a particular protection as that in like sort depends wholly upon his pleasure and doth readily execute his royall commandements serving his turne oftentimes in keeping the Coasts of Spaine and the Kingdomes of Naples and Sicily from the incursions of Pyrates and that without any one penie cost or charges to the said King whereof in proper place The Seigniory of Lucca hath placed both it selfe and all that it hath fearing the potencie of the great Duke under the protection of his Majesty In generall the Spanish Nation beareth little love to the Venetian Common-wealth as suspecting it to favour the French and for the strict friendship which it holds with the most Christian King and the most renowned State of England of late his apparant and professed Enemies Againe there is also little inclination of love towards this State because they thinke that it maketh profession to ballance the States and Forces of the Princes of Italy and though they esteeme well enough of it yet they love it not a jot Notwithstanding the Spaniards know that in those warres which may happen betwixt the Turks and this people they cannot out of their particular interests but aid and assist them and that on the contrary from them they have no hope of retribution unlesse in like occasion But withall they assuredly beleeve that the aids which they shall afford it shall be but feeble and slowly subministred in such sort that they shall not give it any great re-enforcement but only such as may be sufficient to save it from ruine yea scarce that Finally for a perfect review of this tedious discourse I wil recite unto you these weighty secret and last instructions given by Philip the second King of Spaine to his son Philip the third father of this present King teaching him how to governe himselfe and his Kingdomes after the decease of his said father brought to light by a servant of Don Christophero di Mora called Roderigo and translated out of Spanish and Dutch into English that the world may see how judiciously this manuscript of the Kings owne hand agreeth with the purport of these Relations SOnne I have often troubled my mind and entered into most deepe and serious considerations how to leave a quiet and setled estate unto you after my decease Howb●●● neither the long time of my life nor the opportunity of Princes affected to my service would afford me sufficient assistance in this behalfe I confesse that I have spent more than 594. millions of Duckets in lieu whereof I have enjoyed nothing the space of three and thirty yeares but heart-sorrow and vexation of spirit True it is that I recovered Portugal but as lightly as France is escaped from me so likewise may Portugal slide backe Would to God I had followed the counsell of Charles the Emperour my Lord Father of famous memory for then could I much more quietly brooke those my sorrowes and die with a more willing minde leaving to you the succession of this mortall life This then besides so many stately Kingdomes and Seigniories as a perpetuall testament I leave behinde unto you as a mirrour and Looking-glasse wherein you may see how to frame your actions and to carry your selfe in your government after my death Alwayes looke well to the charges and alterations of other States and Countries to the end you make use and reap good profit thereby as occasion shall serve and withall have a cautelous and circumspect eye over them that be in Counsell with you Two meanes you have whereby to maintaine your Spanish Kingdomes the one is Government the other the Trade of the Indies Touching your Government you must draw unto you and relie either upon the Nobilitie or the Spiritualtie of your Dominions If you leane unto the Spiritualtie you must seeke to bri●ile and curbe the other as I have done but if you meane to strengthen your selfe with the Nobility cut short the Livings and Revenues of the Spiritualtie as much as is possible For holding them both in equall favour they will consume you and besides you shall set your Realmes out of quiet and never come to resolution the ballance being over-weighed sometimes by the one and sometimes by the other My Counsell is that you hold in league with the Provinces of the Netherlands especially if you meane to helpe your selfe with the Nobilitie for they be friends to France England the German Princes And neither Italy Poland Sweden nor Denmarke can stand you much in stead As for the King of Denmarke
