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A03066 Some yeares travels into divers parts of Asia and Afrique Describing especially the two famous empires, the Persian, and the great Mogull: weaved with the history of these later times as also, many rich and spatious kingdomes in the orientall India, and other parts of Asia; together with the adjacent iles. Severally relating the religion, language, qualities, customes, habit, descent, fashions, and other observations touching them. With a revivall of the first discoverer of America. Revised and enlarged by the author.; Relation of some yeares travaile Herbert, Thomas, Sir, 1606-1682.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650, engraver. 1638 (1638) STC 13191; ESTC S119691 376,722 394

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with a parti-coloured plad or mantle falling no longer than the knees and are impatient if any offer to touch their heads The ordinary food had here not at easie rates is ryce wheat pinange betele ophium goates egs hens coquos plaintains jacks and rack-a-pee so cald 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which drunck immoderately accilerates Death but temperately exhilirates the heart cures fluxes kill wormes and helps digestion To conclude Whence this great and noble I le is called Iava I confesse my ignorance I dare not say from Iavan Iaphets sonne grandson of Noah in that most agree he planted Greece But by reason his own brother Tharsis peopled these parts why might he not from his brothers name to eternize his memory borrow the denomination Nothing else save Pepper presents itselfe in this I le worthy our nothing Pepper is sowne Pepper and in the growth supported by poles or canes about which it entwines and duplicates with many embraces till by maturity it gets the shape and strength of a bushy round and pleasant tree The pepper hangs foure inches in length and one about in many clusters each yeelding fifty or sixtie cornes full round and fragrant the smooth is best accounted of The Cotton more common in Persia and Guzurat is no lesse memorable and usefull The tree is slender streight a yard high and like a bryer Cotter at the top it expands into many severall branches each charg'd with many balls or cods conteining the Bumbast or Cotton the shape is round and equall in bignesse to a Walnut at maturity the cod opens discloses her treasure but being cropt is put in an entire heap and with flayles or such like usefull though churlish instruments is forced out and by the enriched owner cheerefully gathered The Malayan Tongue sounds well and may prove harmony to the ingenious observer in these parts no lesse musicall epedemic than is with us and others the Latine Arabique and Sclavonian English Malay A King Rutgee a Nobleman Oran-kay a Lord Kay a Priest Cadda a Merchant Phetor an Interpreter Iorbissa a Man Oran a Woman Tadon Paran-poan a Child Buda a Boy Catsion a Youth Monda a Father Babba a Mother Mamma a Brother Addal-Ally a Sister Adda-paparas an Uncle Niana a Friend Marty-lowty a Stranger Oran-Leya a Chirurgian Goething an Iron-Smith Goada An Elephant Catgha an Oxe Cambi Alomba a Goat Carbow a Sheep Domba a Dog Hangbé a Bird Borron a Hen Ayam a Duck Bebeé a Musk-Cat Catto-Dalgalia a Sow Sabi Sieleng a Fish Ican a Water-Pot Laude a Herb Oberbedil Lancuos a Musk-Nut Palla a Ship Capel Iunck a Boat Praw Paca-sura a Coat Nasse a Needle Naroen a Custome Negry a Rope Tali a Stone Batu a Ring Chinsim a Wimble Alforees a Shooe Apon a Sword Ita. Padang a Dagger Cryze a Knife Pieson a Javelin Tomba a Sheild Salvack a Gun Bedyl Pitsil a barrell of a Gun Sombo-bedyl a looking-Glasse Sarmi a Glasse Lora a Lamp Pulita a warme thing Penas a Cap or Turbāt Caya a marriage maker Coemodo a Command T'suyka a Yeare Tauwa a Day Aris a Book Nimoda Kitab a Bed Bantell a good Day Tabea a Royall of 8 Serpi a Christian Vrangby All Samoanga The Head Capell Coar Hayre Ramboyet Eares Talinga Eyes Martic Eye-broowes Alys Nose Irotdon Neck Goulon Lips Lambider Tongue Ilat Teeth Auton Beard Tianga Back Balacca Shoulder Baon Arme Backeyen Hand Tangan Finger Iary-laree Belly Penot Blood Darno Privie part Perot T●igh Backy Legg Gula Foot Bhackhyé Toe Ghoumo Fire Api Ayre Baya Water Eyer Earth Zam the Sea Chay Gold Maz. Cabo Silver Peca Salorca Brasse Temba Copper Tambagle Lead Tyma Iron Negle Money Sarfi Scarlet Facca lata-miera Death Mattu Merchandise Bayick Dimana Melancholy Chinta Silke Sabuck Paper Cartas Quills Cazamp Inck Mangsi a Book Khytab Nymoda Wine Aracca Vinegar T'suka Strong Water Pinangha Bread Sagu Boyld Ryce Braas Fruit Tacat Drink Larnick Sugar Gula Salt Garram Matary Oyle Nuagia Flesh Lalyer Fish Ivack Crabs Horrae