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A51007 A new voyage to Italy with a description of the chief towns, churches, tombs, libraries, palaces, statues, and antiquities of that country : together with useful instructions for those who shall travel thither / by Maximilian Mission ; done into English and adorned with figures.; Nouveau voyage d'Italie. English Misson, Maximilien, 1650?-1722. 1695 (1695) Wing M2253; ESTC R28829 405,658 759

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an Animal in the Alps 105 Bezoar-Stone 95 Miraculous Stones 251 Stone Knife 123 The Devil's Stone 37 Stoves of Germany 114 Prodigious Strength 100 103 Superstition Popular 263 Susanna 91 Sweetness out of Bitterness 255 Sword us'd at the Emperor's Coronation 68 T. Tabacco 30 65 Tent of the Grand Visier 92 Terracina 271 Terni 255 Theatines 288 St. Theodore neglected at Venice 157 Thief hang'd with a Golden Halter 165 Treacle 53 Thomas Aniello 305 St. Thomas Aquinas 267 274 Thomas Schuweiker wrote with his Foot 59 Thorns without Pricks 280 Treasury of Munich 91 Of St. Mark 162 Of Loretto 243 Tyber 259 Titus Livius 139 Tolentino 248 Tomb of St. Ursula 38 Of a Daughter of a Duke of Brabant Ibid. Of the Electors of Mentz 49 Of Drusus 47 Of the Counts Palatines 63 Of the Emperour Louis IV. 89 Of Maximilian I. 100 Of the Scaligers 120 Of Antenor 134 Of Lupatus 136 Of Titus Livius 139 Of Ariosto 215 Of Theodoricus 217 Of Placidia Galla 219 Of Valentinian and Honorius Ibid. Of the Poet Dante Ibid. Of Gregory XII 247 Of Charles of Bourbon Constable of France 278 Of Munatius Plancus Ibid. Tombs many at Naples 293 c. Tomb of Agrippina 340 Of Virgil 341 Of Sannazarius 343 Torrents of Sulphur kill the Birds that fly over Averno 332 Tower gilded 155 Tower of Orlando 278 Trachyna 271 Treaty between the Elector of Brandenburg and the Duke of Newburg concerning the free exercise of the Protestant and Roman Religions 31 A Tree Two thousand Years old 274 Trent 110 Three Taverns or the ThreeShops 264 Cunning Trick of the Priests of Loretto 244 Trunks of Vines very great 218 Troop of Beggars 95 A monstrous Tun 62 V. Valmanara Garden of the Count of that Name 131 Vanity of Vanities 209 Velino a River which throws it-self down near Terni 256 Velitri 262 Venice 147 Often falln from its Constitution 173 Vessels of the Virgin Mary 235 Verdure perpetual 254 Verona 115 Original of a Procession made there every Year 124 Verses on the Conception of the Prince of Wales 238 Vertue sacrific'd 141 Vesuvius 309 Via Flaminia 259 268 Via Appia 268 Viae Consulares 270 Vicenza 127 Vines 115 218 Villa Marii 261 Virgil of the Vatican 163 Virgil's Tomb 341 Virgil sometimes a Saint sometimes a Witch 342 Virgin Mary created Eve 85 11000 Virgins 38 Union of Utrecht 29 University of Utrecht Ibid. Of Duisbourg 32 Of Mentz 49 Of Heidelberg 63 Of Dillingen 82 Of Ferrara 215 Voyages pleasant 144 Volturno River 282 St. Ursula 38 227 Utensils of Sacrifices 121 Utrecht 29 W. Prince of Wales's Conception and Verses on that Occasion 237 238 239 Deep Wells 67 Wesel 31 Wiligise Elector of Mentz and Son of a Cart-Wright 48 Wimpsen 64 Wind-Gun 70 Wine of Venice 185 Wine cheap 65 Winsheim 64 Withay Plain in York-shire 333 A Woman rais'd from the Dead 38 A Woman brought to Bed of Six Boys 9 Of 365 Children 12 13 Of 36 Children 14 A Woman in Mourning 86 A Virtuous Woman 141 Women common 188 Enslaved 186 Oddly cloath'd 47 Padlock'd 169 Curious Works in Paper 7 In Ivory 85 Worms 55 Woorburg 10 Curious Writing 59 Z. Zeist a fine House of the Count Nassaw Odyck 30 The End of the Table of the First Volume A New Voyage TO ITALY With a Description of the Chief Towns Churches Tombs Libraries Palaces Statues and Antiquities of that Country Together with Useful INSTRUCTIONS for those who shall Travel thither By MAXIMILIAN MISSON Gent. Done into English and adorn'd with FIGURES Vol. II. LONDON Printed for R. Bentley at the Post-House in Russel street Covent-Garden T. Goodwin at the Queens Head and M. Wotton at the Three Daggers in Fleet-street and S. Manship at the Ship in Cornhill 1695. A NEW VOYAGE TO ITALY To D. W. VOL. II. LETTER XXIII I Cannot express the Pleasure with which I read your long Letter that part of it especially which assures me that my Letters have given you some Satisfaction I do not intend to trouble you with Reflexions on the present Occurrences in your Country of which you have given me an Account For besides that such a Design would engage me into long and useless Digressions I am perswaded that an Answer to those new Questions which you propose concerning Venice will be more acceptable to you I will endeavour then to answer them succinctly and in the same order in which you have rank'd them and afterwards proceed to entertain you with my Observations concerning Rome I. Your Venetian Gentleman may affirm as positively as he pleases That Venice contains Two hundred and fifty thousand Souls but you must not imagine that because he is a Citizen of Venice he must be a competent Judge of the number of its Inhabitants that is a thing which neither his Eyes nor mine can ever be able to determine nor can it be known without a very diligent and nice Enquiry And therefore I am still of the opinion that this Controversie ought to be decided by the Authority of those who have grounded their Calculations on a careful and particular Examination I told you that the Computation which I follow comprehends the Inhabitants of la Giudeca for I look upon that Island as a part of the City of Venice but I do not include the Isle of Murana In the mean time you must give me leave to tell you that you carry the point too far when you pretend that 't is impossible to make a judgment of the number of the Inhabitants of a great City for if you consider what has been done by Sir William Petty you will be convinc'd that there are rational methods to make such a computation without any considerable Error II. The two great Columns of Granite which are near the Sea at the end of the place call'd the Broglio were brought from * They might have been brought from Egypt to Constantinople and from thence to Venice It was one Nic. Baratier who undertook to fix them in the place where they still remain He ask'd no other Recompence but that he might have leave to set up a Priviledg'd Gaming-house between the two Columns which was granted him Egypt or as some say from Constantinople The Lyon of St. Mark holding an open Book with the Inscription of Pax tibi Marce c. is upon one of these Columns and those are the Arms of Venice The Statue of S. Theodore is on the other Pillar I think I told you that 't is the Custom of the Signiory to erect such Columns in all the Cities under its Dominion Your Friend has misinform'd you who told you that the three great Banners which on Festival days are set up on the Brazen Pedestals over against S. Mark 's Church represent the State of Venice and the two Kingdoms of Cyprus and Candia This I confess is the generally-receiv'd Opinion but 't is as false as common for the Republic's Arms are to be seen without the least difference on all