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A28561 A geographical dictionary representing the present and ancient names of all the counties, provinces, remarkable cities, universities, ports, towns, mountains, seas, streights, fountains, and rivers of the whole world : their distances, longitudes, and latitudes : with a short historical account of the same, and their present state : to which is added an index of the ancient and Latin names : very necesary for the right understanding of all modern histories, and especially the divers accounts of the present transactions of Europe / begun by Edmund Bohun ... ; continued, corrected, and enlarged with great additions throughout, and particularly with whatever in the geographical part of the voluminous, Morey and Le Clerks occurs observable, by Mr. Bernard ; together with all the market-towns, corporations, and rivers, in England, wanting in both the former editions. Bohun, Edmund, 1645-1699.; Barnard, John Augustine, b. 1660 or 61. 1693 (1693) Wing B3454; ESTC R13938 1,110,589 500

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to the West and sixteen from Magdeburg to the South It has a Castle called Pleisenburg and an University opened here by Frederick Marquess of Misnia in 1409. Upon the Banishment of the followers of Jerome of Prague from that City four thousand Students retiring to this In 1520. Luther disputed here with Eckius against the Popes Supremacy soon after which they embraced the Reformation In 1547. this City which then belonged to Maurice Duke of Saxony was besieged by John the Elector of that House in the Month of January Maurice tho a Protestant having joined with the Emperour against the rest of the Augustane Princes who had taken Arms for the defence of their Religion and Liberty against Charles V. And although the City was not then taken yet it was much defaced by the Battery and its Suburbs burnt In 1630. Gustavus Adolphus gave the Forces of Ferdinand II. a great defeat near this place In 1642. the Swedes defeated the Forces of Ferdinand III. under the Arch-Duke Leopold and Piccolomineo and thereupon the City was forced to yield it self to the Victorious Swedes It is not great but rich by reason of its Mart twice every year and the great concourse of Students to this University Leyte Leyta Lutis a River of Austria which washing the Town Prurck adder Leyta in the Lower Austria at Altemburg falls into the Danube three Hungarian Miles from Presburg to the South and six from Javarin Lez Ledum Liria a River of Languedoc it ariseth three Miles above Montpellier and a little beneath falls by the Lake of Maguelone into the Mediterranean Sea See Les. Lhon See Lippe Lhundain the Welsh Name of London Lhydaw the Name of Bretagne a Province in France in some of the Writers of the middle Ages Liacura Parnassus a Mountain in Greece in Achaia Liamone Pitanus or Ticarius a River in the Isle of Corsica Liampo the most Easternly Cape of all the Continent of China in the East-Indies taking its Name from a Town so called in the Province of Chechiara Lianne Liana Elna a small River in Picardy in France which ariseth in the Confines of Artois and flowing through the County of Bologne by the Capital City of it falls into the British Sea Liasto Liguidon a Sea-Port on the East of Sardinia an Island in the Mediterranean Sea Libano Libanus the greatest and best known Mountain in Syria which alone produceth the Cedar Tree in that Country It beginneth between the Confines of Arabia and Damascus and ends at the Mediterranian Sea near Tripoli having run from East to West one hundred and twenty five Miles It is the oftenest mentioned of any Mountain in the Sacred Scriptures exceeding high and very far spread fruitful and pleasant and was the Northern Boundary of the Holy Land and Mother of the River Jordan Now inhabited by divers Towns and some Cities amongst which is the Seat of the Residence of the Patriarch of the Maronites The Rivers Rochan Nahar-Rossens and Nahar-Cardicha spring from it The Northern part is said to be continually covered with Snow It hath Palestine to the South Mesopotamia to the East and Armenia to the North with one foot in Phoenicia another in Syria and the Mediterranean to the West Opposite to it stands a Mountain called Antilibanus separated only by a Valley See Antilibanus Libaw Liba a Town in the Dukedom of Curland in the Kingdom of Poland which has an Haven on the Baltick Sea in the Confines of Samogitia eighteen German Miles from Memel in Prussia and twenty five from Mittaw the Capital of Semigallia to the West This Town was often taken and retaken in the late Wars between the Swedes and Poles at last by the Treaty of Olive-Kloster in 1660. it was restored to the Duke of Curland Liburnia a Branch of the ancient Illyricum now thrown partly into Croatia and partly into Dalmatia It s principal City was Scardona now Scardo in Dalmatia The Lopsi were some of its ancient people to whom is owing the invention of light Frigats thence called Naves Liburnicae Libya is so considerable a part of Africa in the old Geographies that the Greeks called all Africa Lybia It stood divided into the Exterior and Interior The former lay along the Mediterranean betwixt Egypt and Marmorica or from Egypt South according to others along the left Bank of the Nile as far as to Aethiopia in which space the Desart of Elfocat and the Kingdom and Desart of Gaoga now are contained The other ran from the Mountain Atlas to the River Niger containing the now vast Desart of Zaara And this latter is Libya properly so called Which together with Libya Marmorica now Barca and Libya Cyrenaica makes up a second division that we find in Writers of Libya Lichfield Lichfeldia a City which is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Canterbury seated in the County of Stafford twenty four English Miles from Leicester to the West ten from Stafford to the North-East and sixteen from Coventry to the North-West It is a low seated beautiful and large City divided into two parts by a clear Brook which is crossed by Causeys with Sluces in them for the Passage of the Water That part which lies on the South Side of this Water is the greater by far and divided into several Streets and the North Part though less has the Cathedral Church the Close incompassed with a strong Wall in which are the Prebends Houses and the Bishops Palace This has been a Bishops See very long for in the year of our Lord 606. Oswius King of Northumberland having conquered the then Pagan Mercians instituted a Bishoprick and settled Dwina as Bishop here to instruct them in the Christian Faith his Successors were in such esteem with the following Kings of Mercia that they did not only obtain large Possessions for the maintaining the Dignity of this See but were also reputed the Primates of Mercia and Archbishops Ladulph one of them had a Pall sent him as such upon the Golden Solicitations of Offa King of the Mercians about 779. Which Dignity lasted not long for it died with this King and Archbishop Ladulph A Synod held in 1075. ordaining that the Bishops Sees for the future should be settled in the greatest Cities Peter Bishop of Lichfield removed this to Chester Robert Lindsey another of them removed it to Coventry Roger Clinton a third Bishop but the thirty seventh in Succession in 1148. began the beautiful Cathedral here which he dedicated to the Blessed Virgin and S. Chad and rebuilt the Castle which is now intirely ruined The Ciose in the old Rebellion was garrisoned for the King But the Lord Brook a zealous Parliamentarian coming before it March 2. 1642. though the General was slain and so paid dear for his Disloyalty yet the place was taken by that Party The twenty second of that Month the King's Forces returned and besieged it the second time and April 8. after a Defeat of three thousand that came to the Relief of
Pius II. It was a flourishing University in 1386. but when founded is not known to me Several Popes Alexander III. Pius II. Pius III. Alexander VII and great Men have been Natives of this place its greatest glory is S. Catherine of Siena a Dominican who persuaded Pope Gregory IX to leave Avignon She died in 1380. Canonized by Pope Pius II. in 1461. Sierra-Liona a chain of Mountains upon the Frontiers of Nigritia and Guinee in Africa therefore placed sometimes in the one and sometimes in the other by Writers It gives name to the River Sierra-Liona and to a large African Kingdom whither the English French Dutch and Porteguese traffick for Ivory Ambergrease Pepper Crystal Coral pieces of Gold c. The English for the security of their Commerce built themselves a Fort upon the River Sierra-Liona which in 1664 was lost to the Dutch In 1607 the King of this Country with his Family and others received Christian Baptism of Father Barreira a Portuguese Jesuit of the Mission The Portuguese called him Dom Philippe de Lion in allusion to the name of his Kingdom The present King is also a Christian tho the greatest part of the People Heathens His Kingdom extends from Cape Verga to Cape Tagrin and hath its name from the noise of the Sea against the Rocks and the thunder from the Mountains of it resembling the roaring of a Lion Sierras-Nevadas a Chain of Mountains in Castile d'Or in South America extended the space of forty Leagues and accounted two in height being tho near the Line in the hottest seasons always covered on the top with Snow as it is intimated in its Name Siga a City of Mauritania Caesariensis in Africa with a Port upon the Mediterranean in the Kingdom of Algiers It is an ancient City and in Christian times has been a Bishop's See Now called Humain A River of its own name Siga falls into the Mediterranean here Sigan a City of the Province of Xensi in China which is the Capital over thirty five other Cities Sige and Sigeium Promontorium an ancient Episcopal City of Troas in Asia minor ruined For the Promontory see Janizzari Sigeth Salinae Metuharis a strong Town the Head of a County of the same Name in the lower Hungary seated in a Marsh made by the River Alme two Hungarian Miles from the Drave seven from Alba Regalis to the South and five from Quinque Ecclesiae to the West It has a very strong Castle fortified with three Ditches and as many Walls which added to the situation of it make it very considerable Solyman the Magnificent ended his Life at Quinque Ecclesiae during the Siege of this place which was yielded to the Turks September 7. 1566 after a Defence that wanted nothing but Success to have rendered it the most celebrated that has happened Nicolas Esdrin Count of Serini Governour of it being slain in the last Sally which he made at the head of his remaining Forces It is now in the Emperor's hands by re-conquest surrendred January 15 1688. The Imperialists found therein eighty five pieces of Cannon § There is another Town of the same Name in the Vpper Hungary near the Fountains of the Tibiscus in the Principality of Transylvania Sign a Venetian Garrison in Dalmatia besieged by the Turks twenty four days in 1687 and relieved by the Forces of the Republick under General Cornaro Silaro Silarus a River in the Kingdom of Naples in former times the Boundary of Lucania and now often called il Selo and il Silaro It ariseth in the Hither Principate from the Apennine and falls into the Bay of Salerno eighteen Miles from that City to the East Il Sile Silis a River in the States of Venice which watereth the City of Treviso and then falls into the Adriatick Sea Silesia a great Province in the Kingdom of Bohemia called by the Inhabitants Slisko by the Poles Slusko by the Germans Schlesien Bounded on the East by Poland on the North by the Marquisate of Brandenburgh on the West with Lusatia and Bohemia properly so called on the South with Moravia and the Vpper Hungary It was for eight hundred and sixty years a part of Poland and revolted from that Crown under Vladislaus Loch King of Poland in 1327. In the fifteenth Century this Country generally imbraced the Doctrines of John Hus which were tolerated by Rhodolphus II. in 1609. It had at first several Princes of Royal and Sovereign Jurisdictions in their several Principalities which together with the Piastean Family ended in the Person of George William in 1675 whereupon that Country returned entirely to the Emperor as King of Bohemia having been above three hundred years ago united to the Kingdom of Bohemia The Principal Cities and Towns in this Province are Brieg Crossen Glogaw Grotkaw Jawer Lignitz Monsterberg Olss Troppaw Oppelen Ratibor Sagan Schweidnitz Volaw and Breslaw which is the Capital City of this Country It is divided into the Vpper and Lower Silesia The Isles of Silly Silurum Insulae Casiterides a knot of Islands in the Vergivian Ocean to the West of the Land's end of Cornwal an hundred and twenty Miles South of the Coast in Ireland sixty from the Land's end and an hundred and forty from Cape S. Mahe in Britagne The French call them the Sorlingues They are and ever have been under the Crown of England in all above an hundred and forty five all clad with Grass or green Moss The greatest of them is S. Mary which has a Town and Harbor of the same Name Where Queen Elizabeth in 1593 built a Castle to defend it from the Spaniards and fixed a Garrison in it King Athelstane was the first of the Saxon Kings that conquered them See Cambden Simmeren a Town and County in the Palatinate of the Rhine in Germany The Town hath a Castle belonging to it Simois a small River of Troas in Phrygia in the Lesser Asia It arileth out of Mount Ida and joining with the Scamander falls into the Archipelago together with it near Cape Janizari at the entrance into the Streights of Gallipoli Sin Sina a City in the Kingdom of China in the Province of Choquang seated at the foot of a Mountain § Also a Desart betwixt the Mountains Elim and Sinai in Arabia whither the Israelites in their March came the fifteenth day after their departure from Egypt and murmuring for hunger were relieved by an extraordinary Rain of Quails and Manna Exod. 16. 4. 13. Sinai a part of the Mountain Horeb upon the Coast of the Red Sea in the Stony Arabia separated by a large Valley from the Mountain of S. Catherine It hath at some distance from its foot a Spring of good Water and upon the top two Grotto's in Rocks at this day said to be the place where Moses received the Tables of the Law and where he passed his forty days fast It is now wholly covered with a Multitude of Chappels Convents Cells and Gardens possessed by some Latin amongst a crowd of