Plates Pienig Pepper Lada Sihang Ginger Alia Mace Bengo Cloves Chocho Sianck Cynomon Cajumayns Aloes Garro Tamarind Assa Ryce Braas Parce Nuts Calappen Palla Sweet Gums Daringo Sweet Spices Dingyn Plantaines Gardang Cocos Calapa Mustard Sajani Egges Teloor Woe Saya Better Parma Great Bazaer Sweet Manys Heavie Brat Strong Cras Needles Calvenetten Baggs Corni Hard Wax Caju-lacca Friendship Pondarra I Manyr Thou Pakanera Hee Itowen Wee Dep Yee Pachaneras They Itowe Shee Dya Sunday Ion-maheet to Day Mari Yesterday Bulmari the other Day Bulmari-dula Early Pagi Night Malam to Morrow Ysouck What say you Abba-catta Is he not here Beef What 's done Bigimana Well done Soosa Where is it Manauten Bring it back Combali Now Bacabaren How much Barappe itu Give place Lalan Require it Minta Regard Nanthy Let passe Ganga Neare hand Gila We will go Maree Leave it Iangemast I have Ada It is found Botonvum It is Dalan I will bring it Addadizano I see Green I thank you Terimacaché I understand not Tan or tyedae-taw I care Tage I have not Tyeda-da I desire not Tyeda-maw I am sick Bite-secata To eat Macan To remember Engat To stretch out Dusta To beat one another Baccalayo To ashame Malon To choose Damare To pay Chiny To give Bering To buy Bilby To live Iagava To poyson Ampo To observe Doduer To be silent Dyem To gaine Menang To destroy Ilan To cover the head Kocodang To arise Passai To burne Baccar To kill Benue To spin Tuedda To sell Iouwall To do Bretcon To sweare Sempa To help Touloug To us Quia-bota To let blood Bewaeng-darner To question Betangia To know Kyunall To dye Bantaren Take it Ambell Not good Tiedae-Bayck Sloth Checo Give thanks Tarima Casse Farewell Tingal One Satu Two Dua Three Tiga Foure Enpat Five Lyma Six Nam Seven Toufiou Eight De lappan Nine Sambalan Ten Sapola Eleven Sabalas Twelve Dua-balas Thirteene Tiga balas Foureteene Enpat-balas Fifteene Lyma balas Sixteene Nam-balas Seventeene Toufiou-balas Eighteene De lappan-balas Nineteene Sambalam-balas Twenty Dua-pola Twenty one Dua-pola-satu Twenty two Dua pola-dua Twenty three Dua pola-tiga Twenty foure Dua pola-enpat Twenty five Dua pola-lyma We must yet to sea and think us not a little happy that we land so safely 〈◊〉 the Celebes not out of our way to our intended places Our course from Iava hither is North-East from Bantam two hundred leagues or thereabouts Of the Celebes CELEBES by some is cald Makasser I le from her best Citie so called a place for quantitie and quality no way despicable stretching from the Equator 6 degrees South ovall formed two hundred miles long at lest well peopled but with bad people no place ingendring greater Demonomists well agreeing with the old name Ptol. gave them Anthropophagorum regio Mahomet is not unknowne among them but by him a malo in pejus for though he teach them there is one and but one God yet seeing Iesus Christ is unknowne there what does this their
contemplative Tertullian cals them gloriae animalia Apollonius sayes they were and were not earthly their thoughts so transcendent as if they were ravisht by the sweetnesse of that harmony the rolling Orbs in an exact diapazan send forth in their forced Motion Their imaginatiō flew beyond nature beleiving that this Fabrick of the inferiour world was created of nothing and made sphericall yet subject to dissolution that it had an efficient cause it being unable to forme it selfe and that that cause is the commander of nature Our byrth to be no other then a quick conception perfected by death which is the true Nativity of the soule and entrance to immortality A Tenent however oppugned by the Stoicks yet by these Bramyns from the Tradition of the Phenix observation of corne and the like was so maintained that from hence arose that magnanimity of Calanus the Bramyn who to injoy it burnt himselfe in sight of Alexander But how they have by overture of their wits and country forgot these and broacht new opinions more fantastick and rediculous I shall gleane a little out of that their masse of confusion and dedicate it to your attent patience Religion of the Bannyans The Bannyan religion at this day is of these Tenents That the whole frame or body of the world had a beginning created by a God of immense power eternall and provident that after he had made man to associate him created woman to simpathize in similitude of body and disposition These be named Pourous and Parcouty a coople so innnocent and contented that they had no ill thoughts but fed only upon herbs and fruits not touching ought had bloud or life in it From this chast couple sprung two couple of boyes the Embleams of the foure complexions Brammon Cuttery Shuddery and Wise Of different constitutions Bramon melancholy Cuttery chollerick