other advantages required in the situation of a City hath those two which are required in a well seated City whereof having already discoursed in the site of England wee will here surcease further to dilate of The safety then of this City groweth from the Waters and the situation thereof in the Water where neither it can be well approached or assaulted by Land for the interposition of the Water betweene it and the Land nor yet by Sea for that the streames are not navigable but by Vessels of the lesser size onely for greater ships riding out of the Channels where the Water is somewhat deepe would drive and riding within the Channels with every turning water should bee on ground So that a Navie of lesser shipping would doe no good and greater shipping cannot well there be mannaged In conclusion these Waters are rather made for the places and entertainment of peace than for motions of warre We may adde to these difficulties which nature and the situation doe present another as great which ariseth from the power and provisions of the City which are ever such as will better inable the Inhabitants to offend another in those Waters than any man can invent to offend them All which young Pepin tasted to his losse Who with his ships and men fild all the Coast From the Fornaci to the greater shore And Laid a bridge to passe his ventrous boast From M●lamocco all the Channellore Even to Rialto yet for all this boast Hee 's faine to flie with shame the Seas doe drowne His men His bridge the waves have beaten downe And lastly wee may adde the continuall Art and care which the Seigniorie doth use ever to augment something to the fortification of this their Citie and State The whole Dominion of the Venetian Seigniorie is divided into firme land and Sea By the firme land we understand all that which they possesse in Lombardie in Marca Tr●vis●● and in Friuli for that all those parcels doe make one continued country passable from one to the other without helpe of Sea Wee will terme that Sea which confineth with the Lake Sea-ward or that which cannot be approached without passing by Water This State is againe divided into Continent and Island On the Continent they have Istria Dalmatia Sclavonia Albania or at least some parts thereof The Islands stand partly within the Gulfe not farre distant from the Continent and part of them are without the Gulfe which are Corfu Cephalonia Zante Candia Cenigo Tine and other in the Adriatique The State of the firme Land containeth one of the Marquisats of Italie to wit Trevisa which besides the head Citie whereof it taketh its name hath also in it the Cities of Feitre Belluno and C●n●da It hath moreover two of those Cities which are of the first ranke of the Cities in Italie namely Venice and ●res●la Nor let it seeme strange to any man that Treckon ●r●scia amongst the said Cities considering that for largenesse of Territorie it giveth place to no Citie thorow Ital●● containing in length one hundred miles and in bredth fiftie considering also the number of Inhabitants and the entrade it yeeldeth to the Seigniorie besides the private revenue of the Citie it selfe In all which few other Cities come neere it There is also in the firme Land the Citie of Verona called so for its superemment conditions as Ver● una and is the first of the second ranke of Cities of Italie The Citie of Padoa which for goodnesse of soile exceedeth Bolognia it selfe There are also the Cities of Bergamo Vicenza and Crema There is againe the State of Friuli with two honourable Cities Vdine where the Lieutenant of the State resideth and Cividal besides a number other populous Townes little inferiour to Cities Lastly there is the fruitfull Polesine with the noble Citie of Rovigo therein with other places of good respect If wee consider the water there are few States of Italy that have more abundance in that kinde either for standing Waters or Rivers In the Territorie of Bergamo is the Lake of Iseo in the Country of Brescia the Lake of Idro In the Veronesse and Brescian is the Lake of Guardo It is also watered with many great Rivers that not only serve to make the fields fruitfull but also to fortifie the place And those Rivers are Oglio Chiese Navilio Mincio Seri Mela and Garza which indeed is rather a Mountaine Bourne than a River c. The Countrey of Polesine and Padoa are so stored with Lakes and Rivers that therein is no Burg or place which standeth not within five miles of some fresh Water And all this Countrey of the firme Land whereof I have spoken is also for aire exceeding wholesome and temperate as the complexions and cheerefull countenances of the Inhabitants can well witnesse together with the quicknesse of their apprehension and wit as well for matter of Armes as Learning Touching the Land this State hath in it many parts that are very diverse in qualitie some-where exceeding happy and fruitfull but lesse industrie in the people other-where the people are exceeding industrious but the ground defective Againe some parts there are where both the people are exceeding carefull industrious and the soile also good Of the first sort is the Territorie of Crema of Padoa of Vicenza of Trevisa and the Polesine Of the second sort is the Countrey of the Bergomasche the Veronise and Friuli Of the third sort is the Country of Brescia And touching the first it is almost incredible what the riches and increase is of those grounds what fresh Meadowes what fruitfull arable what abundance of Cattell of Flesh of all things that come of Milke what plenty of Corne of Pulse of Fruit Wood Flax Linnen and Fish Amongst all which particularities the