City belonging to it which the Turks in the Years 1538. and 1548. besieged in vain This Island is a part of the Kingdom of Guzarate and lies fifty Leagues from Surata to the West at the Entrance of the Bay of Cambaya It hath been in the Hands of the Portuguese ever since 1535. Divan Du Rou Insulae Divandurae a Knot of five or six small Islands in the Archipelago de Maldivas in the East-Indies under the King of Cananor About twenty seven Leagues distant from the Island of Malicut They are reputed extreamly healthful Dive in Latin Diva and Deva a River in Normandy which riseth near the Town of Dive and running North-West takes in the Ante at Morteaux the Leison and Vie at Hervetot the Mauch the Beverrone and some others and falls into the British Sea below Cabour five Miles and a half West of Honfleure § There is a River in the Province of Poictou of this Name which takes its Rise at the Town Grimaudiere receives the Gron at Moncontour and continuing its Course to Londun takes in the Matrevil and the Briaude till below S. Just it self is received by the Thouay which soon after falls into the Loyre Divertigi Selucia ad Belum a City of Asia which was a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Apamea lying in Syria thirty Miles from Antioch to the East It may be supposed to be now ruined being hardly to be found in the later Maps Divice a famous Fountain at Bourdeaux Diul Indus Dixmuyde or Dixmude Dixmuda a very strong Town in Flanders in the Possession of the Spaniards though it has been often taken by the French This Town stands upon the River Ipre three Miles from New-Port to the South and is now a Frontier Town against the French Doblin Dublinum a City in Curland upon the River Terwa in the Confines of Samogitia six German Miles from Mittaw to the West and fourteen from VVomic or Mednici to the East Under the Duke of Curland Dobroncha Epidaurus a Maritime City of Dalmatia Dobrzin Dobrinum Debricinium Dobriznum a Town in Poland which is the Capital of a Palatinate upon the Vistula between Ploczko to the South and Wladislaw to the North a few Leagues above Culm The Palatinate is usually taken for a part of that of Ploczko on which it borders to the North as it does on the Vistula to the West and Prussia to the North. Docastelli Lycastum a Town of Cappadocia in the Borders of Paphligonia upon the Shoars of the Euxine Sea near the Bay of Amisenum between Halis and Iris Irio distant from Amiso to the East thirty six Miles Docum Dockum or Dorkum Doccumum Docomium one of the principal Towns in West-Friesland four Leagues from Leeuwarden towards the North-West and five from Groningen upon a Canal near the Sea Dodbrook a Market Town in Devonshire in the Hundred of Colrudge Dodona an ancient City of the Kingdom of Epirus in Greece in the Country then called Molossia famous for the neighbouring Grove of Dodona in which Jupiter had his Temple and his Oracle with the Title of Dodonaeus thence It stood near a River of the same Name that joined it self with the Achelous Doesbourg or Doesborck Doesburgus Drusiburgus Arx Drusiana a strong rich and populous Town in the Province of Guelderland in the Low-Countreys upon the Issel at the Mouth of the old Canal of Drusus one German Mile from Zutphen Taken by the French in 1672. It is no very great Town Doffrini the Mountains of Scandinavia Doggers bank the Name of some Sands in the German Ocean Doira and Doria a double River of Piedmont The Greater which is called Doria Balta springeth from the Grecian Alpes in the Borders of Le Vallais and leaving Aosta Pont de S. Martino and Inurea to the East at the latter it divides sends one Branch to Vercelli called the Naulio then continuing its course it receiveth from the West the Cuisella and ends in the Po at Verolengo or S. Giovan thirty two Miles from Alexandria to the north-North-West The Lesser Doria riseth in the Cottian Alpes from the Mountains called the Genebre in the Dauphinate and running East it washeth Susa Bozolengo and Aviglana and falls into the Po not above half a Mile beneath Turino Dol Dolum Neodunum Tollium a City in the Lesser Britainy in France which is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Tours called by the Ancients NEODVNVM stands in a Marshy Ground and of no great Circumference not above two Leagues from the British Sea and four from S. Maloe's with a Castle There was a Council here assembled by Pope Vrban II. in 1094. The Bishops of this See have formerly made strong Pretensions to the Metropolitanship of Bretagne Dolcigno See Dulcigno Dole Dola ad Dubim a City in the Dukedom of Burgundy strongly fortified being the Capital of that Dukedom the Seat of the Parliament and an University founded in the year 1426. by Philip the Good Duke of Burgundy It stands upon the River Dou Dubis nine Miles from Dyon to the East and from Verdun to the North. This Town was sack'd by Lewis XI in 1479. Fortified by the Emperor Charles V. in 1530. Besieged by the French without their taking of it in 1636. Taken by the French from the Spaniards in 1668. Retaken in 1674. and by the Treaty of Nimeguen annexed to the Crown of France for ever The Country about is called the Bailage de Dole which together with the Town was then resigned to the French King Dollert a vast Lake or Bay at the Mouth of the River Amasus between Groningen and Emden which in 1277. was made by an Inundation of the Sea in which thirty three Villages were swallowed up and irrecoverably lost It is otherwise called the Gulph of Emden The South part of Groningen suffered not much less by such another raging Overflow from Groningen diep in the year 1686. Dolomieu A Village in Dauphine betwixt Moresel and La Tour du Pin. Much spoken of in France in the year 1680. for a feigned Story of the killing of a Flying Dragon there and of a Carbuncle in his head of extraordinary value Dombes Tractus Dombensis a small Territory of France incompassed on all sides by le Bresse except on the West where it is bounded by the River Saone which parts it from Baujolois It lies between Mascon to the North and Lyon to the South and though small is yet very fruitful honoured with the Title of a Principality under its own Princes of the House of Bourbon The Capital of it is Trevoux four Miles above Lyon to the North. This Principality was given to Lewis II. Duke of Bourbon by Edward the last Duke of the Race de Baujolois in 1400. Domburg a Town of good Antiquity and pleasantly situated in the Isle of Walcheren in Zealand about two Dutch Miles from Middleburg in the same Island to the West Domezopoli Domitiopolis once a famous City of Isauria in the Lesser Asia and a Bishops See under
word Gulph is commonly added reserving the rest to their proper places di Balsora Sinus Persicus the Persian Gulph which divides Persia from Arabia di Lepanto Sinus Crissaeus sive Corinthiacus is a Bay or Branch of the Adriatick Sea which entereth on the West side of the Morea divides it from Livadia or Achaia a part of Greece and extends it self to the six Mile Isthmus which connexes the Morea to the rest of Greece This has been made exceeding famous by a great Naval Victory the Venetians obtained here against the Turks in 1571. in which the Maritim Forces of that Empire were so broken that it has not been able to recover the loss to his day In the year 1687. the Venetians again entered this Gulph and taking its Dardanels are become the intire Masters of it di Mexico a vast Bay which from the North Sea or Atlantick Ocean between Florida Cuba H●●paniola and the Caribbe Islands insinuates it self a 〈…〉 ms a kind of Semicircle of about twenty degrees from North to South and near fifty from East to West In this Bay Jamaica lies upon the North it has Florida upon the West New Spain on the East and upon the South New Granada The Continent of America is not here in the narrowest part above twenty German Miles and therefore all that lies South of this Streight is called South and the other North America di Taranto Sinus Tarentinus is all that great Bay at the South end of Italy which has Otranto on the East the Basuicate on the North Calabria on the West and the Island of Sardo almost in the middle of it di Venetia the Venetian Gulph or Adriatick Sea is a great Branch of the Mediterranean which divides Greece on the East from Italy on the West at the North end lies the City of Venice which commands this Sea and will suffer no other armed Ships upon it as much as in that State lies but Merchants and the Convoys of them Golle Galliola a River in Soissons in the Isle of France Gollen-berg Asciburgus a Mountain in Poland which is a Branch of the Sarmatian Mountains in the opinion of Ptolemy It begins at the Town of Twardozyn in the Confines of Hungary and running Northwards towards the River Swarta and the Marquisate of Brandenburg ends at the Baltick Sea This Mountain is called Gollenberg by the Inhabitants and Tartary by the Poles Golnow Golnovia a small City in Germany in the Dukedom of Pomerania upon the River Ihna which a little lower falls into the Oder five German Miles North-East of Stetin This City was built in 1188. And was heretofore a great and rich Place but of later times it has suffered much by Fire and War● by the Peace of Westphalia it belonged to the King of Sweden but by the Treaty of S Germain in 1679. it was mortgaged to the Elector of Brandenburg by the Swedes for fifty thousand Crowns Golo Tuolo a River in the Isle of Corsica Gouiera one of the Canary Islands betwixt Tenerissa to the East and the Island of Iron to the West which is twenty two Leagues in Compass and has a Town of the same Name and a large Haven supposed to be that which the Ancients called Theode Gomeres a Tribe of the ancient Bereberes in Africa See Bereberes Gomorrha an unfortunate City of Judaea consumed together with four others by Fire from Heaven Gen. 19. and the Plains they stood in turned into a Dead Sea about the year of the World 2138. Gonfi Gomphi a Town of Thessalia in the Borders of Epirus towards the Springs of the River Penee thirty Miles East of Ragusa it is still called by the ancient Name but reduced to a Village Gonga Gannum Gan●s Gonni Gonos a Town in Thrace in the Province of Corp upon the Propontis It lies in the middle between Rodisto to the South and Constantinople to the North fifteen Miles from either It is mentioned in the Councils Gorch a Village of the Lower Hungary upon the River Zarwich between Alba-Regalis and Quinque Ecclesiae Gordium an ancient City of Phrygia in Asia Minor upon the River Sangarius where was that famous Gordian Knott which Alexander cut in two with his Sword when he could not otherwise untye it Goree Goeree and Goure an Island in the Atlantick Ocean upon the Coast of Nigritia in Africa three Leagues distant from Cape de Verde heretofore belonging as a dependent to the Kingdom of Ale in Barbary till taken by the Hollanders who built it a Fort called Nassaw and in 1677. from the Hollanders by the French Goritia Noreja Julium Carnicum Goritia is a small but very strong City in the Eastern Border of Friuli next Carniola upon the River Lisonzo or Isonzo Sontius three German Miles from Friuli East and seventeen from Venice This is the Capital of a small County of the same Name and is well feated over-looking a fair Plain to the South-West The Emperours Governour of the Country lives in the Castle who has a Guard allowed him The Germans call it Gortz This City and County fell to Frederick IV. by Inheritance from the last Earl of Gortz who died in 1473. and ever since it has been in the Possession of the House of Austria It has been esteemed a part of Carniola though it be in truth a part of Friuli Gorkum Gorichemum a City or great Town in South Holland upon the Maes where it receives the Ling one Mile more West than the Confluence of the Maes and Wael three Leagues from Dort to the East and four from Breda to the North built in the year 1230. by a Lord of the Territory of Arkel of which it is the Capital and very strongly fortified Gorlitz Gorlitium a City of the Vpper Lusatia in Germany which is the Capital of that Country It is very strong seated in a Marsh upon the River Nisse which falls into the Oder between Gossen and Franckfort twelve German Miles from Glogaw to the South-West the same from Dresden to the East and eighteen from Prague to the North. It was heretofore under the King of Bohemia but belongs now to the Elector of Saxony Goro Sagis a Haven at one of the Mouths or Out-lets of the Po. Gory a principal Town or small City in Gurgistan or Georgia in Asia upon the River Kur in a Plain betwixt two Mountains built by a General of the Persian Army about forty years ago and defended with a Fortress in which a hundred natural Persians keep Garrison It is already grown a rich and plentiful place Goslar Goslaria an Imperial and Free-City in the Lower Saxony in Germany within the Bounds of the Dukedom of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel in the Forest of Sellerwalt Built by Henry the Fowler and fortified in 1201. The Dukes of Brunswick are its Protectors it stands on the Confines of the Bishoprick of Hildisheim five Miles from that City to the South East and seven from Halberstad to the West upon the River Gosa Gostar which a little lower
Isles of Scotland over against Cantyr in 56 deg of Lat. twenty four Miles long and sixteen broad plentiful in Wheat Cattle and Herds of Deer The principal Towns in it are Kilmany Dunweg and Crome besides which it hath divers Villages Ilchester a Market and Borough Town in Somersetshire in the Hundred of Tintinhull which returns two Burgesses to the House of Commons It stands upon the River Ill or Yeovel having heretofore sixteen Parish-Churches as a place of great Note Strength and Antiquity now reduced to two The County-Goal is kept here Iler Hilarus Ilarus a River of Schwaben in Germany which riseth in Tirol and running Northward watereth Kempten then falls into the Danube over against Vlm Ilerda Lerida Athanagia a fortified and strong City in Catalonia in Spain which is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Tarragona seated upon the River Segre Sicoris three Leagues above its fall into the Ebro in the Confines of Arragon This City is mentioned in Livy as taken by Scipio and rendred famous for an Encounter near it between a General of Sertoris and Manilius Proconsul of Gallia where the latter was defeated with the loss of three Legions of Foot and 1500 Horse Ilion See Troja Ilfordcomb a Market Town in Devonshire in the Hundred of Branton Ill Ellus Hellus Hellelus a River of Germany which ariseth in Suntgow and passing through Alsatia watereth Mulhausen Ensisheim Colmar and Strasburg below which it falls into the Rhine Illyricum Illyris Illyria In the antient Geography of Europe this Country lay betwixt Pannonia to the North and the Adriatick Sea to the South divided into two parts Liburnia and Dalmatia whereof the first was subjected to the Romans a little before the second Punick War the other the Eastern part not till the Reign of Augustus It is now nigh wholly comprehended under Dalmatia and Sclavonia under the respective Dominion either of the Venetians or the Turks except the Republick of Ragusa and some Places more The Illyricus Sinus is now call'd the Bay of Drin and the Gulph of Venice Ilmen a considerable Lake in Russia towards Livonia on the South of the City Novogorod which disburthens it self into the Lake of Lagoda by a River which passeth on the East of that City called the Wolga Ilment Arabius one of the most considerable Rivers in the Kingdom of Persia it ariseth from the Mountains of Sibocoran in the Province of Sigistan and watering Mut Gilechi Racagi beneath Sistan it takes in the Sal beneath Sereng the Ghir beneath Chicheran the Ilmentel and beneath Pasir falls into the Arabick Ocean in Long. 106. 30. near Macran to the West Iltz or Izilz Ilza a small Town in the Palatinate of Sandomir in the Lesser Poland with a Castle which belongs to the Bishop of Cracow Ilmister a Market Town in Somersetshire in the Hundred of Abdick Imaus is one of the greatest Mountains in the Greater Asia it begins at Mount Taurus near the Caspian Sea and running Southward through the whole Continent of Asia it divides the Asian Tartary into two parts and ends at the rise of the River Ganges where it again spreads it self East and West and becomes a Northern Boundary to the Empire of the Great Mogul or Indostan having performed a Course of 450 German Miles and taking various names from the Nations it passeth as Althai Belgan Dalanguer c. Imiretta or Imaretza a Kingdom in Gurgistan in Asia stiled by the Turks Pacha Koutchouc or a Little Principality is inclosed betwixt the Mountain Caucasus Mengrelia the Black Sea Guriel and Georgia properly so called About 120 Miles in length in breadth 60. Wooddy and mountainous yet not without its agreeable Valleys and Plains Mines of Iron and the Necessaries of Life Under a Prince of its own to whom heretofore Mengrelia and Guriel after their shaking off of the Yoke of the Emperors of Constantinople and Trebizond own'd Subjection but now together with them tributary to the Turk who obliges the King of Imireta every year to send him eighty Children as a Tribute There are three Fortresses in this Kingdom Scander towards the South and Regia and Scorgia towards the North near the River Phasis besides scattered Villages It s most valuable Commodities are Wine and Swine which makes it difficult here to observe the Laws of Mahometanism The Kings pretend to be descended of the race of King David Imzagor Claudius a Mountain in Stiria Immirenieni an antient People towards the South of the Kingdom of Persia of which History relates that they embraced Christianity in the Reign of the Emperor Anastasius about the year 500 and at their request had a Bishop sent amongst them Imola Cornelia Forum Cornelii Imola a City in the Dominions of the Church in Romandiola upon the River Santerno This is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Ravenna of which Alexander VII was Bishop when in 1655 he was chosen Pope It is a fine and a populous City twenty Miles from Bononia to the East and twenty five from Ravenna Narses is said to have ruined and the Lombards to have repair'd it Caesar Borgia made himself Master of it in the Pontificate of Alexander the Sixth from which time it became subject to the Church Imperiati a small City in the Kingdom of Chili in America near a River of the same Name four Leagues from the South Sea said to be an Episcopal See under the Spaniards Inacho Apheas a small River of Epirus which watereth Larta on the South and falls into the Bay called the Gulph of Larta Index Vid. Indus India is taken for a considerable part of Asia commonly called the East-Indies to distinguish it from America which is called the West-Indies It is thought to be the Havilah in the Holy Scriptures by the Natives Indostan Bounded on the North with the Asiatick Tartary the Mountains of Imaus and Emodus on the East with the Kingdom of China on the South with the Indian Ocean and on the West with the Kingdom of Persia This Country consists partly in a vastly extended Continent partly in Islands some of which are very great That upon the Continent is divided into three Parts 1. The Empire of the Great Mogul or North India which is a part of India intra Gangem Indum and more peculiarly called Indosthan in this there are thirty five Kingdoms 2. The Peninsula of Malabar 3. The India extra Gangem In the India extra Gangem are four more considerable Kingdoms Pegu to the West Ava to the North Siam to the South and Cochinchina to the East each of which contains many particular or lesser Kingdoms in it The principal of the Islands are Borneo Ceylan Java Sumatra Celebes Mindano Luconia Hainan Pakan Gilolo the Moluccaes and Philippine Isles Many of these are so great as to be divided in many Kingdoms some of them have never been throughly discovered by the European Nations This Country extendeth in length from deg 106. to 159. of Long. and from deg 10. of