Shudddery flegmatick and Wise sanguin Each affecting his severall calling The first a Priest the second a Warrior the third a Merchant the last a Pesant Brammon the Priest from whom the Brahman have their title and not from Abraham and Keturah as Postellus thinketh was commanded sayes their Shaster or booke of lawes to travell East to finde a wife it being revealed to him that God had formed foure women for him and his brethren on whom to propagate for the reason they had no sisters to generate upon was because so pure and holy a race as they should not discend from filthy Incest After long and tedious pilgrimage and much prayer he espies his long lookt for Virgin cloathed with naked innocence her face yellow like gold her hayre and eyes black of a compleat stature who without much courting he won and marryed this Lady Savatree proved the mother of a holy generation Cuttery was sent west to find his mate his sword in 's hand habited after his nature all the while fretting for want of resistance and that his patience was so long trod upon at length he espies a farre off one comming towards him aequally inflamed with impatience without much complement they forthwith assailed each other with such fury and so much bravery that the first dayes fight the victory was not to be decided next day they renew their courage giving and receiving wounds insensibly till in conclusion Cuttery grapled and seiz'd Toddicastree by the tresses of her haire but instead of subjecting her is by the fresh out breaking of her beauty captivated yet after submission and repentance for his rage against such an earthly Angell shee is reconcil'd and from them the West swarmed with a generation of Radiaes and Souldiers Shuddery the third sonne of Pourous and Parcouty travell North in equall hope to find his Mistresse farre he went and many strange adventures passed thorow and saw witnesse that rock of Diamonds he alight on many of which as any other Merchant would have done he carried along with him enamoured of their lustre and sparkling excellencies till at last he also met Visagundah whom he soone woone being of a tractable sweet nature and condition as be all the Bannyan daughters descended from her and of her begot so many sonnes that the North quickly became pregnant and inhabited Now come we to Wyse the simplest of Sir Pourous sonnes a man of much plaine honesty and comportment Southward goes hee having strange intelligence that his female was thereabouts whom after he had passed seven Seas the breadth and way is concealed in the Shaster and built him a faire Mansion whither Iejunogundah his future wife came to admire so rare a structure he saw her not knowing how to court her is o'recome with Loves passion but long time is rejected and thought basely of till by divine providence shee is mollified and made to yeeld upon condition hee should build many Pagods or Idols for Gods worship and adore pictures under greene Trees and under Arbours which to this day his posterity observe ceremoniously Thus from these two the South was filled with mechanick men and such as practize tillage and husbandry When these foure young men had spent some yeares in those contrary quarters of the world whither Fate had directed them All foure becam equally mindfull of their first home desirous to visit their aged parents not onely to propagate there also and furnish that Meditallium of the earth but also to recount their memorable fortunes and adventures After much circumstance and toile they arrived at the place from whence they came each of them attended by a troope of their owne younglins t is in vaine to decipher the joy and mutuall embraces twixt them and their aged Parents revived by this good hap from the benumming Frost of old age as also the reciprocall kindnesse and love amongst the 4 Travellers a dull sense may easily comprehend it was without all mixture of discōtent or malady Notwithstanding to shew no summum bonum can be had in this life in processe of time the issue of these foure multiplying the world began to lose her virgin purity and candor discord pride and rapine mingling amongst them whereby all brotherly love was layd aside and no appearance now but of violence voluptuousnesse Bramon growes idle and carelesse in his devotion Cuttery becomes insolent and aspiring regarding neither the venerable advice admonition of his Parents nor the dignity of Bramon his elder brother Shuddery also invents deceit not regarding justice nor equity but delights in cheating his other brethren Wyse also growes unthrift in a good conscience banishing his innate honesty to entertaine ryot For which his cruell brother Cuttery domineeres and makes an Asse of him imposing such taxes and burdens on that silly Countryman that Wyse is now the object of casheered ryot and the abject of his Lordly brother who also picks a quarell with Shuddery and admits not of any reconciliation till the poore Merchant had satisfied his Avarice with halfe his store so that such hate and feare grew amongst 'em that all their Designes are involv'd
