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A16286 A briefe description of the whole world Wherein is particularly described all the monarchies, empires and kingdomes of the same, with their academies. As also their severall titles and situations thereunto adioyning. Written by the most Reverend Father in God, George, late Arch-bishop of Canterbury. Abbot, George, 1562-1633.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650, lengraver. 1636 (1636) STC 32; ESTC S115786 116,815 362

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Alexander afterward had taken Arabia and had possession thereof hee sent a Ship load of Frankincense to the Noble man and bad him serve the Gods plentifully and not offer Incense miserably Mahumet born in Arabia This is that Countrey wherein Mahumet was borne who being of meane parentage was brought up in his youth in the trade of Merchandize but afterward joyning himselfe with Theeves and Robbers his life was to rob such Merchants as passed thorow Arabia and to this purpose having gotten together many of his own Countrimen hee had afterward a whole Legion or more of the Romane Souldiers who being offended with Heraclius the Romane Emperour for want of their pay joyned themselves to him so that at length hee had a great Army where with hee spoyled the Countries adjoyning And this was about the yeare of Christ six hundred To maintaine his credit and authority with his own men hee fained that hee had conference with the Holy Ghost at such times as hee was troubled with the Falling sicknesse and accordingly he ordained a new Religion consisting partly of Iewish Ceremonies and partly of Christian Doctrine and some other things of his own invention that he might inveagle both Iewes and Christians and yet by his owne fancie distinguish his own Followers from both The Booke of his Religion is called the Alcoran The Turkes Alcaron the people which were his Sectaries whereas indeed they came of Hagar the Hand-maid of Sarah Abrahams wife and therefore should of her be called Ishmaelites or Hagarens because they would not seeme to come of a Bond-woman and from him whom they suppose a Bastard they terme themselves Saracens as comming from Sarah they are called by some Writers Arabians instead of Saracens their name being drawn from their first Countrey The Turkes Religion Mahumet did take something of his doctrine both from the Iewes and Christians as that there is but on God that there is a life eternall in another World and the ten Commandements which they doe admit and beleeve but from the Jewes alone the false Prophet did borrow divers things as that all his males should bee circumcised that they should eate no Swines-flesh that they should oftentimes bathe purge and wash themselves which divers of their people which are more religious than the ordinary sort doe five times in the day and therefore they have neere to their Churches and Houses of Devotion divers Baths whereinto when they have entred and washed themselves they doe perswade themselves that they are as cleere from sinne as they were the first day they were born The City Mecha In this Countrey of Arabia standeth a Citie called Mecha where is the place where Mahumet was buried and in remembrance of him there is builded a great Temple unto which the Turkes and Saracens yearely goe on Pilgrimage as some Christians doe to the Holy Land For they account Mahumet to be the greatest Prophet that ever came into the World saying that there were three great Prophets Moses Christ and Mahumet and a the doctrine of Moses was bettered by Christ so the Doctrine of Christ is amended by Mahumet In this respect as we reckon the computation of our yeares from the Incarnation of Christ so the Saracens account their from the time of Mahumet The Turks The Turkes biginning and their Religion whose Fame began now about 300 yeares since have imbraced the opinions and religion of the Saracens concerning Mahumet Some of our Christians doe report that Medina a Citie standing three dayes journey from Mecha is the place where Mahumet was buried and that by order from himselfe his body was put into an Iron Coffin which being carried into a Temple the roofe or vault whereof was made of Adamant or perhaps of the Loadstone is attracted unto the top of the vault there hangeth being supported by nothing But there is no certainty of this Narration This false Prophet as Lodovicus Vives de veritate fidei doth write being desirous in some sort to imitate Christ Iesus who foretold that hee should rise againe within the space of 3 dayes did give out that himselfe should rise againe but hee appointed a larger time that was after 800 yeeres The blasphemous prophecie of Mahumet and yet that time also is expired but wee heare no newes of the resurrection of Mahumet As the Devill hath ever some device to blinde the eyes of unbeleevers so hee hath suffered it to be reported and credited among the Turkes that as Moses did allude to the comming of Christ so Christ did foretell somewhat of the appearing of Mahumet Whereupon it is ordinarily received among them that when Christ in S. Johns Gospel did say That although hee departed he would send them a Comforter it was added in the Text and that shall be Mahumet But that the Christians in malice to them have raced out those words Their owne Bookes doe mention that Mahumet while hee lived was much given to lasciviousnesse Mahumet a lasciviou●●s person and all uncleannesse of