Padoan doth notwithstanding excell which for goodnesse of soile doth carrie the praise from all the rest of Lombardie The wealth of this Territory may hence be conjectured that it hath the richest Bishopricke and Prebendaries of Italy It hath one of the richest Abbeies of Saint Benet in Italy which is Saint Iustina It hath one of the most beautifull Convents of the same order viz. that of Praxa It hath the richest Monastery belonging to the Austen-Friers which is that of Caudiana It hath two of the greatest Churches that may bee found in Italy which are Saint Iustina and Saint Anthony with one of the greatest Customes of salt in Europe In the time of the Roman Common-wealth no City of the Empire had more Knights of Rome than had Padoa For that as Strabo testifieth there were sometimes counted five hundred of them at once Which must needs proceed from the extraordinary goodnesse of the soile and the greatnesse of private livelihoods But at this day the greatnesse of the Venetian Nobilitie hath in great part diminished the Nobilitie of other Cities Amongst which Aquileia in old time tooke in compasse twelve miles and made an hundred and twenty thousand Citizens
a tribute which Leo the ninth did release to the Church of Bamburgh which in those daies being by divers casualties often usurped was at last restored againe to the Church by the Armes of the Normans It was the habitation of the Lucans extending from the River Sarvo to Lavo it is a territory rough and mountainous Towards the Sea-coast are Nico Sorento Massa Almasi and Salerne the aire whereof is very temperate in the upland are Cava Nocera San-Severino and more neere the Sea Peste where Roses blow twice a yeare Agropoli Possidoniat now Licosa Policaster Capace Nov● Venosa Accella and Melsi holden second to Naples Naples NAples was first the receptacle of Philosophie secondly of the Muses and now of Souldiery the moderne inhabitants having their eares daily inured to the sound of the drum fife and their eyes to the management of Horses and glittering of Armours For the ambitious Spaniard now governeth this Kingdome by a Viceroy directed upon occasions by the Councell appointed for Italy which innovation hath principally befallen them by their dependancie upon the Popes who knowing by reason of the brevitie of their lives not otherwise to govern than by spleene passion and private respect have continually disquieted the estate untill a third man hath bereaved both parties of their imaginary greatnesse And this is the Spaniard who making right use of former defaults hath secured the peece first by taking all power and greatnesse from the Nobility more than titular and secondly in suppressing the popular throughout the whole Kingdome by forren souldiery A regiment consisting of foure thousand Spaniards besides sixteene hundred quartered in the maritime Townes and fortresses To these one thousand great horse and foure hundred and fifty light-horse are inrolled They say through the whole Kingdome two hundred thousand five hundred and threescore persons able to beare armes may bee levied and trained but are not in pay nor raised but in time of service and then but in part according to occasion To make good this proportion every Hundred fires or families are charged with five foot-men there are foure millions eleven thousand foure hundred fifty and foure fires in this Kingdome Over whom Captaines are appointed who have their entertaiments as well in times of peace as of warre Their strength at Sea consisteth of thirty seven Gallies yet more than trouble and title the King of Spaine reapeth not from this Kingdome The revenue and donatives now made revenue with impositions amount yearly to two millions and fiftie thousand ducats one million and thirty thousand thereof are ordinarily given away in pension and other largesses the remainder cannot suffice by much to discharge the Garrisons Gallies Horsemen and the residue of the Souldierie The body of their Nobilitie consisteth of fourteene Princes five and twenty Dukes thirty Marquesses fifty foure Earles and foure thousand Barons too too many to thrive one by another for as they increase in number so great Princes will be sure they shall decrease in authoritie No office is allotted them neither any command assigned them whereby they might ascend to estimation Every Officer is countenanced against them all their misdemeanours lookt into severely examined and justice rigorously inflicted Their ancient vassals their ancient honour and confidencie are now alienated from them and being backt against them in their pretensions are growne neglectfull of them They have lost their stings and being either desperate of their libertie or farre degenerated from their ancient glory dare not expresse much lesse put in hazzard any action tending to redemption Indeed they have no likelihood of forren assistance all the Princes of Italie in these dayes either fearing or flying into the protection of the Spaniard A pregnant president of the many calamities