and was no sooner lodged but is presented from the Queene with a goblet of pure gold massie and of curious work with so many Jewels as out-valued a lac of roupees These he accepts most cheerefully and scorning to be behind in courtesie returnes her and her Lord five hundred Dromidaries swift and beautifull a thousand horses of an excellent good shape and breed some porcellan and other Chyna rarities the Ambassador also presents the Mogull a double of such 2000 horses a thousand Dromidares some sword blades and other gifts of value so great that the report went never any Ambassador came so richly furnished was better entertained or went away more satisfied Never let any Ambassador think himselfe welcome to any Asiatick Prince that brings nothing for a present save complement for not any Native dare petition either the Mogull or any of his great ones without a present Yet is not Normall suited with content so long as Mahobet made frustrate her vowes to have him ruined her power seems small her indeavours idle seeing as she thought his ease was in contempt of her so that her thoughts project her dreames fancie severall waies for his destruction it gladded her in part to see his sonne Zeid-cawn out of imployment and at Court by such as adored her scorn'd and confronted howbeit by Assaphs meane Iangheer affects him yea Normall had not the overflowing hate she bore his Father hindred her had doubtlesse become amorous and made him in Cupids Court Iangheers competitor but spight ore swayes her and revenge predominates she calls Amir●han Nouradri Cooly and Hemyr beg her minions to whom she discovers her desires and intreats their diligence they obey and promise their care and faithfulnesse and with fifteene thousand horse advance to fight with him whiles Normall and the King journey to Cassimeer his ne plus ultra and Assaph-cawn mindfull of Mahobets kindnesse to him loth so brave a man should perish for the lust and malice of a woman and especially by his advantage to draw him to Curroon by a swift and trusty messenger sends him a gracious letter discovering his sisters wrath and resolution and sollicits young Rana Radgee to further him The Queenes Army persecute poore Mahobet who upon receit of Assaph cawns letter after some passion forsakes his cell in Zirmol flies to Gessimeer and thence to Radgee Rana who ever loved him The Army has notice of his flight they dare not enter Ranas country without leave and therefore send post to Queene Normahall who dictates a letter to Rana mixt with intreaties and threats makes Iangheer signe it and after long and swift running is delivered him Radgee Ranna at first contemnes her bravadoes but upon better consideration promises his good-will but thus he perswades Mahobet-cawn in no sort to think him either fearfull or traiterous that if hee pleased he would do his best in his defence against all the power and rage of India yet so his judgement were of any force and to indeare Assaph-chawn he would perswade him since his Enemies were so powerfull and implacable to hast unto Curroon where he should not only be intirely welcomed but agrandize his honour so suddenly that his name would flash terrour into the hearts of his most potent adversaries Mahobet-chan loth to trespasse upon his patience and by the circumstances of his speech judging him fearefull of that army tells him he intended not to be any cause of losse or feare to him or any other in the universe and so mounts to be gone but Rana will not him goe till he promise him a delivery of a pacquet he had intituled to Curroon After long perswasion he accords and with 500 Rashboots and one thousand other men led by Wazir-chan he flyes into Decan where at Guyneer upon the limits of Nisamsha's kingdome he findes Curroon but so affraid of his sudden comming that he instantly armd his men for oppostion yet when he saw the case otherwise and had read his pacquet after some amazement hee imbraces him with unspeakable joy firmes a perpetuall friendship and gives him command of that castle and his other forces All India admire at this agreement and Normall too late repents her folly The mind oft in remorse May wish the thing undone Rage did inforce Qui non mederabitur irae Infectum volet esse dolor quod suaserit et mens Iangheer also blames her incosiderate wrath and growes so afflicted at it that in a deep