body even with very beasts and his followers are so senslesse that in imitation of him they thinke no such wickednesse to be unlawfull For they are utterly unlearned and most receive whatsoever is delivered unto them out of the Alcoran Mahumet having made it a matter of death to dispute sift or call in question any thing which is written in his Law On the Westside of Arabia betweene that and Aegypt lyeth the Gulph called of the Country Sinus Arabicus by some Mare Erythraeum but commonly the Red Sea The Red Sea not of one Erythrus as some suppose but because the Land and bankes thereabout are in colour red This is that Sea through the which by Moses the people of Israel were led when they fled out of Egypt from Pharaoh God causing by his power the waters to stand on both sides of them that they passed through as on dry Land This is that Sea through which the Spices of the East Indies were in times past brought to Alexandria in Egypt and from thence dispersed into Christendome by the Venetians which Spices and Apothecaries drugs are found to be farre worse than before time they were by reason of the great moysture which they take on the water by reason of the long Navigation of the Portugales by the back part of Africa This is that Sea through the which Salomon did send for his Gold and other precious Merchandize unto the East Indies and not to the West Indies as some lately have disputed Whereout the vanity of that opinion may appeare that America and the West Indies were knowne in the time of Salomon For if he had sent thither his course had beene along the Mediterranean and through the straits of Gibralter commonly called Fretum Herculeum betweene Spaine and Barbary But the Scripture telleth that the Navy which Salomon sent forth was built at Ezion-Geber which is there also said to stand on the Red Sea So his course
might be Eastward or Southward and not Westward Mount Horeb. In the Desart of Arabia is the Mount Horeb which by some is supposed to be the same that is called Mount Sina where many think it was that Abraham should have offered up his Sonne Isaac But this is certaine that it was the place where God in the Wildernesse did give unto the people of Israel his Law of the ten Commandements in Thundring Lightning and great Earth-quake in most fearfull manner Of Africk and Egypt FRom Arabia and Palestina toward the West lyeth Africke Situation of Africk having on the North side from the one end of it to the other the Mediterranean Sea The greatest part of which Countrey although it hath beene ghessed at by Writers in former time yet because of the great heat of it lying for the most part of it under the Zona Torrida and for the Wildernesses therein it was in former time supposed by many not to bee much inhabited but of certainty by all to be very little discovered till the Portugals of late began their Navigation on the backside of Africa to the East Jndies So exact a description is therefore not to be looked for as hath beene of Asia and Europe The Countrey of Egypt Ioyning to the Holy Land by a little Isthmos is the Countrey of Egypt which is a Land as fruitfull as any almost in the world although in these dayes it doth not answere to the fertility of former times This is that which in the time of Ioseph did relieve Canaan with corne and the family of Iacob which did so multiply in the land of Aegypt that they were growne to a huge multitude when God by Moses did deliver them thence This Countrey did yeeld exceeding abundance of Corne unto the Citie of Rome Jts fertility whereupon Aegypt as well as Sicilia was commonly called Horreum populi Romani It is observed from all antiquity that almost never any raine did fall in the land of Aegypt Whereupon the raining with thunder lightning fire running on the ground was so much more strange when God plagued Pharaoh in the dayes of Moses But the flowing of the River Nilus over all the Countrey their Cities onely and some few Hils excepted doth so water the Earth that it bringeth forth fruit abundantly The flowing of Nilus The flowing of which River yearly is one of the greatest miracles of the World no man being able to yeeld a sufficient and assured reason thereof although in Herodotus and Diodorus Siculus many probable causes and opinions are assigned thereof That there doth not use any raine to fall in Aegypt besides other heathen testimonies and experiences of Travailers may bee gathered out of the Scripture for in the 10 chapter of Deuteronomy GOD doth make an Antithesis betweene the Land of Canaan and Aegypt saying that Aegypt was watered as a man would water a Garden of herbes that is to say by the hand But they should come into a Land which had Hils and Mountains and which was watered with the raine of Heaven and yet some have written that ever now and then there is mistes in Aegypt which yeeld though not Raine yet a pretty Dew It is noted of this River that if in ordinary places it do flow under the height of fifteene cubits that then for want of moysture the earth is not fruitfull and if it doe flow above seventeene Cubits that there is like to be a dearth by reason of the abundance of moysture the Water lying longer on the Land than the inhabitants doe desire It is most probably conjectured that the falling and melting of Snow from those Hils which bee called Luna Montes doe make the increase of the River Nilus And the custome of the people in the Southerne parts of Arabia is that they do receive into Ponds