Tir-Oēn but being presently besieged by the Lord Montjoy Lieutenant of Ireland both by Sea and Land in December and Tir-Oën coming up to relieve the Spaniards with six thousand Foot and five hundred Horse amongst which were two thousand fresh Spaniards who had landed a little before at Berehaven Baltimore and Castle-haven being defeated December 24. by a Detachment drawn out of the English Camp D' Aquila thereupon January 2. following surrendered the Town to the English and was Transported with the Remainder of his Men by the English into Spain The Forces under the Earl of Marleborough possessed themselves of this Town Octob. 2. 1690 the next day they took the Old Fort by Storm the Governor for King James II. with several other Officers being slain upon the Ramparts On the seventeenth following the New Fort surrendered upon Articles and the Garrison of about 1200 Men marched out with their Arms and Baggage to be conducted to Limerick Kintzig Kintia a small River in Schwaben in Germany which ariseth in the Dukedom of Wirtemberg in the Black Forest and running South-West through the Territory of Ortnaw it watereth Wolsach Hussen and Offenburgh then falls into the Rhine at Strasburgh four Miles South-West of Baden Kiovia Kiow a City of Poland seated upon the Nieper in the Vkrayne which is the Capital of a County or Palatinate of the same Name and a Bishop's See under the Archbishop of Lemburgh having still a very strong Castle The Ruins of its Walls shew that it was once a great and a magnificent City containing eight miles in circuit which appears also from the Cathedral Church Towards the North it is yet full of People but what lies to the South and West has only a Timber Fence This City was built by Kio a Russian Prince in the Year 861. After this it was the Capital of Russia in which it stands which then had Princes of its own And at last it was taken by the Poles In 1615 it was taken and burnt by the Tartars and could never since recover that loss Within these thirty years last past it has suffered very much from the Cossacks and Moscovites In 1651 the Poles took it from the Cossacks but they having afterwards recovered it mortgaged it to the Moscovites who are in that Right still possessed of it It s Long. is 61. 20. Lat. 50. 51. This City is called by the Poles Kiouf or Kioff and lies forty Polish Miles from the Borders of Moscovy to the West seventy from Caminieck to the North-East and an hundred from Warsaw to the East § The Palatinate of Kiovia is called Volhinia Inferior and also the Vkrayne it is a part of Red Russia and lies on both sides of the River Nieper between Moscovy the Desarts of the Lesser Tartary Volhinia Superior the Palatinate of Barlaw and the Tartars of Orzakow In 1686 this was yielded to the Russ to engage them in an Alliance with the Poles against the Crim Tartars Kiri Drinus See Drino Kirkby or Kirby Lonsdale a Market Town in the County of Westmorland The Capital of its Ward upon the Banks of the River Lon in a rich and pleasant vale called Lonsdale large well built and populous having a fair Church and Stone-bridge over the said River The Name signifies the Church in the dale or Valley of Lon. § Kirkby Moreside a Market Town in the North Riding of Yorkshire in the Hundred of Ridal upon a small River which after some course falls with others into the Derwent § Kirkby Stephens a Market Town in the County of Westmorland in East Ward near the skirts of the Hills which sever Cumberland from Yorkshire It has a fair Church and the Lord Wharton a Seat near it called Wharton-Hall Kirkham a Market Town in Lancashire in the Hundred of Amounderness near the mouth of the River Rible Kirkton a Market Town in Lincolnshire in the division of Holland and the Hundred of Corringham adorned with a fair Church built Cathedral wise in the form of a Cross with a broad Steeple in the midst It stands upon a rising sandy ground Kirkwall Carcoviaca the principal Town in the Isles of Orkney which has a Castle and a large Haven It is seated upon the Island called Mainland on the North Side of the Island but towards the Eastern End and is in subjection to the King of Scotland the Seat of the Bishop of the Northern Isles Kisdarnoczi Claudius a Mountain between Stiria to the West and the Lower Hungary to the East which has various Names given by various Nations Klagenfurt or Clagenfurt Claudia Claudivium a City of Carinthia Dr. Brown in his Travels saith it is a fair four-square Town inclosed with a handsom Wall the Rampart is very broad at each Corner there is a Bastion and one in the middle of each Curtain the Streets straight and uniform as well as the Works There is a very fair Piazza or Square in the middle which was thus adorned by the Lutherans whilst they held this place who also erected the Noble Fountain in the Piazza the Figure of which is represented by this Author This is the Capital of Stiria at this day and lies upon a small River a Mile and half N. from the Drave thirty one from Vienna to the South-West and seventeen from Aquileja to the North East Kleckgow Eremus Helvetiorum a small Tract by the River Rhine between Scaphuis to the East and the Canton of Vnderwaldt to the West in Schwaben in Germany but on the very Borders of Switzerland Klein Glogaw Glogavia Minor See Glogaw Klogher an Episcopal City in the Province of Vlster in Ireland and the County of Monagham Knapdaile Knapdalia a County in the North of Scotland between Argile separated by an Arm of the Sea to the East the Isle of Jurai to the West Cantyr to the South Domin and Lorn to the North. Kilmore is the chief Town in it Knaresborough a Market Town in the West Riding of Yorkshire in the Hundred of Claro which elects two Members of the House of Commons It a Castle upon a Rock and a Well says Mr. Speed which petrifies Wood. Knaringen Grinario a Roman Town in Schwaben in the Marquisate of Burgaw upon the River Carnlach a Mile from Burgaw to the West and four from Vlm to the same quarter Knighton a Market Town in the County of Radnor in Wales the Capital of its Hundred Knin Arduba a City of Dalmatia Knockfergus Carrickfergus Rupes Fergusii a City in the County of Antrym in the Province of Vlster on the British Sea over against the Isle of Man seated on the North Side of a fine Bay which affords it the Convenience of a large safe Haven This Bay is called by Ptolemy Vinderius at present the Bay of Fergus from a King of these parts who is said to have led the Scots out of Ireland into Scotland and afterwards to have been drowned here This City is more populous rich and frequented than any other in this part of
a Dukedom but now under the Turks The Maps call it Nixia The Ancients dedicated it to Bacchus for the excellency of its Wines to whom they built a Temple of Marble which also abounds in this Island upon a Rock very near the Shoar joyned by a Stone-Bridge to it the Foundations whereof and a Gate about thirty Foot high and fifteen broad remain to be seen to this day The Venetians enjoyed it from the year 1210. to 1516. when Selim I. made himself the Master of it It pays six thousand Piasters Tribute to the Turk There are divers Monasteries of the Greeks and Latins They find of your Emrods in this Island But there is no Port or Harbour in any part of its Coasts Naxio Acone a Port in Bithynia in the Lesser Asia upon the Euxine Sea which was the Port to Heraclea Pontica and stands upon a River called Acone of old Nazareth A City of Galilee in Judea in the Tribe of Zabulon thirty Leagues distant from Jerusalem to the South upon the ascent of a Mountain The same in which Joseph with the young Child and his Mother dwelt after their return from Egypt Matth. 2. 21 23. It is said the Virgin here in the House of Joachim and Anne her Parents conceived by the Operation of the Power of the Highest and that she her self also either was born or was conceived in the same place Helena the Mother of Constantine the Great built a stately Church in Nazareth in Commemoration of these Passages which the Christian Kings of Jerusalem after the Conquest in 1099. erected into an Archiepiscopal See and adorned with a Chapter of Canons But this Edifice was so defaced in 1291. by the Sultan of Egypt who retook the Holy Land and exterminated the Christians thence that now only some Ruins remain to be seen of it And for what became of the miraculous Chamber of the Virgin see Loretto At this time the Franciscans have a Monastery and a Church at Nazareth which Pilgrims visit you are shown the rests of the Synagogue in which our Saviour explicated the Passage of Isaiah concerning himself together with the place where Joseph kept his Shop to whom in the Chappel there is an Altar dedicated and another to Anne his Spouse But Nazareth is a poor Village There is a Titular Archbishop continued by the See of Rome at the City Barletta in Apulia Peucetia in Italy and the Title particularly was born by Pope Vrban VIII before his Elevation to the Pontificate The Turks call all Christians Nazarenes from this place as Christ himself Matth. 2. 23. was called Nazianze an ancient City of Cappadocia in the Lesser Asia and an Episcopal See heretofore under the Archbishop of Cesarea which had the Honour to be farther advanced to an Archiepiscopal one under the Patriarch of Antioch This was the Birth place of Gregorius Nazianzenus whose Father had been the Bishop here Neath a Market Town in Glamorganshire in ●ales the Capital of its Hundred Neaugh Neaugus a very great Lake in the Province of Vlster in Ireland Nebio Nebium Censunum a ruined Episcopal City in the Island of Corsica The See was a Suffragan to the Archbishop of Genoua It stood about the place where the Town Rosoli now is Nebrisso or Lebrixo a Town in the Kingdom of Andaluzia in Spain betwixt Sevill and the Mouth of the River Guadalquivir mentioned by Pliny and Ptolemy Necastro Neocastrum a small City in the Further Calabria almost ruined by an Earthquake in 1638. Necker or Neckar Nicer Neccarus Neccanus Nicerus a River of Schwaben in Germany which ariseth in Swartzwalt scarce seven Miles from the Fountains of the Danube and passing Rotweil it entereth the Dukedom of Wirtemberg watereth Elsing and Hailbrun and so passing by Heydelburgh in the Palatinate falls into the Rhine Necropolis an ancient City of the Kingdom of Egypt four Miles from Alexandria where Cleopatra poisoned her self with Asps Neda Nedina a River of Arcadia in the Morea Nedham Point a Fortess in the Barbadoes which sustained an Attack of four hours continuance made upon it by De Ruyter the Dutch Admiral sent with a Squadron of Ships to conquer this Island in 1665. but was repelled Needham a Market Town in the County of Suffolk and the Hundred of Bosmere which drives a Trade in Blew and Broad Cloaths for Russia Turkey and other Foreign Parts Neers Nabalia a River of Germany which aariseth in Juliers twelve Miles from Juliers and flowing through the Bishoprick of Cologne and Gelderland by the Castles of Gelders a little below Genep falls into the Maes three Leagues above Nimeguen to the South Negapatan a City of Coromandel in the Hither East Indies now under the Dutch formerly under the Portuguese Negombo a Town in the Island of Zeilan in the East-Indies in the Possession of the Hollanders Negrepelisse a small Town in the County of Quercy in Guienne in France upon the River Aveirou betwixt Bourniquet and Albias two or three Leagues from Montauban Lewis XIII sent a Garrison of four thousand Men hither in 1621. who were in one night massacred by the Inhabitants during the Civil Wars of Religion Therefore in 1622. the said King besieged it and taking it it was laid in Blood and Ashes by the Fire and Sword of the Conquerors Negro Tanager a River in the Kingdom of Naples it ariseth near a Lake of the same Name in the Borders of the Basilicate but in the hither Principate thirteen Miles from Policastro to the East at the Foot of the Apennine And flowing North watereth Atena and after it has buried it self for four Miles under ground comes up again then falls into the Bay of Amalfi near Cappachio twenty Miles from Salerno to the South Negropont Euboea an Island in the Archipelago of old called by the Poets Chalcis and Abantis now by the Turks Egriponte or Egribos and sometimes Euriponte because the Wonder of the fam'd Euripus by the natural situation of the Rocks the Promontories the Channel c. is made here It lies upon the North of Achaia or Livadia being separated from it by a narrow Channel one hundred and twenty Miles from East to West thirty broad three hundred in circuit joyned to the Continent by a Bridge of Stone built by the Venetians It is extraordinary fruitful but little inhabited The principal Town was called formerly Chalcis now Negropont and stands on the South Side of the Island at one end of the Bridge its Walls are two Miles in compass None but Jews and Turks are suffered to reside within those the Christians dwell altogether in the Suburbs the whole of which may be about five thousand exceeding far in number the other and amongst these the Jesuits have a College There are four Mosques in the Town of which the principal hath been a Cathedral Church dedicated to S. Mark and the Seat not only of a Bishop under the Archbishop of Athens but of an Archbishop The Town is separated from the Suburbs by a
North America in the Province of Acadia was taken by the English and restored to the French by the Treaty of Breda in 1667. It stands at the bottom of the Bay of France and has a safe and large Harbour Port Royal a Port in Florida near Virginia Port Royal a celebrated Nunnery near Cheureuse in France six Leagues from Paris Port Royal a Port on the South of Jamaica in the Hands of the English by whom the Town was built Which before the late dreadful Earthquake 1692 ruined the greatest part of it had in it above one thousand and five hundred Houses and extended twelve Miles in length extremely populous it being the Scale of Trade in that Island It is seated at the end of a long point of Land which makes the Harbor and runs into the Main about twelve Miles having the Sea on the South and the Harbor on the North. The Harbor is about three Leagues broad and in most places so deep that a Ship of one thousand Tun may lay her sides to the Shoar of the Point Lead and Unload at pleasure and it affords good Anchorage all over For the security of it there is built a very strong Castle always well Garrisoned with Soldiers and has sixty pieces of Cannon mounted Yet this Town stands upon a loose Sand which affords neither Grass Stone fresh Water Trees nor any other thing that could encourage the building of a Town besides the goodness and convenience of the Harbor Porto Sabione Edron a Port on the Gulph of Venice near Chiosa Fossa Clodia a City in that State twenty five Miles from Venice Porto di Salo Salorius a Port in Catalonia four Miles from Tarragona towards Barcinone Porto Santo Cerne one of the Azore Islands discovered by the Portuguese in 1428 and by them called Ilha de Puerto Santo Not far from the Madera about eight Leagues in Circuit Porto Seguro a City Port and Prefecture in Brasil in South America upon the Sea Coast under the Portuguese The Prefecture lyes betwixt that called los Isleos and the other of Spiritu Santo Port Uendres Portus Veneris a large Port in the County of Russilion upon the Mediterranean Sea in the Borders of Catalonia Seventeen Miles from Perpignan to the North-East It has this name from a Temple dedicated to Venus in the times of Paganism which stood near it Porto Uenere Portus Venerii Portus Veneris a Town in the States of Genoua which has a Haven and a Castle built by the Genouese in 1113 seated over against the Isle of Palmaria Sixty Miles from Genoua and three from the Gulph del Spezza to the East Porto Uiejo a Town and Port in Peru in South America upon the Pacifick Ocean in the Province and not far from the City Quito Porto Zora Pisidon a City of Africa Propria mentioned by Ptolemy now called Zora by the Europeans and Zuarat by the Moors It is a strong Place which has a large Harbor belonging to it in the Kingdom of Tunis one hundred and twenty Miles from Tripoli to the West taken and plundered by the Knights of Malta not long since Portsmouth Portus Magnus a Town in Hampshire in the Hundred of Ports down of great Antiquity