Melancholy he forsakes his pleasures at Cassimeer and removes towards Lahore but upon the high Mountaines of Bymberrie falls sick and the three dayes end after three and twenty yeares reigne to the astonishment of the Leskar Normals endlesse sorrow and grief of the whole Empyre he dyes suspected of poyson the twelft of October or Ardabehish in the yeare of our accompt 1627 and of the Hegira 1007 Iangheer dyes nominating upon his death-bed his grandsonne Bulloch sonne of Sultan Gushroo his eldest sonne his successor he also sweares all the Umbraves to see him crowned and that Curroon should have no portion nor favour save what he might merit by submission and accordingly conveighing the old Moguls dead body to Lahore where preparing for his funerall they carry it to Tzecander three course from Agray and intomb him in King Eckbars Monument at Delly they crowne Sultan Bullochy aged thirteene yeares their King with all royall accustomed state and ceremony and unanimously cry out alowd Padshaw Salamant i. e. God save the King Normall in Iangheers end feares the beginning of a world of miseries in her selfe and progeny but being of an active spirit and not easily distracted she instantly conceives and swels with the ambition of that Empyre her pregnancy is bettered by her having the whole Treasure in her hands also animated in that Bulloch was too young to nourish opposition his Councell carelesse and Curroon a huge wayes absent thence so that taking occasion by the forehead she arms her selfe with confidence and a pretended Title and resolves to mount her sonne Sheriar to the supreame ascent of Majesty or in the attempt to set all India on fire and consume her self as a sacrifice in so great an action In this humor she hires 15000 horse and sends in post haste to her son in Iengapore to levy as many moe that done she thinks to strangle her brother and Bullochy at that tyme comming towards her But they assured of her bad meaning leave Chotelen with 30000 horse post to Lahore to apprehend Sheryar whom they heard was baffled by Godgee Abdul-Hassen once his stipendiary and then incamped onely with 4000 horse but in the way to prevent Normalls speed after them they block up the narrow passage upon the mountaines through which her Army must needs passe so that ere the Queen could come to joyne with simple Cheryar Assaph-chan Eradet-chan and other Umbraves with the young Mogul in their company come to Lahore where they find Sheryars Army by the
the third and sonne to Selym that arch-Atheist and Emperour of Turq's who call'd himselfe God of the Earth and commander of the whole World squinted still upon the Easterne Monarchs and found none a greater eye-sore and rub to his conquests than Mahomet and Persia many attempts he made to subject it but of no force the happy influence of destiny so safeguarded it Nature it selfe laboured to oppugne that rebell of Nature But let us first look back to see what stormes were rais'd what incantations ingendred ere he could make the tottering Dyadem sit close Tamas-Shaw sonne to Ismael-Sophy the Jewes reputed Messias till by the just hand of God they found him crueller than Tytus by a Georgian Lady they are the rarest in the Orient had twelve sonnes Mahomet Ismael Aydar-cawn Solyman Emangoly Mamut-Ally Mustapha Ally-cawn Amet-cawn Ebrahym Hamze and Izma-cawn the daughters are seldom reckned yet one of them a Virago Periacon-Conna by name plaid her part and rather than do as other women spin or bee imprisoned shee chose to practice Armes and to revive the infamy yea in every thing to imitate Semyramis King Tamas was scarce dead hastned some thinke before his time when Ayder his third sonne took advantage of his brethrens absence Mahomet he jeered at as unworthy the crowne by reason of his imperfection hee could not see to fight to discerne to governe Ismael was abroad upon some imployment and therefore Periacon-Conna encouraging he graspt the Scepter and impald his browes with his Fathers Diadem his brothers right his owne confusion for he had not swayed full foure dayes when Sahamel-cawn his insinuating Uncle most audatiously struck off the crowne and to adde presumption made the losse of his head satisfie his too hasty ambition Zenall-cawn his friend grumbles at it but had not power to question him Periacon-Conna finding her ingagement past to Ayder shewes her selfe a right woman in her constancy for without any revenge of Ayders death or sorrowing to his grave she transfers her love to Ismael who by her foot-post has notice of his brothers ill-end and favour of the Sultans towards him Ambition lends him wings so that he quickly arrives at Casbyn and by men of note is joyfully welcomed by the monster