Dams the water that doth hastily fall and the same they let out with Sluces some after some which causeth it orderly to come downe into the plaines of Aegypt For the keeping up of these Dammes the Countrey of Aegypt hath time out of minde paid a great tribute to Prester John Which when of late it was denyed by the Turke Prester John caused all the Sluces to bee letten goe on the sudden whereby hee marvellously annoyed drowned up a great part of the Country of Aegypt Learning very ancient in Egypt In Aegypt learning hath bin very ancient but especially the knowledge of Astronomy and Mathematickes whereof before the time of Tull●e their Priests would report that they had the discent of 1500. yeares exactly recorded with observations Astrologicall which as it is a fable unlesse they doe reckon their yeares by the Moone as some suppose they did every Moneth for a yeare so it doth argue knowledge to have beene among them very ancient Their Priests had among them a kinde of writing and describing of things by picture which they did call their Hicroglyphica This in times ●past was a Kingdome Their Pyramides one of the Wonders of the world and by the Kings thereof were built those great Pyramides which were held to be one of the seven wonders of the world being mighty huge buildings erected of exceeding height for to shew the magnificence of their founders There is part of two or three of them remaining unto this day Divers learned men are at this day of opinion that when the children of Israel were in Aegypt and so oppressed by Pharaoh as is mentioned in the beginning of the booke of Exodus that their labour in burning of Bricke was partly imployed to the erecting of some of those Pyramides but the Scripture doth onely mention walling of Cities The Founders of these Pyramides were commonly buried in or under them and it is not unfit to remember that the Kings and great men of Aegypt had much cost bestowed upon them after they were dead For in as much as Arabia was neere unto them whence they had most precious Balmes and other costly Spices they did with charge embalme their dead and that with such curious art that the flesh therof and the skin will remaine unputrified for divers hundred yeares and all learned men thinke thousands of yeares Whereof experiments are plentifull at this day by the whole bodies hands or other parts which by Merchants are now brought from thence and doth make the Mummia which the Apothecaries use the colour being very blacke and the flesh clung unto the bones Moses doth speake of this when he saith that Iacob was embalmed by the Physicians after the manner of embalming of the Aegyptians But this manner of embalming is ceased long since in Aegypt The Citie Memphis In Aegypt did stand the great Citie Memphis which at this day is called Caire one of the famous Cities of the East Here did Alexander build that Citie which unto this day is of his name called Alexandria being now the greatest Citie of Merchandize in all Aegypt of which Amianus
lyeth Chaldea having on the East side Assyria on the West Syria or Palesti●a on the North Armenia on the South the desart of Arabia This Countrey is often called by the name of Mesopotamia which name it hath because it lyeth in the middle of two great Rivers Tygris and Euphrates It is called also by the name of Babylonia which word of it selfe properly taken doth signifie onely that part of the Countrey which standeth about Babylon Babylon the chiefe City of Chaldea The chiefe City whereof was Babylon whose ruines doe remaine unto this day It was a rich and most pleasant City for all kinde of delight and was in the later time of that Monarchy the Imperiall City of the Assyrians where Nebuchadnezzar and other their great Kings did lye It was to this city that the children of Israel were carried captives which thereof was called the Captivity of Babylon The Kings of Persia also did keep their residence here it was buil● upon the River Euphrates some part of it standing on the one side and some part on the other having for it's foundresse Semiramis the wife of Ninus Ammianus Marsellinus reporteth one thing of this Countrey wherein the admirable power o● God doth appeare The admirable power of God in preserving the people for he writeth that in these parts are a huge number of Lyons which were like enough to devoure up both men and beasts throughout the Countrey but withall hee saith that by reason of the store of water and mudde thereof there doe bree● yearely an innumerable company o● Gnats whose property is to fly unto the eye of the Lyon as being a bright and orient thing wher● byting and stinging the Lyon he teareth so fiercely with his clawes that he putteth out his owne eyes and by that meanes many are drowned in the Rivers others starve for want of prey and many the more easily killed by the Inhabitants It is supposed by Divines that in this Mesopotamia betweene the River Tygris and Euphrates Paradise did stand Note This was the Countrey wherein Abraham the Patriarch was borne unto which the Romanes could very hardly extend their dominion For they had much to doe to get the governement of any thing beyond the River Euphrates From this people it is thought the wise-men came which brought presents to Christ by the guiding of the Starre For as in India and all the Easterne parts so especially in this Countrey their Noblemen and Priests and very many people doe give themselves to all Arts of Divination Here were the