incident to all Kingdomes governed by Deputies The riches of the Kingdome are especially silks wrought and unwrought and wines The taxes now imposed upon these wares have so inhaunced the prices that the forren Merchant néglecteth to trade to the no small impoverishment of the Tradesman and Merchant whose especiall livelihoods consist in workmanship and the quicke returne thereof What rates may be imposed hereon as also upon victuals and wines let reason judge when upon herbs only spent in Naples foure thousand pounds sterling are annually levied by way of imposition As for Wines twelve thousand Buts are reported to bee transported from thence at every season Among all men that professe Christ there is not a more uncivill creature than the Calabriar Over land there is no travelling without assured pillage and hardly to be avoided murder although you have not about you that to their knowledge the worth of a dolar More silke is made from the silke-worme in this Province than in all Italy besides The State of the Duchie of Millaine NOt to doe the Spaniard wrong we will adde his Duchie of Millaine to his Kingdome of Naples The circuit of this State is three hundred miles of good fruitfull and well watered land under which are nine good Cities and in them two Vniversities Pavia and Millan This latter a goodly Citie and a rich almost seven miles in compasse and inhabited by two hundred thousand soules industrious and of the best Artizans of Italy It claimes to be the first Duchie of Europe In the weaknesse of the Empire Millane withdrew its obedience An. 1161. Fiftie six yeares after that the Visonti usurped upon the common libertie For want of heires the French claimed and conquered it But King Francis being taken prisoner by Charles the fifth was faine to release Millane to gaine his owne libertie And thus came it to the Spaniard His certaine Revenue out of it besides Escheats and gratuities are eight hundred thousand Ducats but the maintenance of it costs him much more than that summe and the French for that reason were glad they were rid of it For the Spaniard is at continuall charges of three thousand foot one thousand light-horse and six hundred men at Armes besides the expences upon the Forts whereof the Castle of Millane is held to be one of the surest peeces in the world The natives are proud and the Spaniards are proud too and it was never yet knowne that two proud persons loved one another and this makes the Spaniard to curbe them with Forts and Garrisons But since he is Master of the Valtoline he can quickly bring German forces into Millane if he perceived any inclination to insurrection The Governour is Generall of the Forces and hee alwayes a Spaniard Law-matters are decided by sixteene Doctors of Law and other chiefe men of the Clergie and Nobilitie The State of Genoa THe places of most note therein are Nizza having a Castle of great account Villa franca a Haven of great receit but dangerous Monaco a notable for t Ventimilia a good Citie The Champion of Arbenga is fertill but the aire infectious Finale is a famous Lordship Noly hath a convenient Harbour
conjectured out of Tacitus who reporteth that in the beginning of the siege it contained two hundred thousand soules At this day it numbreth not above five thousand inhabitants although many Pilgrims daily resort thither for devotion sake It was once strongly and fairely walled but now weakely and therin it sheweth nothing now so famous as the Sepulchie of our Lord Christ whose Temple encircleth the whole mount of Calvarie situated upon a plaine plot of ground high round and open at the top from whence it receiveth light but the Sepulchre itselfe is covered with an Archt-Chappell cut out of the maine Marble and left unto the custodie of the Latine Christians Whosoever is desirous to see this Sepulchre must pay nine crownes to the Turke so that this tribute is yearely worth unto him eight millions of Ducats One hundred and eight foot distant from this Tombe is the Mount called Calvarie whereon our Saviour Christ was crucified by the treacherous Iewes In this place are many other religious Reliques And the pilgrims which come thither are alwaies lodged according to their owne professions that is to say the Latines with the Franciscans without the Citie by Mount Sion the Grecians are lodged with the Caloieran Greekes dwelling within the Citie by the Sepulchre And so every other Nation Abassines Georgians Armenians Nestorians and Maronits who all have their proper and peculiar Chappels Those Franciscans which follow the Latine Church and are for the most part Italians were wont to create the Knights of the Sepulchre and to give testimoniall unto pilgrims of their arrivall there Without this Citie is the Valley of Iehosaphat and therein the tombes of the blessed Ladie and S. Anne The territorie adjoyning is exceeding fruitfull in Vines Apples Almonds Figs and Oyle the Mountaines are no lesse stored with all sorts of Trees wilde Beasts and Spiceries Besides Ierusalem standeth Bethlem