multitude saluted King His conscience accuses him of intrusion but checks him not to make such a construction as Law and Nature required from him he resolves to rule and to cut off such rubbs as made the way unsafe to mount upon his brothers had no title to it I meane none but Mahomet yet the name affrights him 8 innocent Princes were slaine to quench his infernall inflammation regarding neither grace his Fathers soule the perfume of that name the name of Tyrant justice nor the peoples mutability who by that cruelty begun to hate him and to wish the right heyre in his lawfull royalties Mahomet also begins to stirre if not for the crowne at least to free himselfe from his brothers blood-thirstinesse but he no sooner practis'd to bee active when the people ground their loyalty and affection on him and in great troopes flock about him vowing to have him King in Casbyn or in the attemp to sacrifice themselves Whiles Ismael growes odious to God and Man for seeing the vulgar sort and others fall away in a high contempt of them and to ruine all he confederates with the Turq intending to betray the honor of his crowne and to shade himselfe under their greatnesse yea to vex his owne and to ingratiate the Turks the more apostatizes proclaiming the error of the Persian reformation crying out that Ally was no body compared to Mahomets three successors and the like frantick impostures which how subtlely so ere hee cloakt his tricks deceived him for one night a dismall night to him his sister weather-cock and foure inraged Sultans Chalyle Emyr Mohummed and Curchy-cawn entred his bed-chamber in womens apparell where Ismael thinking to coole his lascivious appetite was by those Amazons strangled in a cord of silke foming out his infected spirit unable to resist the fury of those conspirators and disheartned when hee saw his sister one of them Casbyn was clouded with shame and amazement but cleares up when Mahomet enters circled with the refulgent Diadem Periacon-conna dreames not of an account but Mahomet acquainted with her turbulent and variable nature commands Salmasmirza to arrest her with the axe of death which accordingly hee executes and sends her Gorgons head the hayre dishevelling upon a speares poynt as a symboll of his obedience unto the King her complices upon the terrour of this posting for their lives into Georgia some unto Babylon Ecce patrem Nati perimunt Natosque parentes Matuaque armati coëunt in vulnera fratres Thus children slay their Syres parents their brood Armd brethren brethen wound in deadly fewd Amurath the Grand-seignior heares by Vstref-beg an Armenian Traytor of Izmaels catastrophe in whose revenge he so colour'd it to make Mahomet neglected he forages the Persian Territores ordering Mustapha the Bashaw with a hundred thousand men to perpetrate their utmost rage which he greedily obeyes till Sultan Tokomac the Persian Generall affronts him face to face and examines him with such fury in the Calderan plains famous for many memorable conflicts that Mustapha is forced thence in despight of his bravadoes a shamed that 20000 could not only bandy but beat downe his Army consisting of five times his number Six and thirty thousand Turks there breath'd their last and eight thousand Persians Anno Domini 1578. Heg 958 of whose heads the bragging Turk made a Bulwark thinking it would bee a scar-crow to the Persian who retaliated them in a more terrible measure that yeere by the valour of Arez-beg and Emanculy-cawn thirty thousand other Turks parting with their heads as they past the Conac in Hyrcania to erect a higher Trophy to their victory praying Mustapha and his Master to come no more unsent for lest they gave them such another harsh welcome wondring they had so soone forgot the famous overthrow King Tamas gave Solyman and Ebrahim-bassa three and forty yeeres since by a handfull of Coosel-bashaes and the assistance of a divine hand scattering as wind does clouds three hundred and fourescore thousand men Mustapha gives his reply in a grim look wishing hee could do more than hee was able But Mahomet is not yet secure for the Tattars allyed to the Turk in revenge upon Mosendram violate and commit all kinds of rage and turpitude hoping when they had joynd with Osman-bassa left by Mustapha to over-runne all Medya without opposall but they reckned without their host for Arez beg with ten thousand gallant Persians surprise the Tattars with such haste and dexterity that they routed a great part of the Army and had return'd crown'd with a most happy conquest had not Abdel-chery the Generall us'd a stratagem who with some selected companies entring upon the backs of the halfe tyred Persians by great clamours made them beleeve Osman was