great Southsayers Enchanters and Wise men as they call them Here were the first Astrologians Here were the first Astrologians which are so described and derided in the Scripture and against the Inhabitants of Babylon and Chaldea were the Lawes of the Romanes made which are against divining Mathematicians who in Tullie 〈◊〉 Divinatione Cornelius Tacitus as also in the Lawes of the Emperours are ordinarily collected by the name of Chaldeans and indeed from these and from the Aegyptians is supposed to have sprung the first knowledge of Astronomy It is thought that a great reason whereof these Chaldeans were expert in the laudable knowledge o● Astronomy was partly because th● Countrey is so plaine that being without hils they might more fully and easily discover the whole fac● of the Heaven and partly because the old Fathers which lived so long not onely before but in some good part also after the Floud of Noah did dwell in or neere to these parts and they by observation of their owne did finde out and discover many things of the heavenly Bodies which they delivered as from hand to hand to their posteritie But as corruption doth staine the best things so in processe of time the true Astronomie was defiled with superstitious Rules of Astrologie which caused the Prophets Isaiah and Ieremiah so bitterly to inveigh against them And then in their fabulositie they would report that they had in their Records Observations for five and twenty thousand yeares which must needs be a very great untruth unlesse wee will qualifie it as some have done expounding their yeares not of the Revolution of the sunne but of the Moone whose course is ended in the space of a moneth Of Asia the lesse ON the North-West side of Mesopotamia lyeth that Countrey which is now called Natolia but in times past Asia minor having on the North side Pontus Euxinus Situation of Asia the lesse on the West the Hellespont and on the South the maine Mare Mediterraneum In the ancient writings both of the Graecians and of the Romanes this is oftentimes called by the single name of Asia because it was best knowne unto them and they were not so much acquainted with the farther places of Asia the Great Richnesse of the Countrey This Countrey in generall for the fruitfulnesse of the Land standing in so temperate a Climate and for the conveniencie of the Sea every way and so many good Havens hath beene reputed alwaies a very commodious and pleasurefull Countrey It is wholly at this day under the Turke The Mountaine Taurus goeth along from the West unto the East part of it The greatnesse of this Countrey is such that it hath comprehended many Kingdomes and large Provinces besides Cities of great fame On the South-east part thereof neere to Palestina lyeth Cilicia Cilicia The city Tarsus the chiefe Citie whereof is Tarsus the Countrey of Saint Paul the place whither Salomon sent for great store of his Gold and provision for the Temple whither Ionas also fled when he should have gone to Niniveh In the straits of this Cilicia neere to the Mountaine Taurus Alexander his overthrow of Darius did Alexander give a great overthrow in person to Darius in the joyning of their first battaile This place seemes to have beene very fortunate for great fights in as much as there also neere unto the straits was the battaile fought out betweene Severus the Emperour and Niger who being Governour of the Romanes of Syria would needs have aspired to the Empire but in a battaile which was very hardly fought out he was overthrowne in the straits of Cilicia In the very corner where Cilicia is joyned unto the upper part of Syria is a little Bay which in times past was named Sinus J sicus neere unto which Alexander built one of his Cities which he called by his owne name The City of Alexandria But howsoever in times past it was named Alexandria it is now by the Venetians and other Christians called Alexandretta as who should say little Alexandria in comparison of the other In Aegypt the Turkes doe call it Scandar●nd and it is a petty Haven where our Merchants do land most of their goods which are afterwards by Camels carried up to Aleppo At this day the Citie is so decayed that there bee onely a few houses there Westward from Cilicia lieth the Province called Pamphilia Pamphilia The
Marcellinus doth observe that there was never any or almost hath ever beene but that once in the day the Sunne hath beene ever seene to shine over Alexandria This Citie was one of the foure Patriarchall Seas which were appointed in the first Nicene Councell Good Lawes made by the Kings of Egypt This Countrey was governed by a King as long agoe as almost any Countrey in the World Here raigned Amasis who made those good Lawes spoken of by Herodotus and Diodorus Siculus in whose writings the ancient customes of the Aegyptians are worthy to be read After Alexanders time Ptolomeus one of his Captaines had this Kingdome of whom all his successors were called Ptolemies as before time all their Kings were called Pharaohs they continued long friends and in league with the people of Rome till the time of Iulius Caesar but afterward they were as subjects to the Romanes til● the Empire did decay When they had withdrawne themselves from the Romanes governement they set up a Prince of their owne whom they termed the Sultan or Souldan of Aegypt of whom about 400. yeares since Saladine was one But when the race of these were out the Mamalukes who were the guard of the Sultane as the