now destroyed and shewing nothing worth looking on save a great and stately Monasterie of the Franciscans within which is the place where Christ was borne Rama is now likewise ruinated the Arches and Cesternes yet remaining by the witnesse of Bellonius his owne eye are greater than those of Alexandria but not so thicke Gaza is now a Turkish Sangiak-ship the soile about fertile and the inhabitants Grecians Turks and Arabians In holy Writ this Region is called Edom and by other Authors Nabathea Toward the sea and Iudea the soile is fertile but towards Arabia desart and barren Some say it is inexpugnable for its Desarts and want of water yet is it stored therewith but hidden and knowne to none but the natives Of old they were a turbulent unquiet and seditious people and so at this day they are like to the villainous and roguish Neighbours the Arabians Next bordereth Phoenicia as part of Syria exposed to the sea and bordering upon Galile Of old it had many famous Cities as Tripolis Beritus Sydon Tyrus Ptolemais Capernaum Emissa and others Amongst the which Tyre and Sydon were most famous Tyre was a goodly Citie a Colonie of the Sydonians and round about encircled with the Sea untill Alexander in his siege joyned it to the continent At this day it hath two harbours that on the North side the fairest and best thorowout the Levant which the Cursores enter at their pleasure the other choked with the ruines of the Citie So is it and Sydon now the strong receptacles of the stiffe-necked Drusians A generation they say descended from the reliques of those Noble Christians who under the conduct of Godfrey of Bullen descended into those parts and being by time driven unto harder fortunes betooke themselves to the Mountaines from whence they could never be expulsed neither by the Saracens nor yet by the Turkes Allowed they are libertie of Religion and no other tribute imposed upon them than is upon the naturall Subject the one being no good Christians and the other worse Mahumetans Sydon was once no lesse famous now contracted into a narrow compasse shewing only in her ruines the foundations of her greatnesse The Inhabitants are of sundry Nations and Religions as the Tyrians yet governed by a succession of Princes whom they call Emirs And whose Seigniorie augmented by armes and tyrannie stretcheth from the River of Canis to the foot of Mount Carmel containing a large extent of ground and therein many Cities whereof Saffet is the principall The Grand Seignior doth much envie him for suffering the Florentines to harbour and water within his Port of Tyrus which he is glad to excuse by the waste of the place and inabilitie of resistance But the truth is that hee is a strong rich and potent Lord in these parts partly presuming upon the strength of his invincible Forts and partly upon the advantage of the Mountaines yet having besides in continuall pay fortie thousand souldiers ●ome Moores some Christians and if the worst should 〈◊〉 ●hee hath the Sea at hand and the Florentine to friend with whom he knoweth that a massie Treasure will worke ●o small effects towards the purchase of some rich Seigniorie To conclude he is too strong for his neighbours and able to make a long defensive Warre against the Turke if his tyrannie could assure him of fidelitie in this people Acon or Ptolomais is strongly fortified triangular-wise two parts whereof lye upon the Sea the third toward the land The soile about is very fruitfull and delicious The Citie adorned with a beautifull Hospitall strong and well bulwarked once belonging to the Teutonicke Knights It hath also a very faire Haven capacious of any ships comming from the South now under the Sanz●ack of Saffet and usurped with the rest of that Province by the foresaid Emir of Sydon In this wofull Towne dwell not above two or three hundred Inhabitants and those in patcht up ruinous houses Beritus is an ancient Citie once an Episcopall See now famous for Trafficke and Merchandize as the Mart-towne whereunto all the ships comming from Europe doe arrive It is situated most safely and almost inexpugnable NOw following mine Author and having finished this tedious discourse of this great Empire by the patience of my Reader I will once turne backe againe and relate the Originall the manners the discent and the Religion of this warlike and infidelious people composed partly of Natives lineally descended from the Scythians and Tartars and partly of Apostata and Renegado Christians Generally the Natives have broad visages correspondent to the proportion of their members faire and tall and somewhat inclined to grossenesse Their haire they regard not save onely that of their beards They are of a grosse and dull capacitie wayward slow and lazie hating husbandrie and yet above all people in the world covetous and desirous of riches yea selling all places of Justice and Government to their best Chapmen Amongst one another exceeding courteous and as servile toward their superiours in whose presence they keepe admirable silence and