called by Ptolemy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Great Haven the Old Town then stood higher up The New Town is built upon an Island called Portsey which is about fourteen Miles in Circuit and at a full Tide floats in Salt Water by a Bridge on the North joined to the Continent The Town is fortified with a Timber Wall covered with Earth on the North-East near the Gate it has a Fort and two Block-Houses at the entry of the Haven built of hewen Stone by Edward IV. and Henry VII To which Qu. Elizabeth added other Works and a Garrison to watch and defend the Place The latter Princes have built Store-houses for all sorts of Naval Provisions and Docks for the building of Ships In Mr. Cambdens time it was more resorted to on the account of War than Commerce and had little other Trade than what arose from the boiling of Salt But since its Trade is much encreased It is grown populous a good Nursery for Sea-men and a Corporation represented by two Burgesses in the Lower House of Parliament Giving also the Title of Dutchess to the Lady Louisa de Querouaille Created by K. Charles II. 1673. Baroness of Petersfield Countess of Farnham and Dutchess of Portsmouth Portugal Lusitania Portugallia a Kingdom on the West of Spain bounded on the West by the Atlantick Ocean on the South by Algarve which is annexed to this Kingdom on the East by Andalusia Extremadura and Leon and on the North by Gallicia It lies on the Sea Coast from North to South four hundred Miles not above one hundred where broadest and eighty in the narrower places eight hundred and seventy nine in Compass Divided into five Provinces to wit Entre Douero è Minho Tra los Montes Beira Estremadura and Alentejo or Entre Tejo è Guadiana whereunto was added Algarve under Alphonsus III. with the Title of a Kingdom The principal Rivers are those four expressed in the Names of the Provinces Douero Minho Tajo and Guadiana which furnish the Kingdom with very convenient Ports It was anciently called Lusitania from the the Lusitani its first Inhabitants and took the present Name about the fifth Century from Poriocale a celebrated Mart. The Air is generally healthful the Earth Hilly and Barren especially as to Corn which is much of it imported from France But it yields Wine Fruits Fish Game Salt Horses and Mines And is so very populous about Spain especially towards the Sea that they reckon more than four hundred Cities or great privileged Towns three Archbishopricks ten Bishopricks and above four thousand Parishes This Kingdom is said to be founded by one Henry Earl of Lorain about 1099. For this Prince having shewn much Gallantry in the Wars against the Moors was by Alphonsus VI. King of Castile rewarded with the Marriage of Teresia a Natural Daughter of his and a part of this Kingdom with the Title of an Earl The Son of this Henry Alphonsus I. having in 1139. in the Battel of Obrique defeated five Moorish Kings assumed the Title of King This Prince assembled the Estates of his Kingdom at Lamego in the Province of Beira who there passed a Law called the Law or Statute of Lamego for the exclusion of Strangers from the Crown which remains in full force to this day His Posterity enjoyed this Kingdom and very much inlarged it by Victories against the Moors at home and by the Discovery of several unknown Countries abroad for seventeen Descents Amongst which John I. styled the Father of his Country succeeded in 1385. tho only the Natural Son of Peter I. the King save one immediately preceding his ascension But Sebastian a young Prince who succeeded King John III. in 1557. perishing in a Battel in Africa in 1580. and Henry dying soon after who was a
Names of Nilus Alopecki a People of Attica near Athens amongst whom according to Diogenes Laertius Socrates had his Nativity Alost a Town in Flanders upon the River Dender This Town was taken by the French in 1667 but restored to the Spaniards again who now have it It lies in the middle between Brussels and Gaunt one mile from Dendermonde There was an Earldom belonging to this place which had Earls of its own till 1165. when it fell to Philip E. of Flanders by Inheritance and was by him united for ever to Flanders Alpes called by the Germans Alben is a long Ridg of Mountains which divide Italy from France and Germany It begins at Port Monaco a Town belonging to the States of Genoua upon the Mediterranean but in the Hands of the French ever since the Year 1641. And ends at the Gulph of Carnaro a part of the Adriatick Sea South of Istria a Province belonging to the Republick of Venice It is divided into divers parts and each of them has its proper Name besides the General From the Port of Monaco to the Fountains of the River Var they are called the Maritim Alpes From thence to Susa the Cottian Alpes from Susa to S. Bernard the less they are called the Greek Alpes from thence to S. Gothard the Pennine Alpes next to these follow the Grison Alpes to the Fountain of the River Piave that part of them which lie near the City of Trent are called by its Name Those that follow as far as Dolak are called the Norician Alpes from the Fountains of Tajamento to those of the Drave they are called the Carinthian Alpes the last are the Julian or Pannonian Alpes Yet some extend them as far as Dalmatia and others carry them to Thrace and the Euxine Sea but it is the most received opinion that they end at the Fountains of the River di Kulpe in Liburnia Thus far Cluvirius Alpheus See Orfea Alpon Vecchio Alpinus a River in the Territories of Verona which falls into the Adige a River which belongs to the States of Venice Alpuxaras Alpuxarae a considerable body of Mountains in the Kingdom of Granada in Spain they were once well peopled but are almost desolate now the Moors that inhabited them having been banished by Philip III. Alre Alera a River in Saxony in Germany See Allere Alrick or Elrick Alriens a River in Twedale in Scotland which falls into the Tweede Al 's or Alsits Alisuntia a River of the Dukedom of Luxemburg in the Low-Countries which washeth the Walls of the principal City and then with the Saar another River of the same Dukedom falls into the Moselle above Treves Alsatia called by the Germans Elsass by the French Alsace in a Province of Germany in the upper Circle of the Rhein lying between Schwaben on the East Lorain on the West the lower Palatinate the Territory of Spire the Dukedom of Bipont towards the North and upon the Switzors toward the South It is divided into three parts Alsatia properly so called and into the lower and upper Alsatia which two last parts with the Bishoprick of Basil Spire and Philipsburgh submitted to Lewis XIII in 1634. and were yielded to the French by the Peace of Munster in the Year 1648. The Territories of the Bishop and Chapter of Strasburg which lie on this side the Rhine belong to the lower Alsatia Alsen Alsa or Alsia is an Island of Denmark in the Baltick Sea on the Eastern-Shoar of the Dukedom of Sleswick from which it is parted by a small Channel At the South end of it stands a magnificent Castle called Suderburgh which belongs to a branch of the House of Holsatia with the Title of Duke and at the North end there is another Castle called Nordoburg possessed by another Ducal Family The whole Island is under the Dominion of the D. of Sunderburgh and is a part of the Dukedom of Sleswick Alsford a Market-Town in Hantshire Alster a River in the Dutchy of Holstein in Germany falling into the Elb above Hamburgh Alssfeldt one of the antientiest Towns in Hassia The Burgers of this Town were the first that embraced Luthers Reformation Alt Alta a small River in Lancashire falling into the Irish Sea at Ahnouth § Another in Transylvania See Olt. Altahein Alteimum an antient Town in the Country of the Grisons Altai a Mountain the same with Belgon Altaich the Upper and Lower is the Name of two famous Monastries on the Danow in the upper Palatinate They have their Names from Altaha Altachum or Altaichum two great old Oaks Altamura or Altavilla Altus Murus a Principality and City in the Province of Bari in Naples Altem-bourg vide Aldenburg Altembourg the Name also of a Town in Transylvania and of another in the Lower Hungary by the Hungarians call'd Owar ● Of another in Bavaria upon the Danube as likewise of a Ruinated Castle of the Province of Argow in Switzerland giving the Title of a Count. Alten and Altenbotten a River and Branch of the Norwegian Ocean in the Province of Werdhuss Altino Altinum an antient City and Episcopal See within the States of Venice upon the River Sile betwixt Padoua and Concordia Ruined by Attila King of the Huns. The Bishoprick is Transfer'd to Torcello Alton a Market-Town in Hampshire Altorf Altorfium the Capital City of the Canton of Vri upon the River Russ in Switzerland at the Foot of the Alps. § Also a City and University in Franconia upon the River Schwartzac The University was Founded by the Magistrates of Nuremberg in 1579. and received its Privileges from the Emperour Rodolph II. in 1581. There is a Castle to it § A small but antient Town within 2 miles of Ravenspurg in the upper Schwaben in Germany the Guelpian Family were usually Buried here This Town belongs to the House of Austria and is the Residence of the high Commissioners of Suevia Altringham a Market-Town in Cheshire in the Hundred of Buclow Alzira a rich and pleasant tho small City in the Kingdom of Valencia in Spain betwixt two Arms of the River Xucar over which it has two Bridges about 5 Leagues from Valencia Am a famous City in Armenia computed to have 100000 Houses and 1000 Churches Taken by the Tartars in 1219. Amachaches Amacari an American People in Brasil towards St. Sebastian Amacusa an Island and Province under Japan in the East-Indies having its Capital City of the same Name Amadabat or Armadabat a Populous City of great Trade in the Kingdom of Guzurate in the East Indies which finds out of its own Revenue for the Service of the Great Mogul 12000 Horse and 50 Elephants The Chan or Governour assumes the quality of a Prince It is 18 Leagues from Cambaya near the River Indus adorn'd with a Mosque of extraordinary magnificence where lie the Sepulchres of many of their antient Kings being heretofore and Idol Temple of the Heathens till the Turks got the Possession of it Amadan one of the finest and most considerable Cities in Persia
restore her Virginity § Also a City in Caelosyria in Asia which has sometime been a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Bastro mentioned by Ptolomy Canavese a Country in the principality of Piedmont betwixt the City Juraea and the River Po yielded to the Duke of Savoy by the Treaty of Querasque in 1631. Canche Cantius Quentia a River of Picardy springing near Blavincour in Artois passing by Ligny sur Canche receiving the Ternois at Hesdin and falling into the Ocean at Montreuil and Estaples Cancheu a great City in the Province of Kiangsi in China with a Territory of the same Name that is honored with the Government of a Viceroy distinct from the Viceroy of Kiangsi who resides in this City and commands also some Towns in the Provinces adjacent of Fokien Quantung and Huquang It is a place of extraordinary Trade and concourse Candahar Candahara the Capital of the Province of that Name belonging to the Kingdom of Persia and one of the greatest inland Cities of Asia seated on the Eastern Shoar of the River Balcan which running Northward falls into the Oboengir which last by Oxus or Gehun is conveyed in the Caspian Sea On the East it is defended by a strong Wall on the West by an high Mountain in the middle of it is a Rock on which is built a Castle The Suburbs are greater than the City and much frequented by the Persian and Indian Merchants who pass to and fro through it It lies in Long. 110. Lat. 34. 40. This City has been often taken and retaken between the Mogul and the King of Persia till at l●st the latter possessed himself of it and still keeps it Cande or Candes Candensis Vicus a Town in the Province of Touraine in France upon the Loyre where S. Martin the Bishop so much extolled by Sulpitius Severus who writes his Life dyed Nov. 11. An. Dom. 400. § Likewise a River in Languedoc falling into the Aveirou Candea or Candi the most considerable Kingdom in the Island of Ceylan in the East-Indies and a great and populous City the capital thereof upon the River Trinquilemale Candei an antient People of the Gulph of Arabia call'd heretofore Ophiomages from their eating of Serpents Candelaro a River of the Kingdom of Naples springing out of the Apennine Mountains in the Capitanata and ending in the Adriatick near Manfredonia Candelona or Candelora a Town and principality in the Province of Caramania in the lesser Asia The Town stands upon the Bay of Laiazzo between the lesser Asia and Syria eight Miles from Antioch to the North and 5 from Scanderoon to the South Candia Creta Jovis Insula in Virgil being heretofore consecrated to him is one of the noblest Islands in the Mediterranean Sea lying opposite to the Mouth of the Archipelago In Length from East to West two hundred and fifty Miles in Breadth sixty in Circuit five hundred and forty Heretofore it was full of a hundred potent Cities and thence call'd Hecatompolis most of which are now ruined To omit the more antient Story of this Island it was granted by Baldwin Earl of Flanders to the Earl of Montisferat who in 1194. sold it to the Venetians Others say that when the Latins in 1204 took Constantinople this and the other Islands in the Aegean Sea fell to the Venetians for their share In 1645. the Turks invaded it and in 1669. by taking of Candia possess'd themselves of all but two or three Forts upon the Sea The inland Parts are very mountainous yet fruitful especially of Wines and other such Fruits but it wants Corn. Whilst it was under the Venetians it was so populous that they might raise in it 60000 Men. The Language there then used was the vulgar Greek and they were accordingly of the Greek Church though with a mixture of the Latin Service in some places Now divided into four Territories or jurisdictions call'd Candia Canea Rettina and Sittia from the four Principal Cities in it of those Names Long. 51. Lat. 34. § Candia the chief City of the Isle of Crete called by the Greeks Castro and Candax was an Archbishop's See great rich and populous as long as it continued in the Hands of the Venetians And stood the longest Siege against the Turks of any place in the World but was at last forced to submit September 27. 1669. upon Conditions very honourable after a Blockade of 22 Years from 1645. to 1667. and a Siege of two more from 1667. to 1669. In which space the Turks are thought to have lost about 600000 Men before it It lies on the Northern shoar of that Island something nearer to the Western End The Labyrinth of Minos in a Grott cut out of a Rock is yet to be seen here Canea an Episcopal City in the Island of Candia and the Capital of an adjacent Territory denominated from it Taken by the Turks Aug. 26. 1645. which loss was an Introduction to the long Blockade and Siege of Candia Canesham a Market-Town in Somersetshire seated at the fall of the River Chire into the Avon near Bristol Cangria See Gangra Canisa See Kanisa Cannares Savages of Peru in the Province of Quito Cannae Cannata des●rutta in Italian is a ruined small Town in the Province of Apulia in Italy where Hannibal engaging the Romans in a bloody Battle slew 40000 of them upon the Place in the Year of Rome 558. with Paulus Aemilius Consul and so many Gentlemen that he sent to Carthage three Bushels of Rings as a Token of his vast Victory Cannes a Town in Provence in France to the Sea over against the Lerin Islands misunderstood by Cluverius to be the Oxibius Portus of Strabo because it has no Port. Cannibals the Savages of the Caribby Islands notorious for eating their Enemies whether taken alive or slain in the Field Cano or Ghana a Kingdom in Nigritia in Africa bounded by the River Niger to the South the Kingdom of Cassena to the East the Agades to the West and the Desart to the North. The Capital City bears the same Name with it and stands upon a Lake Canopus an antient City of Aegypt towards that Mouth of the Nile which is distinguished by the same Name It has been an Episcopal See formerly and in the opinion of some Authors the Country of the Poet Claudian The modern Bochira near Alexandria is supposed to be this antient Place under a new Name Canosa Canusium an antient City in the Terra di Bari in the Kingdom of Naples with an Episcopal See that is united to the Archbishoprick of Bari five Miles from the Ruines of Cannae upon the Ascent of a Hill with the River Ofanto at the Foot of it Horace gives the Character of Bilingues to its Inhabitants in the old Roman Times because the Language they spoke was an ill mixture of Latin and Greek It was a famous place for fine Russet colour'd Cloath whence the Word Canusinati in Martial for such as wore of it In this City the Emperor Henry IV.