Ianisaries be to the Turk appointed a Prince at their pleasure till that now about an 100. yeares agoe or lesse the Turke Selimus possessed himselfe with the sole government of the Countrey so that at this day Aegypt is wholly under the Turke There bee Christians that now live in Aegypt paying their tribute unto the Turke as others doe now also in Gracia Aeneas Silvius doth report in his History De mundo universo cap. 60. that divers did goe about to digge through that little Istmos or Strait which at the top of the Red Sea doth joyne Aegypt to some part either of Arabia or of the Holy Land imagining the labour not to bee great in as much as they conceived the space of ground to be no more than 1500 furlongs Sesostris the King of Aegypt as he saith did first attempt this Secondly Darius the great Monarch of the Persians Thirdly Ptolomy one of the Kings of Aegypt who drew a ditch a hundred foot broad thirty foot deepe and thirty seven Miles and a halfe long but when hee intended to goe forward hee was forced to cease for feare of inundation and over-flowing the whole land of Aegypt the Red Sea being found to bee higher by three Cubites than the ordinary plaine of Aegypt was But Plinie affirmeth that the digging was given over lest the Sea being let in should marre the water of Nilus which alone doth yeeld drinke to the Aegyptians Pet. Maffaeus in his Indian story doth tell that there was a Portugall also that of late yeares had a conceit to have had this worke finished that so hee might have made the third part of the old knowne world Africa to have beene an Iland compassed round with the Sea Men commonly in the description of Aegypt doe report that whole Country to stand in Africke but if wee will speake exactly and repute Nilus to bee the bound betweene Asia and Africke we must then acknowledge that the Eastern part of Aegypt from Nilus and so forward to the Red Sea doth lye in Asia which is observed by Peter Martyr in that pretty Treatise of his De legatione Babylonica Although this Countrey of Aegypt doth stand in the selfe same Climate that Mauritania doth yet the inhabitants there are not black but rather dunne or tawny Of which colour Cleopatra was observed to be who by inticement so wonne the love of Julius Caesar and Antony And of that colour doe those runnagates by devices make themselves to be who goe up and downe the world under the name of Aegyptians being indeed but counterfeits and the refuse or rascality of many Nations Of Cyrene and Africke the lesse ON the West side of Aegypt lying along the Mediterranean The Countrey of Cyrene is a Country which was called in old time Cyrene wherein did stand that Oracle which was so famous in the time of Alexander the Great called by the name of the Temple or Oracle of Jupiter Hammon whither when Alexander did repaire as to take counsell of himselfe and his successe the Priests being before taught what they should say did flatteringly professe him to bee the Sonne of God and that he was to be adored So that as the Oracle of Delphos and some other were plaine delusions of Sathan who did raigne in that darke time of ignorance so this of Iupiter Hammon may be well supposed to be nothing else but a cousenage of the Priests In this Countrey and all neere about where the Oracle stood are very great Wildernesses where did appear to Alexander for foure daies journey neither Grasse Tree Water Man Bird nor Beast but onely a deepe kinde of sand so that hee was enforced to carry water with him for himselfe and his company and all other provision on Cammels backs At this day this Countrey hath lost his old name and is reckoned as a part of Aegypt and lyeth under the Turke In dry Countries as in Africa and the Wildernesse of Arabia they have much use of Cammels First because they can carry a huge burthen of water and other provision Secondly because that themselves will goe a long time without drinke travelling as Solinus writeth foure dayes together without it but then drinking excessively and that especially of muddy and puddle water And thirdly because that in an extremity those that travell with them doe let them bloud in a veine and sucke out the bloud whereby as the owner is much relieved so the Camell is little the worse Westward from this Countrey along the Mediterranean lieth that which in ancient time was called Africa minor for as in Asia one part above another was by an excellency called Asia or Asia the lesse so this part of Africke was termed by the Romanes sometimes Africa simply sometime Africa the lesse In this Countrey did stand that place so famous mentioned by Salust under the name of Phillenorum arae which was the bound in that time betweene Africke and Cyrene On the North and East part hereof in the Sea neere unto the shore was that Quick-sand which in times past did destroy so many ships and was called Syrtis magna as also on the North and West part was the other sand called Syrtis parva Some part of this Countrey was heretofore under the Sultan of Egypt whose dominion did extend it self so farre to the West and there was diuided from the Kingdome of Tunis but it is now wholly under the Turk and is commonly reputed as a part of Barbary For now by a generall name from the confines of Cyrene unto the West as farre as Hercules Piller is called Barbary though it containe in it divers Kingdomes as Tunis Fessa and Morocco Of Mauritania Caesariensi A Part of that country which by a generall name is called at this day