ancient City of Nubia in Africa And a River of the same Name in the Kingdom of Morocco Cusco Cuscum a great City of Peru in the South America one hundred and twenty Miles East from Lima. It was the Royal City of the Kings of Peru adorned with a stately Temple dedicated to the Sun and divers noble Palaces and an admirable Fortress when the Spaniards conquered it but now dispeopled and ruined Yet it is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Lima. Cussit a Province in Aethiopia Custrin Custrinum a City in the Marquisate of Brandenburg on the East side of the River Oder where it receives the Warta four Miles North from Franckfort a very strong Place Cuzagne a small Territory or District in Aquitaine in France Cuzt a large Province of the Kingdom of Fez in Africa lying eighty Leagues along the River Gureygure as far as to the River Esaha East of the Province of Temesen and containing all the courses of the Mountain Atlas betwixt those two Rivers Cyclades a Circle of little Islands in the Archipelago surrounding the Island of Delos call'd Paros Andros Zea Micoli Naxia Quiniminio c. Cyclopes the original Inhabitants of the Island of Sicily living about Mount Aetna whose extraordinary height mixt with fierceness occasioned many Fictions amongst the Poets Cydnus a River of Cilicia in Asia the Less passing by Cogni and Tharsus Alexander the Great took a desperate Sickness by bathing in it and some say the Emperor Frederick Barberaosse died of the coldness of its Water as he returned from the East in the year 1100. Cydonia the same with Canea in Candia Cylley Celia a City of Stiria in Germany upon the River Saana which a little lower falls into the Save it stands ten Miles from Lambach to the East and as many from Draburgh to the South-East The Capital of a County of the same Name and belongs to the Emperor of Germany there is in it two very strong Castles and many Roman Antiquities are thereabouts discovered Cynopolis an ancient City of the Kingdom of Egypt upon the Western part of the Nile remark'd heretofore for the Worship of the God called Anubis in it Cynthus a Mountain in the Island of Delos upon which the ancient Pagans built a celebrated Temple in the honour of Apollo who together with Diana was supposed to be born here of L●tona Cyparissa an ancient Town of the Morea that did belong to the Government of Messene and imparted its Name to the Cape and Gulph adjacent Cyprus an Island of the Mediterranean Sea called by the Turks and Arabians Kubros about sixty Miles North from the Shoars of Syria and Anatolia and extended in length from East to West two hundred and twenty its Circuit about five hundred and fifty This Island is so very fruitful the Air so pleasant and the Hills abounding so with Metals that it was by all the Ancients call'd The Happy Island Ammianus Marcellinus saith it could build a Ship and fraight her out to Sea out of what grew here without the help of any other place The first Inhabitants were the Cilicians who yielded to the Phenicians as these did to the Greeks Ptolomy the last King of this Island knowing that Cato was sent against him by the Romans put an end to his own Life It continued in the hands of the Greek Emperors till 656. when it was conquered by the Saracens In 807. the Emperors recovered it but Richard I. King of England going to the Holy War in 1191. and being ill used by the Inhabitants made a Conquest of it for England and gave it to Guy de Lusignan whose Successors were dispossessed by the Templars in 1306. In 1472. the Venetians possessed themselves of it in 1560. Selim the Grand Seignor gained it from them whose Successor at this day enjoys it not without some Confusion and as occasion serves Insurrection of the Inhabitants against the Turks There are three considerable places in it Merovige at the West end Colosso on the South side and Famagusta on the same side more to the East and about eight hundred and fifty Villages Cypsella See Ipsala Cyr Ciropolis Cyrus the same with Carin Cyrene See Cairoan Cythera See Cerigo Cyziqua an ancient City of Asia built in the twenty fourth Olympiad upon the Propontis and honoured in the Primitive Ages of Christianity with a Metropolitan See under the Patriarch of Constantinople Over against the Ruines of it stands a little Island famous for the Marble that they call the Marble of Cyziqua Czaslaw Czaslavia a very small City in Bohemia upon the River Crudimka nine Miles from Prague to the East with a considerable Prefecture belonging to it John Zisca the famous Captain of the Hussites who so sharply revenged the deaths of John Hus and Jerome of Prague was here buried Czeben See Hermanstat Czenstokow or Czeschow Chestocovia a Town in Poland upon the River Warta twenty five Miles East of Breslaw ten North-West of Cracovia It is strong as well by Situation as its Fortifications Czeremissi a Province or rather a People of Moscovy reduced under the Empire of the Grand Duke in the year 1552. Lying on both sides of the River Wolga betwixt the Cities Novogorod-Nisi and Casan They are partly Mahometans and partly Pagans of the Race of the Tartars Czeremicz Sulonia a Town in Dalmatia Czernikow or Czernishaw Czernihovia a City and Dutchy in Poland upon the River Deszna which falls into the Nieper at Kiovia twenty eight Miles South-West of Szernikow or Czernihow This City is now in the hands of the Russ as also the Dukedom thereunto belonging called by the same name They belonged originally to the Russ and together with Novogrod were conquered by Vladislaus IV. King of Poland so that the Russ has only recovered what was his own Czernobel a Town in the Palatinate of Volhinia in Poland upon the River Vsz two or three Leagues from the Borysthenes of little consideration Czersk a Palatinate and Czesko a City upon the Vistula seven Polish Miles above Warzovia or Warshaw Czyrkassi Czyrcassia a strong Town in the Vkraine upon the Nieper twenty seven Polish Miles beneath Kiovia towards the Euxine Sea it has suffered great Extremities of late years from the Cossacks and Tartars being a Frontier to both those People Czyrknizerzee or Zirichnitz Lugeum a great Lake in the Province of Carniola in Germany extended the space of four Miles betwixt the Woods and Mountains towards Italy full of Fish ebbing and flowing extraordinarily and begetting a fruitful Soyl. D A DAbir or Debir an ancient City of the Anakims in Palestine near Hebron It had been formerly call'd Kirjah-Sepher i. e. the City of Learning as we read Judg. 1. 11. And was first taken by Joshua Josh 11. 21. afterwards by Othniel Judges 1. 13. with a reward of the General Caleb's Daughter given him to Wife for his Victory Dabul Dabulum Dunga a strong Maritime City with a large Port and a Castle at the Mouth of the
City § The Bishoprick of Hildesheim makes a particular District of it self about ten or twelve Leagues long between the Dutchies of Brunswick and Lunenbourgh and the Principality of Halberstad In which extent there are divers Towns following the same Religion Himera an ancient City of the Island of Sicily so called from its situation at the Mouth of the River Himera or the modern fiume ai Termine Hannibal destroyed it about six hundred forty eight years before the coming of Christ two years after which the Carthaginians near its Ruins built another named Thermae Himerae or Thermae Himerenses from the Hot Baths that were in the place This is now called Termine The Poet Stesichorus was a Native of the ancient Himera Hinckley a Market Town in Leicestershire in the Hundred of Sparkingho Hindon a Corporation in VViltshire in the Hundred of Mere which elects two Members of the Lower House Hingham a Market Town in the County of Norfolk in the Hundred of Forehoe Hinghoa a great City of the Province of Fokien in China The Capital of a Territory of the same Name commanding one other old City and divers Towns and Villages It is beautified with Magnificent Buildings and many Triumphant Arches and Sepulchres Hippocrene a celebrated Fountain in Boeotia in Greece sacred to the Muses amongst the ancient Poets Hippone Hippo Regius See Bonne Hippopodes an ancient People mentioned by Mela that dwelt about the Scythian Sea and were fabulously reported to have Horses feet from nothing but their agility and swiftness in running Hirpini an ancient People of Italy amongst the Samnites so called from their Capital City Hirpinum which is now a Village says Leander by the Name of l' Arpaia The farther Principate in the Kingdom of Naples was the Seat and Country of this People Hirschfeld Herofelda a small Town in Hassia upon the River Fuld which had heretofore a celebrated Abbey and was an Imperial Free-Town under the Jurisdiction of its own Abbot together with the Territory in which it stands but is now under the Land●-Grave of Hessen-Cassel with the Title of a Principality by the Treaty of Munster It stands five German Miles from Fuld to the North and seven from Cassel to the South Hispahan See Haspaam Hispaniola San Domingo and S. Dominique a great Island belonging to the North America called by its Natives Ayti First discovered by Christopher Columbus in 1492. The Spaniards afterwards gave it this Name though it is also commonly called La Saint Domingue from its principal Town It is seated in the Bay of Mexico with Cuba and Jamaica to the West Porto Rico and the Caribbe Isles to the East the Atlantick Ocean on the North and the Bay of Mexico on the South It extends from 299 to 307. deg of Long. being one hundred and forty Spanish Leagues from East to West sixty in breadth and four hundred in compass between eighteen and twenty degrees of Northern Latitude The Spaniards have some Colonies at the East end the French others at the north-North-West end towards Cuba The Air is extreme hot in the Morning but cooler in the Afternoon by reason of a constant Sea Brize which then riseth The Country is always green affords most excellent Pasture the Cattle grow wild for want of Owners they encrease so prodigiously Herbs and Carrots in sixteen days become fit to Eat It affords Ginger and Suger-Canes in vast abundance and Corn an hundred fold It has also Mines of Brass and Iron some say of Silver or Gold When first discovered extreamly populous but the Spaniards in a few years destroyed three Millions of Natives so that now there are very few left The prinpal Town is St. Domingo built by Bartholomew Columbus in 1494. and removed in 1502 to the opposite Shoar of the River Ozama Whilst the Natives were Masters of this Island it stood divided into divers petty Provinces each under the obedience of a distinct Cacique or Prince of their own The Spaniards have cast it into five Cantons viz. Bainora Cubaho Cajaba Cassimu and Guacayatima San Domingo stands in Cassimu In 1586. Sir Francis Drake made a Descent here took Domingo and kept it a Month till the Spaniards redeemed it with their money again Histria Hystereich Istria is a County in Italy which on the East West and South has the Adriatick Sea and on the North Friuli It is full of Woods and Quarries affords Venice under which it is Materials both for Ships and Houses but otherwise not comparable to the rest of Italy in point of Fertility the Air is besides sickly and unwholsom The compass of it is about two hundred Miles This Country was conquered by the Venetians first in 938. and finally subdued in 1190. ever since which they have been under this State though they have made several attempts to shake off their Yoak and regain their ancient Liberty Hitchin a Market Town in Hartfordshire The Capital of its Hundred Hoaiching one of the principal Cities in the Province of Honan in the Kingdom of China Hodu the Persian Gulph Hoddesdon a Market Town in Hartfordshire in the Hundred of Hartford upon the River Lea. Hoeicheu a City of the Province of Nanquin in the South part of it towards Chekiam which stands in a Mountainous Country and has five small Cities under it Hoencourt a Town in the Bishoprick of Cambray near which the French were defeated in 1642. It lies three German Miles from Cambray to the North-West and a little less from Arras to the South-West Hoentwiel a Fortress in Schwaben in Germany belonging to the Duke of Wirtembergh seated upon a Rock between the Rivers Schlichaim and Breym which both fall into the Necker one above the other beneath Rotweil This Castle is seated less than two German Miles from the Danube to the North and two Miles and an half from the Fountains of the Necker to the East It stood seven or eight Sieges against the Imperialists who in one of these viz. that in 1641. spent a whole Summer upon it and at last could not take it Hog-Magog-Hilis a ridge of Hills two Miles South-Eastward of Cambridge on the top whereof is seen a Rampier formerly so strengthened with three Ditches as to be esteemed almost impregnable The same was a Danish Station Hohenloe or Holach Holachius an Earldom in Franconia in the Borders of Schwaben by the River Cochar between the Marquisate of Anspach and the Dukedom of Wirtemberg under its own Count or Earl Holbech a Market Town in Lincolnshire in the Hundred of Ellow Holland one of the three parts in the division of the County of Lincoln which contains the Southern Towns from Lindsey towards the Sea Adorned with the Title of an Earldom since the year 1624. When King James I. created Henry Rich Earl of Holland whose Grandson Edward Rich is the present Earl of Warwick and Holland Holland Batavia Hollandia the principal Province of the Vnited Netherlands called by the Spaniards la Olandia and by all others Holland because
that Tract of Land that was possessed heretofore by the Jazyges Metanastae a Sarmatian People and part of Pannonia Superior and Inferior Wonderfully fruitful yielding Corn and Grass in abundance the latter exceeding when at its greatest length the height of a Man it abounds so in Cattle that it is thought alone to be able to serve all Europe with Flesh and they certainly send yearly into Germany eighty thousand Oxen. They have Deer Partridges and Pheasants in such abundance that any body that will may kill them They have Mines of Gold Silver Tin Lead Iron and Copper store of River or Fresh-water Fish and Wines equal in goodness to those of Candia The People are Hardy Covetous Warlike but Slothful and Lazy not much unlike the Irish Their best Scholar was St. Jerome Their best Soldiers Johannes Huniades and Matthias Corvinus The principal Rivers are the Danube which divides this Kingdom from end to end the Savus the Dravus and the Tibiscus they have one famous Lake called the Balaton which is forty Italian Miles in length The principal Cities are Buda or Offen Presburgh Alba-Regalis and Caschaw The Hungarians are a Tribe of the Scythians or Tartars which in the times of Arnulphus Emperour of Germany possessed themselves of Transylvania and the Vpper Hungary under Lewis IV. Successor to Arnulphus they passed the Danube wasted all Germany Italy Greece Sclavonia and Dacia till broken by the Forces of Germany and sweetned by the Christian Religion first taught them under King Stephen about 1016. by Albert Archbishop of Prague they became more quiet and better civilized This Stephen began his Reign in 1000. This Race of Kings continued to 1302. in twenty three Descents when Charles Martel Son of Charles King of Naples and Mary Daughter to Stephen IV. King of Hungary partly by Election partly by Inheritance and Conquest succeeded to this Crown to him succeeded Lewis his Nephew in 1343. Charles II. another of his Descendents in 1383. Sigismund Emperour King of Bohemia in the Right of Mary his Wife Eldest Daughter of Lewis in 1387. Albert of Austria in the Right of Elizabeth his Wife Daughter of Sigismond in 1438. Vladislaus Son of Albert and Elizabeth in 1444. Matthias Corvinus Son of Johannes Huniades by Election in 1458. Vladislaus II. Son of Cassimir IV. King of Poland and of Elizabeth Daughter of Albert in 1491. Lewis II. slain in the Battel of Mohatz succeeded in 1517. and was slain in 1527. John Sepusio Vaiwode of Transylvania chosen upon his Death succeeded that year but was outed by Ferdinand restored by Solyman the Turk and at last died in 1540. The Hungarians Crowned Stephen his Son an Infant in the Cradle but Solyman seized the best part of his Kingdom under pretence of defending it against Ferdinand of Austria and Ferdinand the rest so that ever since this wretched Kingdom has been a Stage of War between the Austrian and the Ottoman Families The former at this time having recovered from the latter all the Lower Hungary and all Tameswaer in the Vpper The Reader may be pleased to know that all that part of Hungary which lies on the West and North of the Danube is called the Lower Hungary what lies on the East and South the Vpper This Kingdom is divided into fifty five Counties three and twenty of which in the beginning of this last War were in the Hands of the Turks and the rest in the Emperor's It has also two Archbishops Sees Gran Strigonium and Colocza thirteen Bishopricks six under the first and seven under the latter Hungerford a Market Town in Berkshire in the hundred of Kentbury upon the River Kennet Hunni the ancient Inhabitants of the Marshes of the Maeotis who for the sake of a better Country to live in invaded Pannonia in great numbers and thence under Attila their King who stiled himself the Scourge of God marched victoriously into Germany Italy and France till Aetius General of the Romans and Meroveus King of France slew 200000 of them in one Battel in 450. Then they retired into Pannonia again and maintain'd themselves in divers Wars At length the Hungarians a Scythian race appeared about the end of the Reign of Charles the Gross and expelled them Huntingdonshire is bounded on the North by the River Avon or Afon which parts it from Lincolnshire on the West by Northamptonshire on the South by Bedfordshire and on the East by Cambridgeshire The North-East parts of it are Fenny but yield plenty of Grass for feeding of Cattle The rest is very pleasant fruitful of Corn rising into Hills and shady Groves The whole indeed was one Forest till Henry II. in the beginning of his Reign disforested it The Town of Huntingdon which gives Name to the County is seated upon the North side of the River Ouse somewhat high and stretcheth out it self in length to the Northward it has four Churches in it a fair Bridge of Stone over the River and near it is the Mount or Plot of an ancient Castle now ruined built by Edward the Elder in the Year 917. Which King David of Scotland who had this County with the Title of an Earl from King Stephen of England for an Augmentation of his Estate in the Year 1135. enlarged with new Buildings and Bulwarks but Henry II. finding great Inconveniences from it razed it to the Ground This was a very considerable Town in the times of Edward the Confessor and perhaps greater than now The first Earl of Huntingdon was Waltheof Created in 1068. two years after the Conquest he being beheaded Simon de Lyze who Married Maud the Daughter of Waltheof was made Earl in 1075. David Prince of Scotland her second Husband was the next Earl in 1108. It continued in this Family of Scotland till 1219. but it is now in the Family of the Hastings George Lord Hastings and Hungerford being by Henry VIII Created Earl of Huntingdon in the Year 1529. Theophilus Hastings the present Earl succeeded his Father in the Year 1655. and is the seventh Earl of this Noble Family Huquang a very large Province in the middle of the Kingdom of China counted the seventh in number but in extent one of the greatest its greatest length is from North to South being bounded on the North by Honan on the East by Nankim and Kiamsi on the South by Quamtum and on the West by Queycheu and Suchen It contains fifteen Cities an hundred and eighteen great Towns five hundred thirty one thousand six hundred eighty six Families The greatest City is Vuchang The great River of Kiam crosseth it and divides it and in the middle of this Province it receiveth two other great Rivers one from the North and the other from the South whose Names I cannot assign And these three Rivers form at their meeting a very considerable Lake between the Cities of Kincheu and Yocheu The Chinese call it also Jumichiti and the Granary of China for its abundance As to which they have a Proverb that the
now in the Kingdom of Arragon supposed to be built by Pompey the Great but certainly called by this very Name by Ptolemy It is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Saragoza and stands upon the River Aragona at the Foot of the Pyrenean Hills twenty one Baudrand saith sixteen Spanish Miles from Saragoza to the North eight from the Confines of France and eight from Huesca in Arragon to the North-West This City is the Capital of the County of Arragon The Jacobites Under this Name says P. Simon in general we may comprehend all the Monophysites of the East i. e. such as acknowledge one only Nature the Humane in Jesus Christ in which Latitude the Armenians Cophtites and Abyssines will be included But it more particularly denotes a separate Church of Christians in Syria and Mesopotamia consisting of about forty or forty five thousand Families under a Patriarch of their own who keeps his Residence at Caramit and assumes the title of the Patriarch of Antioch having divers Metropolitans under him Jacobus Zanzalus a Syrian of the sixth Century dressing up a particular Creed out of the opinions of Eutyches and Dioscorus was the Founder of this Church which therefore retains his Christian Name Amongst other customs and tenents they deny the Trinity they circumcise their Children first then baptize them upon their forehead with a hot Iron because of the words Matth. 3. 11. He shall baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire And no endeavours of the Roman See whose Supremacy they disown have hitherto been sufficient to alter their Principles Jacamcury a City of the Hither East-Indies called of old Sosicurae as Castaldus conjectures Jacuby a River of Tartary which falls into the Caspian Sea on the Confines of Bochar Jada Lade an Island in the Archipelago Jader or Jada Jadica Guttalus a River of Germany more commonly called the Oder It falls in the Baltick Sea near Stetin having watered Silesia Marchia and Pomerania Hoffman placeth it in East Friseland Others in the County of Oldemburg in the Circle of Westphalia See Oder It gives Name to a Town at its fall Jadog a River in Africa called Rubricatus Armua and Ardalia of old Ladog and Guadilbarber as well as Jadog in later Writers It falls into the Mediterranean Sea through the Kingdom of Tunis Jaen Giennium Gienna Aurigi Iliturgis Aurinx Oringe Oningis is a City and a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Toledo ever since 1249 having been three years before recovered by Ferdinando out of the Hands of the Moors It is a great and populous City in the Kingdom of Andalusia upon the River Guadalbollon where it receives that of Susanna twelve Miles from the Guadalquivir to the South towards the Borders of Granada and eighteen from Alcala to the South-East This City has been heretofore so considerable as to bear the title of a Kingdom Jafanapatan Jaffanapatan a City on the North of the Island of Ceylan in the East-Indies in the Hands of the Dutch who have built it a good Fortress and the Capital of a Kingdom of the same Name It lies in Long. 110. 00. Lat. 10. 07. Jaffo or Jaffa Joppe a Maritime City of Palestine in the Tribe of Dan upon the Mediterranean Sea twenty four Miles from Jerusalem thought to be one of the ancientest in the World as having been built and so named by Japhet the Son of Noah Famous in all ages for the convenience of its Port at which particularly Hiram King of Tyre his Fleet laden with Cedar and Marble for the building of K. Solomon's Temple discharg'd and Jonas the Prophet took Ship for Tharsis St. Peter also here raised Tabitha from the dead and saw the Vision of the Beasts This City was ruined by Judas Macchabeus and afterwards by the Emperor Titus Next the Arabians established themselves in it from whom the Christians under Godfrey of Bovillon recovered it rebuilt the Castle and made it a strong Garrison adorning it likewise with the title of an Earldom and an Episcopal See under the Archbishop of Cesarea In the Year 1188. Saladine overcame and dismantled it But Richard I. King of England and S. Lewis King of France successively repair'd it again till it fell finally into the hands of the Saracens in 1252. Now it consists of some poor Houses with a small Fort garrisoned for the Bassa of Gaza nothing of its ancient Buildings appearing but in their ruins Jagerndorff Carnovia or Karnow a Town in Sil●sia in Bohemia the Capital of a District of the same Name and heretofore under the Duke of Brandenburgh It stands upon the River Oppa which near Hilschin falls into the Oder four German Miles from Ratibor a City of Bohemia towards the West and about three from the Confines of Moravia there is in it a very splendid and magnificent Castle S. Jago-Cavallero a small Town in the Island of Hispaniola in America twenty Leagues from S. Domingo to the East near a Mountain from whence the rains bring down little pieces of Gold The Inhabitants trade to San Domingo in Hides and Tallow Jagos a vagabond Barbarian People of Africa abounding more especially in the Kingdom of Ansico in the Lower Aethiopia or according to others in Congo without a certain abode living by robbery and carnage Parents and Children 't is said have no horrour amongst them to eat the flesh of one another Jagel one of the Heads of Dwina See Dwina Jagntevo a City of Servia built on a Plain amongst the Hills not above half a Days Journey from Monte-Novo another City of the same Province It is pretty considerable and has some Christians residing in it though under the Dominion of the Turks Jaitza or Jaicz Jaitia Gaitia Jaycza a City of Bosnia towards the Confines of Croatia upon the River Plena defended by a strong Castle which is in the Hands of the Turks as Calchondylas saith The Kings or Despotes of Bosnia did heretofore reside here Jakotyn a small Town in the Vkrain in the Palatinate of Kiovia beyond the Nieper which has a strong Castle It stands upon the River Supoi eleven Miles from Kiovia to the East and about thirteen from the Nieper into which the Supoi falls six Miles above Czyrkassy This Town belongs to the Muscovites now Jala a Kingdom in the Eastern part of the Island of Ceylan in the East-Indies with a City of the same Name little inhabited by reason the Air is very contagious Jalea Elis a City in the Morea Jalina Acherusia a Lake in Epirus Jalines Macaria a Town in Cyprus towards its North End Ialofes the People of the Kingdom of Senega in Nigritia in Africa lying betwixt those two branches of the Niger the Rivers Senega and Gambay Their Emperour is called the Grand Jalof and takes the Style of the Soveraign of thirteen or fourteen Kingdoms The Capital where he keeps his Court is Tubacatum There are no Towns or Cities walled in all this Empire Tobacco Hides Ivory Gum-arabick Ambergrease Wax Dates and Maze
to the North. Iser Isara a River of Germany in the Dukedom of Bavaria It ariseth in the Borders of the County of Tyrol three Miles from Inspruck to the West and flowing to the North through Bavaria watereth Munick or Munichen the Capital of that Dutchy and Frisingen beneath which the Amber Ambra from the West falls into it at Landschut and at last it ends in the Danube over against Derkendorf six Miles West of Passaw and the same distance above Straubing to the East L'Isere Isara a River in France which is caled Isar by Ptolemy and Scoras by Polybius it ariseth in the Territory of Tarentaise near Moutiers in the Dukedom of Savoy which it watereth beneath which it takes in the Arche from the South then passeth by Montmelian to Grenoble over against which it admits the Drac from the South and above Valence falls into the Rhosne It is a rapid River § There is another of this Name in the Dukedom of Bavaria in Germany Isernia Aesernia a City in the Kingdom of Naples by some called Sernia It stands in the Province of Molise and is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Capua seated four Miles from the River Volturno to the East and the same from the Confines of the Terra di Lavoro at the foot of the Apennine thirty Miles from Capua to the North and almost twenty from Trivento to the South It is now in a tolerable good state and made more famous by the Birth of St. Peter Celestine a Pope Isin Istnisca a Village and a River in Bavaria six Miles from Munichen to the East Isis a River of Oxfordshire at the Confluence of which with the River Thame stands Dorchester in the same County Island Thule Islandia is a great Island in the Northern Ocean called by the Dutch Het Islandt by the Germans Ynslandt It lies between Norway to the East and Greenland to the West from East to West two hundred French Leagues and about half so broad Well peopled and fruitful towards the Sea-shoar but the middle is barren desolate and very Mountainous N●ddock a Norwegian first discovered it in 860. and called it Sneeland that is the Land of Snow Flocko a Pyrate of Norway afterward gave it the Name of Isee-Land from the great quantity of Ice he found about it It began to be inhabited by the Norwegians under Ingulphus so soon as ever it was discovered that Nation being then dissatisfied with Horald their Prince It became subject to Norway in 1260. by doing Homage to that Crown and in the Right of that Kingdom it belongs to the King of Denmark who every year sends them a Governour who resides at the Castle of Bestede called otherwise Kronniges-Gard that is the Vice-Roys Residence They were converted to the Christian Faith by Adebert Bishop of Bremen Canutus King of the Vandals settled Bishops first amongst them in 1133. one at Hola another at Schalholt the two principal Cities and to each of them annexed a School They had at first neither Money nor Cities but lived in Caves in the sides of Mountains covered their Huts with Fishes Bones and eat dried Fish instead of Bread They speak the ancient Cimbrian Tongue In 1584 the Bible was Printed in their Language They have no Cattle but Horses and Cows nor any Trees but Box and Juniper The Country produceth so great a quantity of sweet Grass that their Cattle would burst 't is said if they did suffer them to eat it as they would On the East and West sides of the Isle there are burning Mountains The Inhabitants are strong and fierce It lies between eight and ten degrees of Long and in Lat. 67. one hundred and fifty German Miles from the Shoars of Norway to the West Their longest day in Summer is twenty four hours without night and their night in Winter when the Sun enters into Capricorn the same without day The Vulgar believe the Mountain Hecla to be the Prison of damned Souls Mines of Sulphur are found in it with which the Merchants drive a Traffick Isle de feu the Island of Fire one of the Islands of Cap. Verde upon the Coast of Africa so called from a burning Mountain therein It has a Port defended by a Fort on the North West The Ille of France Insula Franciae is a very great Province the most celebrated rich and populous of any in that Kingdom It is bounded on the North by Picardy on the East by Champagne on the West by Normandy and on the South by La Beausse it contains in it twelve Counties as le Parisis la Brie Francoise l' Hurepois le Gastinois le Mantoan le Vexin Francois le Beavoisis le Valois le Soissonois c. The principal City is Paris the Royal City of this Kingdom Islas de los Ladrones or Islas de las Velas by the French called Isles des Larrons a mass of little Islands in the Archipelago of St. Lazare betwixt the Oriental and the Pacifick Oceans extending from North to South at the extremity of our Hemisphere Eastward Discovered in 1520. by the famous Magellan Some inhabited by a salvage people whose addiction to Thievery occasioned this general ill name upon them all of the Islands of Thieves Yet the greatest part are barren They reckon fifteen principal ones The Air temperate but that the Hurricanes from time to time rage with violence These Salvages are excellent at making of Matts and they traffick to Tartary in Canoes Isle Maurice an Island in the Aethiopick Ocean to the East of Madagascar so named by the Hollanders in 1598. in honour of Maurice of Nassaw Prince of Orange But the Portugueze made the first discovery of it who called it Ilha do Cerno or Swan-Island the English also have given the Name of Warwick to its Haven In 1640. the Hollanders settled upon it and have built it a Fort. It yields Palm-trees Cocao Ebony plenty of Fish and Tortoises of a vast magnitude § There is another small Island of this Name near the Coast of Moscovia to the West of Weigats Streight discovered by the Hollanders in 1594. in their search for a North Passage to China Full of Lakes Ponds and Marishes Isles des Papas du Pape or des Princes called by the Turks Papas-Adasi by the Greeks Papadonisia or the Priests Island from their being inhabited by the Religious Caloyers of the Order of S. Basil lie within four Leagues of Constantinople betwixt the Sea of Marmora and the entrance into the Streights of Gallipoli The Europeans of Constantinople and Pera ordinarily divert themselves at them Isles des Perles the Islands of Pearl are a Shoal of Islands in the South Sea twelve Leagues from Panama in South America to which the abundance of Pearls heretofore fish'd out of the Sea adjacent occasioned the giving of this Name The two principal are Del Rio and Tararequi Maze and odoriferous Trees grow upon them The Spaniards here having made an end of all the Natives serve themselves
Basil Pierreport and Botzberg more South Schafmat and by the Swiss Leerberg Iurat a part of the Mountain Jura which lies between Burgundy and Switzerland also called Jurten Iurea Eporedia called Vrbs Salassiorum by Ptolemy and Eporaedio by Antoninus in his Itinerary at this day Jurea by the Inhabitants Jurée by the French is a City of Piedmont in Italy the Capital of the Territory of Canavese and a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Turin seated upon the River Doria Duria which falls into the Po beneath Rivarotta between Chivas to the West and Casal to the East thirty Italian Miles from Turin to the North and twenty five from Aoust to the South-West This City has been under the Duke of Savoy ever since 1313. who has taken care to fortifie it very well it has also an ancient Castle and a Stone Bridge over the River Doria The French took it in 1554. during the Wars of Italy It has of ancient time given the Title of a Marquess Iuriogrod See Derpt Iustinopolis or Justiniana See Achrida Cabo di Istria and Giustandil Iutland Jutia Cimbrica Chersonesus is a very great Province of the Kingdom of Denmark extended in the form of a vast Peninsula from North to South and only joined to the Continent at the South end where Holstein a part of this Promontory joins it to Germany on the West it has the German Ocean on the North and East the Baltick Sea It is divided into the Northern and Southern Jutland The Northern Jutland is divided into four Dioceses viz. Rypen Arhusen Alborch and Wisborch this part is under the King of Denmark the Southern is divided into three viz. Sleswick Flensborg and Hadersleben this is under the Duke of Sleswick who is of the Blood Royal of Denmark Charles Gustavus King of Sweden took Jutland in his late Wars and thence passed over the Ice into the Neighbouring Islands It was the Country most suppose of the ancient Cimbri Ixar a small Town in the Kingdom of Arragon upon the River Martinium twelve Miles from Sarragoza to the South which gives the Title of a Duke Ixe a Kingdom on the South of Japan Iyo a Province in Japan in Xicoca towards the West of it and the Island Ximoam which has in it a Town of the same Name K A. KAchemire a Kingdom in the Estates of the Great Mogul along the Mountain Caucasus towards the Kingdom of Lahor and the Borders of Indostan with a City its Capital of the same name The City is all built of Wood unwalled traversed by a River over which it has two Bridges and near a great Lake four or five Leagues in circuit falling into the same The Country affords excellent Pasturage about thirty Leagues long and twelve broad Kaimachites a Province or Tribe amongst the Asian Tartars by the great River Ghamma between Mongal to the North and the Kingdoms of Thibet and Tangut These People give Name to that part of the Ocean which bordereth upon them Kalisch Calisia a City in the Kingdom of Poland built upon the River Prosna which a little lower falls into the Warta five German Miles from the Confines of Silesia and twelve from Breslaw to the North-East It is the Capital of a Palatinate in that Kingdom and suffered very much from the Swedes in the year 1657. Kalmar See Calmar Kalmintz Celemantia called by Ptolemy the Town of the Quades is now a Village in Austria not far from the Fountains of the River Teye in the Consines of Moravia thirty Miles saith Baudrand from Zuaian a Town of Moravia to the West Kalmouchs a People or Tribe of the Grand Tartary toward the Coast of the Caspian Sea Kam the ancient Name of Egypt Kamenieck Camienick Camenecia Clepidava Camenecum a strong City in the Vkraine in the Kingdom of Poland which is the Capital of Podolia The Poles call it Kaminieck Podelsski It is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Lemberg and stands upon a Mountain by the River Smotrzyck which a little lower falls into the Neister thirty Miles from Lemberg to the South-East eighty from Warsaw and one hundred and seventy from Constantinople towards the Frontiers of Moldavia The Turks very often attempted this Place without any success but having suffered much by Fire in 1669. and being thereupon in 1672. besieged by them it was taken the Poles being then engaged in a Civil War amongst themselves and the Town not in a condition to defend it self The Cossacks under the Command of the Sieur Mohila blocked it up in April 1687. The Polish Army offered to attack it about September following but upon the Approach of the Ottoman Forces they were both of them forced to retire the Polish Army kept it in a manner blocked up by their Encampment in September 1688. About a Month after they left the Tartars to put a Convoy of Provisions into the Place In 1689. August 20. the Forces as well of Lithuania as Poland under the Command of the great General of Poland setting down before it began a formal Attack till on the eighth of September following being crossed with ill success they raised the Siege Kaniow Kaniovia a strong Town in Poland upon the Nieper where the River Ross falls into it in the Palatinate of Kiovia It lies seven German Miles from Czyrcassis to the North West twenty seven from Kiovia to the South-East and upon the same side of the River This Town is one of the strong Places which belongs to the Cossacks Kanisa Canisia a Town of the Lower Hungary seated upon the River Sala in the County of Zalad between the Lake of Balaton and the Drave not above one Mile from the Confines of Stiria to the East This was taken by the Turks in 1600. though the Imperialists did all that was possible to prevent it the year following the Arch-Duke of Austria besieged it from the beginning of September to the end of October without any success In 1664. Count Serini besieged it and had infallibly carried it if he had been succoured in time In 1688. June 30. the Count de Budiani blockaded it with a Body of six thousand Hungarians and two thousand Heydukes which continued till April 13. 1690. when in pursuance of a Capitulation that the Emperour had ratified the Keys of the Gates hanging upon a Chain of Gold were delivered to the Count de Budiani by a Turk saying I herewith consign into your hands the strongest Fortress in the Ottoman Empire The Imperialists found in it great store of large Artillery taken heretofore from the Christians and some with old German Inscriptions Kargapol Cargapolia a City in Muscovy in the Western parts of that Kingdom near the Lake of Onega between the Confines of Sweden and the Dwina there is a Lake and a River of the same Name belonging to this City Karkessa a Town in Arabia Deserta Karn Taurn a Mountain in Carinthia Karnwaldt a Forest in Switzerland Karopnitze Orbelus a Mountain in Macedonia which is a Spur of
took this City and was therefore called BRITANNICVS He made it a Roman Colony planting in it a Regiment of old Soldiers and ordered Money to be Coined with this Inscription COL CAMALODVN Cambden saith from this Money it is Collected this Expedition was in the twelfth Year of his Reign fifty two years after the Birth of Christ Certain it is this City soon felt the fury of the Britains under Boadicia Qu. of the Iceni who took and burnt it and put all the Romans to the Sword about the Year of Christ sixty three Yet the Romans rebuilt it as appears by Antoninus Edward the Son of Alfred a Saxon King finding it much ruined by the Danes repaired and fortified it with a Castle William the Conqueror had here one hundred and eighty Houses in the Tenure of the Burgesses and eighteen wasted In Mr. Cambden's time it was a well inhabited Town consisting of one Street of a Mile in length built on the ridge of an Hill and having a convenient Haven Now not only a Corporation which sends two Burgesses to Parliament but also made a Viscounty the thirteenth of Charles II. and given to the late Earl of Essex The Maleas are a People which live in the Mountains of Malabar towards the Confines of Coromandel near the Dominions of the King of Madura Amongst them there live many Christians of the old Conversion called the Christians of S. Thomas Maleg a River of the Vpper Aethiopia which ariseth in the Kingdom of Damut and receiving the River Anquet after a Course of eighty Leagues falls into the Nile in Nubia below the Province of Fasculon Malaguette Mallaguete or Managuete the Western part of Guiney in Africa called by the Dutch Tand-Cust by the French Cote des Graives about 60 Leagues long extending from the River Sanguin to the Cape of Palmes which Cape separates it from Guinea propria It hath the reputation of a considerable place for the Pepper trade First planted with some Colonies of French and afterwards by the Portuguese English and Dutch Malemba a Kingdom of Africa betwixt the Kingdom of Angola and the Lake of Zembre Malespine a Marquisate and Souereignty in Tuscany in Italy near the States of Genoua The same properly with the ancient principality or now Dukedom of Massa belonging formerly to the Family of the Malespini which since has been incorporated with the House of Cibo Malfi Amalphis or Amalphi a City in the Kingdom of Naples in the Hither Principato honoured with an Archbishops See and a Dukedom but little and not well inhabited It lies on the North side of the Bay of Salerno eleven from Salerno to the West and twenty two from Naples to the South The Emperor Lotharius II. in the War he undertook in the behalf of Pope Innocent II. against Roger K. of Sicily and Anacletus an Antipope mastered and plundered this City They pretend that here are the Bones of St. Andrew the Apostle brought from Judea about the Year 1206 and that the Seaman's Compass was invented here by Flavio Gioïa an Italian in 1300. P. Nicholas II. celebrated a Council here in 1059. in which the Dukedoms of Puglia and Calabria were confirmed to Robert Guichard the Valiant Norman for his Services in the expulsion of the Saracens Long. 38. 35. Lat. 40. 52. Malines See Mechelen Maliapur Maliapura a City on the Coast of Coromandel commonly called St. Thomas as being the place of the Martyrdom of that Apostle and an Archiepiscopal City written also Meliapor it was taken by the French in 1671. and deserted two years after Long. 108. 50. Lat. 13. 12. Malling West a Market Town in the County of Kent in Aylesford Lath. Mallorca See Majorca Malmesbury Maldunense Caenobium a Town built on the Western Bank of the River Avon the Capital of its Hundred on the Confines of the County of Glocester in the County of Wiltshire which took its name and rise from Maidulph a Learned Irish Scot who being highly admired both for his Piety and Learning erected here a School and a Monastery which Adelme his Scholar much improved becoming after his death the Tutelar Saint of Athelstane King of England who died in 938. after he had much enriched this Monastery by his Princely Donations this Adelme was the first who taught the Saxons the Latin Poetry No less honor is due to this Place on the score of William of Malmesbury a Learned Historian for the Times in which he lived which was about 1143. The Monastery thrived so well that at the suppression of it by Henry VIII its Revenue was above eight hundred and three pounds the year Whether its late Philosopher Thomas Hobbs has added to the Honor of this Place by being born here is left to the Judgment of Posterity The Town is now a Corporation represented by its Burgesses in Parliament and in a tolerable Condition by reason of its Clothing Trade It has six Bridges over the River being almost encircled therewith A Synod was held at it in 705. or 707. Malmugon Malmoe Malmogia a City in Scania in the Kingdom of Sweden called by the Hollanders Elbogon because it represents the Bent of the Elbow of an Arm. It was built in 1319. and has a safe Harbor over against Coppenhagen on the Sound In 1434. here was a strong Castle built by Ericus King of Denmark the first Encourager of lasting Architecture in this Kingdom In 1658. it first came into the hands of the Swedes in 1676. the Danes endeavoured the recovery of it by a Siege but without success they did the like the year following with the like event It stands four Danish Miles from Coppenhagen to the East Malpas a Market Town in Cheshire in the Hundred of Broxton Malta Melita and Island belonging to Africa in the Mediterranean Sea by some taken for the Place where S. Paul suffered Shipwrack in the Year of Christ 58. It s length is twenty Miles breadth twelve circuit about sixty which is its distance too from Pachyno the most South-Eastern Cape of Sicily one hundred and ninety from the nearest Coast of Africa Taken from the Saracens by Roger the Norman Earl of Sicily in 1089. And was under the Kings of Sicily till Charles V. granted it to the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem now called Knights of Malta from it after they were beaten out of Rhodes in 1530 that he might the easier protect Sicily from the Incursions of the Moors In 1566 they began to build the Bourg or principal City after Solyman the Magnificent had in 1565. reduced the greatest part of the old Town into Dust by a Siege of five Months managed by Dragut his General with the loss of twenty four thousand Men spent to no purpose on this small Island There are sixty Villages in it and three Cities all seated at the East end within the distance of eight Miles which have two large Havens divided by a Rock on the Point stands the Castle of S. Hermes to defend the entrance
County of Vallesia S. Neots or S. Needs a Market Town in the County of Huntingd. in the Hundred of Toseland Deriving its Name from a learned Monk of Glastenbury called Neotus whose Body being translated hither from S. Neots or Neotstoke in Cornwall the Palace of Earl Elfride in this Town was in honour thereof converted into a Monastery S. Nicolas Fanum Sancti Nicolai a pleasant Town upon the Meurte in Lorain two Leagues above Nancy to the South much addicted to the Honour of S. Nicolas Bishop of Myra whose Reliques it reserves § There is another Town of the same Name in Flanders three Miles from Antwerp toward Gant from which it stands five Miles S. Nicolas a City of Moscovy upon the White Sea on the Western Shoar of the River Dwina over against Archangel from which it stands ten German Miles to the North-West A Place of so considerable a Trade that the White Sea is from it frequently called the Bay of S. Nicolas into which the Dwina falls S. Omers Audomarensis Vrbs a City in Artois heretofore called the Abbey of Sithieu upon the River Aa which beneath Gravelin falls into the British Sea eight Miles from Bologne to the East three from Arras to the North six from Dunkirk to the South-East and five from Gravelin to the East It has this Name from Audomarus a holy Bishop who died here in 695. Made a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Cambray in 1559. in the stead of Terouanne a ruined City which stands three Miles from it to the North. Fulco Abbot of S. Bartin began to wall it about the year 880. Baldwin II. Earl of Flanders perfected that Work in 902 There was a Council held here in 1099 under Robert Earl of Flanders and another in 1583. About 1595 Philip II. King of Spain sounded here a College for English Jesuits to which he gave a good Annuity That House has since purchased Watton Cloister a pleasant Place belonging before to the Benedictines two Leagues from S. Omers which is worth five hundred pounds a year In 1639 the French besieged this Place without any good success But in 1677 the Spanish Forces being much weakened after the Battel of Cassel they took it and by the Treaty of Nimeguen in 1678 it was yielded to them Long. 23. 22. Lat. 50. 47. It is a handsome large City strongly sortified near a great Lake with the River and a Marsh on one side of it and a Castle and Fosses on the other S. Palais Fanum S. Palatii the capital Town of the Lower Navarre under the French situated upon the River Bidouss● near Grammont S. Papoul Fanum Papuli a small City in Languedoc which is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Tolouse by the Institution of Pope John XXII who changed its antient Monastery that had been sounded about the end of the eighteenth Contury into a Cathedral in the year 1317. Five Leagues from Carcassone to the south-South-West and nine from Tolouse S. Paul de Leon. See Leon or Leondoul S. Paul de Trois Chasteaux Augusta Tricastinorum Sancti Pauli Tricastinorum Civitas an ancient City ascribed by Pliny to Gallia Narbonensis now in the Dauphine and a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Arles but formerly of Vienne It is a flourishing Town built upon an advanced Cliff one Mile from the Rhosne four from Montelimart to the South and from Oranges to the North. The Huguenots had the possession of it near fifty years in the last Age till 1599. It is the Capital of the Territory called Tricastin which preserves the name of the antient People Tricastini mentioned by Ptolemy S. Pierre le Moutier Monasterium Sancti Petri a Town in the Province of Nivernois in which the Law-Courts of that Province are fixed It stands between Nevers to the North and Moulins to the South seven Leagues from either S. Pons de Tomiers Tomeria or Pontiopolis Sancti Pontii Tomeriarum Vrbs a City of Languedoc which is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Narbonne from whence it stands eight Leagues to the North and a little more from Alby to the North-West It is a small City seated amongst the Mountains not much peopled and honored with this Bishops See by Pope John XXII in 1318 who at the same time changed its Benedictine Abbey that had been founded in the year 936. by Raymond sirnamed Pons Pontius Earl of Tolouse into a Cathedral The Bishop is Lord of the Place S. Quintin Augusta Nova Veromanduorum Quinctinopolis Samarobrina Quintini Fanum a City of Picardy upon the River Somme or rather between it and the Oyse which sprung out of a Roman Town called Augusta Nova c. two Miles from this Place It stands six Leagues from Peronne to the North-East and seven from Cambray to the South Taken by the Spaniards in 1557 after a great Defeat of the French Forces upon S. Quintin's day Aug. 10 and restored by the Treaty of Cambray in 1559. The French sometimes write it S. Quentin It is the Capital of the County of Vermandois in Picardy hath been honoured with the Sessions of French Synods in the yeares 1235. 1237. and 1271. and now contains divers Monasteries and Churches besides a Collegiate Church S. Semi a small Town in Provence four Leagues from Arles adorned with a Collegiate Church of the Foundation of Pope John XXII about the year 1330. It s antient Name was Glanum There are Urns Medals and Inscriptions frequently discovered here which prove its Antiquity And near it a triumphal Arch with a stately Mausoleum illustrated with Trophies is observed with admiration S. Semo Fanum S. Remuli or Remigii a Sea-Town upon the Coasts of Genoua in Italy in a fruitful Country for Oranges Citrons and Olives Santa Saba so called by the Italians or the Province of Arcegovina lies between Dalmatia Bossinia and the Quarter of Montenegro seventy Miles long thirty broad inhabited by about fifty thousand Families of which the Turks make not the tenth part Castlenovo stands in this Province The Inhabitants were very forward to put themselves under the Protection of the Venetians in 1688. S. Salvador Soteropolis the Capital City of the Kingdom of Congo in Africa seated one hundred and forty Miles to the East from the Ocean and sixty from the River Zaire to the South The Inhabitants call it Banza but the devout Portuguese gave it this Name S. Salvador Soteropolis a City in South America which is the Capital of Brasil an Archbishops See the Seat of the Vice-Roy and of the Courts of Justice for that Kingdom It stands on the Eastern Shoar of Brasil has a capacious Harbor on the Ocean strongly fortified and defended by three Forts yet the Hollanders took this City in 1624. The year following the Portuguese recovered it and are at this day in the Possession of it The Archbishops See was erected in 1676 by Pope Innocent XI San Salva●o● a ●●●ll City in North America in the Province of Gua●i●●ala called by the Natives Cuzcatlan
a City placed by Pliny in Liburnia now in Croatia and a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Spalato It stands upon the Shoars of the Adriatick Sea at the bottom of a Mountain thirty five Miles from Nona to the South-West and fifty from the Borders of Italy to the East This City belongs to the Kingdom of Hungary and is under the Emperor it has an old Castle a very strong Fort built on a steep Hill and a Harbour upon the Gulph of Venice Segni Signia Vrbs Volscorum a City of great Antiquity in the States of the Church in Campagna di Roma under the Dominion of the Pope giving the Title of a Duke to the Family of Sfortia It stands on the top of a Mountain called by its own name La Montagna de Segni thirty two Miles from Rome to the East and twelve from Preneste to the South In this Place Organs were first invented and Pope Vitalianus was born The Popes Innocent III. Gregory IX and Alexander IV. were all of the House of the Counts of Segni For this Place was an Earldom before a Dukedom Segorve or Segorvia Segorbia Segobriga a City of the Kingdom of Valentia upon the River Morvedre which a little lower falls into the Mediterranean Sea it is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Valentia small and not well Peopled Eight Miles from Valentia to the North-West and twelve from Tervel to the South-East Segovia Vrbs Arcevacorum in Pliny Segubia in Ptolemy Segobia in the Councils is a City in New Castile in Spain which is a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Toledo A celebrated Place well Peopled and Rich by reason of a great Cloathing Trade driven in it And besides very large Suburbs it has a Castle called El Alcaser By the City on the North-side flows a small River called Eresma It stands at the foot of an Hill in a pleasant Plain has a noble Aquaduct supported by a hundred and seventy seven Arches in double Rows which reach from one Hill to another built by the Emperor Trajane This City is twenty Spanish Leagues from Toledo to the North. Long. 16. 30. Lat. 41. 15. Segovia La Nueva a City in the Island of Manilia one of the Philippines under the Spaniards on the East side of the Island and a Bishops See Segre Sicoris a River in Catalonia which ariseth in the County of Cerdagne at the foot of the Pyrenean Hills in the Borders of France and watering Livia Cerdagne and Vrgel receives the Noguera Pallaresa and the Noguera Rogercana the first at Camarasa the second above Lerida beneath it comes in the Cinca a great River above Mequinenca below which this River Segre unites with the Ebro nine Miles above Garcia to the West Segura Serabis Sorabis a River of Spain which ariseth in New Castile from a Mountain of the same name and flowing through the Kingdom of Murcia falls into the Bay of Alicant having watered Caravacca Murcia and Orihuela Sehusen Senohusium a City of Brandenburgh Seididag See Agion Oros. La Seille Sala Salia a River of Lorain which ariseth out of the Lake de Lindre and flowing North-West watereth Dieuze Nomeny and Going and at Metz falls into the Moselle La Seine Seyne Sequana one of the principal Rivers of France which ariseth in the Dukedom of Burgundy in a mountainous place near the Castle of Chanceaux two Leagues from a Town called Seine and six from Dijon to the North. Being augmented by some smaller Rivers it watereth Chastillion Bar sur Seine Troye Pont sur Seine above which the Aube comes in and beneath it the Yonne and the Loing so it hasteth by Melun to Corbeil The Marne comes in a little above Paris the Glory of this River and beneath that City above Poissy the Oise the Epte and in Normandy the Eure and the Andelle above Roan the Capital of Normandy At Caudebec in Normandy it forms a great Arm of the Sea which admits the Tides of the Ocean thirty Leagues into the Land gives passage to a Ship of great Burthen as high as Roan and smaller Ships as high as Paris Selby a large Market Town in the West-Riding of Yorkshire and the Hundred of Barkston upon the River Ouse Remarkable for being the Birth-place of K. Henry I. Selemne the name in Pausanias of a River of the Peloponnesus gliding by Patras in the Province of Clarentia Seleschia Seleucia a City of Cilicia which is an Archbishops See under the Patriarch of Antioch twelve Miles from the Mediterranean Sea to the North. Long. 64. 00. Lat. 38. 40. The Antients gave it the Titles of Seleucia Olbia Seleucia Hiriae and Seleucia Aspera which latter might be occasioned by the many Mountains in this Country Gregory Nazianzen calls it Seleucia S. Theclae because it was famous for the Sepulchre of that Martyr In the year 359. the Arrians assembled a Council of a hundred and sixty Bishops here to which S. Hilary Bishop of Poictiers came being at that time an Exile in Phrygia Seleucajelbor Seleucia Pieria a City of Syria built by Seleucus Son of Antiochus King of Syria near the Mouth of the River Orontes ten Miles from Antioch which is a Bishops See under the Patriarch of Antioch Seleucia Aspera the same with Seleschia Seleucia ad Tigrim the same with Bachad Seleucia Pieria the same with Seleucajelbor Seleucia ad Belum the same with Divortigi Seleucia Pisidiae this is an antient City of Pisidia in the Lesser Asia upon the Confines of Pamphylia in which S. Paul established the Christian Faith A Bishops See under the Archbishop of Antioch Now under the Turks called Caragar Carasazar and by others Celestria Selivrea or Selibria Selymbria Selybria a City of Thrace upon the Propontis of great Antiquity being mentioned by Pliny and Ptolemy It was at first a Bishops See under the Archbishop of Heraclea but now the Metropolis it self Great and populous tho without Walls it has a good Harbour too This City stands twenty five Miles from Constantinople to the West also called Selombria Selo See Silaro Seilsey-Isle a Peninsula commonly so called near Chichester in the County of Sussex Assigned about the Year 711. by Edilwach King of the South Saxons to Wilfride Archb. of York for his Seat who being banished his Country by the King of Northumberland came thence to preach to the South Saxons Cedwal King of the West Saxons having Conquered the Kingdom of the South Saxons built a Monastery here and made it a Bishops See which continued in the same place above three hundred years with the Title of the Bishops of Selsey till Bishop Stigard in 1070 removed the See to Chichester It s chiefest Note now is that it yields plenty of excellent Lobsters and Cockles Semigallen Semigallia a Province of Livonia in the Kingdom of Poland which signifies in their Tongue The End of the Earth Bounded on the North by Livonia properly so called cut off by the Dwina on the South by Samogithia on the West by Curland and
and with it into the Ocean Seyde Sidon by the Germans called Said is a City of Phoenicia in Syria upon the Shores of the Mediterranean North of Tyre about a League distant from the remains of the ancient Sidon Sister to Tyre in the Scripture for its Sins and the Punishments of them A populous City full of Merchants and Artisans of all Nations driving a great Trade in Cotton and Silk The Franciscans Capuchins and Jesuits have each their Chappels the Turks seven or eight Mosques and the Jews one Synagogue here The Maronites of Mount Libanus and the Armenian Greeks enjoy the like Liberties Without the City appear many Gardens of Oranges Citrons Tamarines Palm-trees and the Fig-trees of Adam so called because bearing a Leaf of the length of six foot and the breadth of two Adam it is supposed covered his nakedness with them It hath two small Fortresses but so far ruined as to remain indefensible The Turks keep a a Sangiack here under the Bassaw of Damascus a Cady or Judge and an Aga of the Janizaries The French a Consul All which Officers are handsomely lodged the rest of the Houses are ill built The Harbor formerly was capable of receiving many and great Vessels but is now choaked with Sand to that degree as to admit only of Skiffs whilst Ships lye in the road behind the Rocks for Shelter In the Christian times it was a Bishop's See under the Archbishop of Tyre The Eutychians held Council here of twenty four Bishops in 512 under the protection of the Emperour Anastasius In 1260 the Tartars became Masters of it from whom the Turks obtain'd it about one hundred and fifty years since There is now a Caemetery upon a part of the Mountain Antilibanus in the place where the Old Sidon stood for the use of the Christians of Seyde And the Maronites have a poor Chappel by it Seyne See Seine ● Sezza Setia a City of Campagna di Roma in Italy of good Antiquity mentioned by Martial It is said to have sometime been a Bishop's See though not now Du Val places an Epispocal City of the same name in the Terra di Lavoro in the Kingdom of Naples Sfacchia Leuci a Range of Mountains in the Territory of Cydonia on the West side of the Island of Candy which gave name to the Sfacciotes who signalized themselves by their valiant resistance against the Turks when they endeavoured the ravishing that Island from the Seigniory of Venice of late years Shaftsbury Septonia a Town upon the Stoure in the North-East Borders of Dorsetshire towards Wiltshire seated in the form of a Bow on an high Hill which affords it a serene Air and a large delightful Prospect but deprives it very much of Water In the times of the Norman Conquest it had one hundred and four Houses and after this ten Parish Churches now three with about 500 Houses built of the Freestone of its own Hill Some write King Canutus the Dane died here This Town was built by King Alfred in 880 as Mr. Cambden proves from an old Inscription mentioned in William of Malmesbury In 1672 Charles II. created Anthony Ashley Cooper then Lord Chancellor of England Earl of Shaftsbury who died in Holland and his Son succeeded him in this Honour Shannon Shennyn or Shennonon Senus Sinejus a River in Ireland which is one of the principal in that Kingdom It ariseth in the County of Roscomon in the Province of Connaught out of Mount Slewnern and flowing Southward through Letrim forms a vast Lake called Myne Eske and Ree towards the North end of which on the East side stands Letrim in the middle Longford towards the South Ardagh on the West side Elphem and Roscomon and at some distance from the Lake to the South Athlone Beneath which comes in from the West the Logh a vast River from three other Lakes more to the West called Garoch Mesks and Ben-Carble on the East it receives the Anney so passing by Bannogh and Clonfort to the Lake of Derg at Kiloe it leaves that Lake and passeth to Limerick where it turns full West and between Munster to the South and Connaught to the North enters the Vergivian Ocean by a Mouth five Miles wide between Cape Leane and Cape Sanan having in this Course separated Leinster and Munster from Connaught Shap a large Village in the County of Westmorland in Westward near the River Lowther in which in the Reign of Henry I Thomas Son of Jospatrick founded an Abbey and the same was the only Abbey in this County There is near this Town a noted Well which ebbs and flows often in a day and a perfect Bow of vast Stones some nine foot high and fourteen thick pitch'd at equal distances from each other for for the space of a Mile Sheale a Town in the Bishoprick of Durham in Chester-ward upon the Mouth of the River Tine The Newcastle Coal-Fleet takes its Cargo here Sheffield a large well-built Market-town in the West riding of Yorkshire in the hundred of Strafford upon the River Dun of particular note for Iron Wares even in Chaucer's time who describes a Person with a Sheffield VVhittle by his side It shews the ruines of one of the five Castles formerly seated upon the same River Dun in the compass of ten Miles Corn especially is much bought up here for the supply of some parts of Derby and Nottingham shires as well as Yorkshire Shefford a Market Town in Bedfordshire in the Hundred of Clifton situated between two Rivulets which below it join to fall in one Stream into the Avon Sheppey Shepey Toliapis an Island on the Eastern Coast of Kent at the Mouth of the Thames and Medway Separated by the River Medway from Kent and on all other sides surrounded with the Sea About eight Miles long and six broad Fruitful in Pasturage and well watered especially on the South by Rivers The Danes Earl Goodwin his Sons and their Adherents much harassed it in former times Queensborough is its chief Town it hath several other Towns besides and hath been honoured with the Title of an Earldom in the Lady Dacres Countess of Shepey Shepton-Mallet or Malley a large Market Town in Somersetshire in the hundred of VVhiston Shipton a Market Town in VVorcestershire in the hundred of Oswalderston upon the River Stower It stands in a slip of the County taken off from VVarwickshire Shirburne Clarus Fons a Town and Castle in the North-West of Dorsetshire on the Borders of Somersetshire upon a River of the same Name which afterwards falls into the Parret the Capital of its Hundred Built on the side of an Hill in a fruitful and pleasant Country and much increased in the number of its Inhabitants and its Wealth by the Cloathing Trade In 704. a Bishop's See was erected here translated afterwards to Sunning and thence to Salisbury The Family of the Digbys Earls of Bristol are Barons of Shirburne § Also a Market Town in the West riding of Yorkshire in the Hundred of
Vberrimus undis Millia qui novies distat ab Vrbe decem Sultzbach Sultsbachium a small Town in Nortgow in the Vpper Palatinate of the Rhine one Mile distance from Amberg to the South-East which gives the Title of a Prince to some Branches of the Palatine Family Sumatra a vast Island in the East-Indies to the South-West of the Promontory of Malaccia from which it is separated only by a narrow streight as also by another from the Isle of Java to the South It extends from North-West to South-East one hundred and eighty five German Miles or nine hundred and ten English and is two hundred and ten broad in the middle There are several Kingdoms in this Island which ordinarily go to war with one another The principal of which are Achem Camper Jamby Menanchabo Pacem Palimban and Pedir The principal City in the whole Island and Kingdom is Achem towards the North the King whereof possesses one half of the Island The Coast upon the streights of the Sund is under the obedience of the King of Bantam Some parts are covered with Wood and Mountains amongst which latter one in the middle of the Island casts forth flames by intervals It is divided by the Equator into almost two equal parts the Air is very hot and unhealthful the Soil will produce little Grain but Rice and Millet It yieldeth Ginger Pepper Camphir Agarick and Cassia in great abundance Wax and Hony Silks and Cottons rich Mines of Tin Iron and Sulphur and such quantity of Gold that some conceive it to be Solomons Ophir and some the Taprobane of the ancients The Inhabitants are for the most part Pagans except the Sea Coast where Mahometanism has got some footing It has a vast number of Rivers and Marshes which with the Woods do much promote the unwholsomeness of the Air. The Hollanders enjoy four or five Fortresses in it and are become more powerful than some of the Kings The Portuguese traffick to it but it is when the others will permit them for they have no establishments here Sie Sund Sundae Fretum Sundicum fretum a streight between the Baltick Sea and the German Ocean call'd by the Dutch Ore Sunn by the English the Sound It stretcheth fifty Miles from North-West to South-East about fifteen at its greatest breadth but between Elsingburg and Cronenburg not above three over which necessitates all Ships that pass to and fro to pay a Toll to the King of Denmark he being able otherwise by the Cannon of his Castles to shut up the Passage § This name is attributed also to the Streights betwixt the Islands of Java and Sumatra in the East-Indies The Dutch call it Straet Van Sunda and Latin Writers Sundae fretum The Island of the Sund or Souud comprehend in the Portugueses's accounts who gave them this name all those Islands in the Indian Ocean which lye beyond the Promontory of Malaca some near some under the Equinoctial Commonly divided into the Islands of the Sund to the East and to the West Of the former Gilolo Banda Flores Macasar and the Moluccaes are the Principal Of the other Borneo Java and Sumatra Sundenberg or Sunderbourg a Town and Duchy in the Isle of Alsen near Iutland Sunderland Sunderlandia a small Island at the Mouth of the River VVere in the North-East part of the Bishoprick of Durham in Esington Ward once a part of the Continent but rent off by the violence of the Sea from whence it has the name of Sunderland A place of no great note only for its Sea-Coal Trade till it was made the Title of an Earldom by Charles I. who in 1627 Created Emanuel Lord Scrope of Bolton President of the North Earl of Sunderland He dying Childless Henry Lord Spenser of VVormleighton in 1643. was Created Earl of Sunderland and slain the eighth of June the same year in the first Battel of Newbery To whom suc●eeded Robert his Son sometime Principal Secretary of State and President of the Council to King James II. Sungkiang a trading and populous City in the Province of Nanking in China The Capital over two others Suntgaw or Sundgow Suntgovia a Province of Germany now under the King of France by the Peace of Munster Bounded on the North by Alsatia on the East by the Rhine and the Canton of Basil which last is sometimes included under this name on the South by the Dominions of the Bishop of Basil and on the West by the Franche Comté The Principal Places in it are Befo rt Mulhausen Ferrete whence it hath the name also of the County of Ferrete and Huningue The last has been lately fortified by the King of France Sura an ancient Episcopal City of Syria near the Euphrates The See is a Suffragan to the Archbishop of Hierapolis § Plutarch remembers us of a Town of this name in Lycia in the Lesser Asia famed for Oracles in ancient times delivered there Betwixt Phellus and Strumita Surate Surata a very famous City of the Hither Indies in the Kingdom of Guzarat upon the Bay of Cambaya under the Dominion of the great Mogul which has a convenient Port or Haven much frequented by the European and Armenian Merchants for Diamonds Pearls Ambergrease Musk Civet Spices and Indian Stuffs procured from divers parts and here laid up in Mazagines It lies saith Monsieur Thevenot 21. deg and some minutes from the Line and was then designed to be Fortified with a Brick instead of its ancient Earthen Wall which had not been able to preserve it from the depredations of a Raja In the time of the Monson or Fair kept in the Spring Quarter it is exceeding full of People not meanly furnished at others nor are those Inhabitants less considerable on the account of their Wealth than Number The English and Dutch have their Factories here it is the Staple of the English Trade in the East-Indies It has a Castle at the South end of the Town upon the River which is square flank'd at each corner by a large Tower The Ditches on three sides are filled with Sea Water on the West the River runs and there are many Cannon mounted in it The Governor commands over all the adjacent Provinces and keeps the train and equipage of a Prince For the rest you may consult Thevenot Part III. pag. 15. Surina a Province of South America between the confluence of the River Cayana and that of the Amazons Surrey Suria is separated on the North from Buckingham and Middlesex by the great River Thames on the East it is bounded by Kent on the South by Sussex and Hampshire and on the West by Hampshire and Barkshire In length thirty four Miles in breadth about twenty two in circumference one hundred and twelve including one hundred and forty Parishes with eight Market Towns The Air is sweet and pleasant the Soil especially in the verges of the County fruitful the middle Parts being somewhat hard to cultivate Whence the People are used to say their County is like a