A Dictionary, Geographical, Statistical, and Historical, of the Various Countries, Places, and Principal Natural Objects in the World, Volume 1Longman, Orme, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1846 - Commercial geography |
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Page 14
... latter northwards it has been partially filled up by the deposits brought down by the Po and the Adige , and is edged by lagoons , marshes , and shoals . On the E. side its coasts are generally high , steep , and rocky , and are broken ...
... latter northwards it has been partially filled up by the deposits brought down by the Po and the Adige , and is edged by lagoons , marshes , and shoals . On the E. side its coasts are generally high , steep , and rocky , and are broken ...
Page 21
... latter was situated a good deal further W. Ac- cording to the Turkish annals , it was founded by Aladdin , one of the Seljuckian sultans . It was the patrimony of Othman , the founder of the Turkish empire , of which it has ever since ...
... latter was situated a good deal further W. Ac- cording to the Turkish annals , it was founded by Aladdin , one of the Seljuckian sultans . It was the patrimony of Othman , the founder of the Turkish empire , of which it has ever since ...
Page 31
... latter being , in many parts , so highly prized and so scarce as to be employed to per- form the functions of money . article is found in various places in the desert , This necessary while dates are found in the greatest abundance all ...
... latter being , in many parts , so highly prized and so scarce as to be employed to per- form the functions of money . article is found in various places in the desert , This necessary while dates are found in the greatest abundance all ...
Page 56
... latter on the N. side of the greater Atlas ; they consist partly of a light oozy soil , as dangerous as quicksands to travellers.The lakes are those of Titteri ; two near Oran , which dry in summer , and from which salt is collected ...
... latter on the N. side of the greater Atlas ; they consist partly of a light oozy soil , as dangerous as quicksands to travellers.The lakes are those of Titteri ; two near Oran , which dry in summer , and from which salt is collected ...
Page 68
... latter to the village of Splüghen in the Rheinwald . At this place the road divides in two . One continues to ascend the valley of the Hinter Rhein to a village called also Hin- terrhein , and passes thence over the high moun- tain ...
... latter to the village of Splüghen in the Rheinwald . At this place the road divides in two . One continues to ascend the valley of the Hinter Rhein to a village called also Hin- terrhein , and passes thence over the high moun- tain ...
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Abyssinia Africa Algiers Alps America ancient Arabia Arabs Asia Austria banks Bedouins Black Sea built called Cape Caspian Sea castle chain church climate coast considerable consists contains corn cotton cultivated Dalmatia Danube declivity desert district elevation empire Euphrates Europe European exports extends extremity feet fertile forests France Galicia Gulph harbour Hedjaz height Herodotus hills houses Hungary Illyria important India inhab inhabitants interior islands lake land latter Lower Austria manufactures miles mountains native navigation nearly occupied Ocean parish Persian plain population port portion principal produce prov provinces race range region remarkable ridges rises river road Roman runs salt shores side silk situated soil Spain species summits Syria table-land town of France town of Naples town of Spain tracts trade traversed tribes Upper Austria valley vessels Vienna village whole Yemen
Popular passages
Page 127 - The temple and the village were deeply bosomed in a thick grove of laurels and cypresses, which reached as far as a circumference of ten miles, and formed in the most sultry summers a cool and impenetrable shade. A thousand streams of the purest water, issuing from every hill, preserved the verdure of the earth and the temperature of the air...
Page 118 - ... feet together, but a little forwards, as if going to lie down. In this 'attitude, having, as it were, taken a 'survey of the road, they slide down with the swiftness of a 'meteor. All the rider has to do, is to. keep himself fast in the...
Page 233 - Their features are far from being disagreeable ; their noses are not flat, nor are their lips thick ; their teeth are white and even, and their hair naturally long and black, it is, however, universally cropped short; in general, it is straight, but sometimes it has a slight curl ; we saw none that was not matted and filthy, though without oil or grease, and to our great astonishment free from lice. Their beards were of the same colour with their hair, and bushy and thick ; they are not, however,...
Page 21 - Afghan character," remarks Mr Elphinstone, " of which it is more difficult to get a clear idea, than the mixture of sympathy and indifference, of generosity and rapacity, which is observable in their conduct to strangers. In parts of the country where the government is weak, they seem to think it a matter of course to rob a stranger, while in all other respects they treat him with kindness and civility. So much more do they attend to granting favours than to respecting rights, that the same Afghan...
Page 118 - ... meteor. All the rider has to do is to keep himself fast in the saddle without checking his beast; for the least motion is sufficient to disorder the equilibrium of the mule, in which case they both unavoidably perish.
Page 251 - ... school system of the empire, but have been the greatest and, indeed, the insurmountable difficulty in the way of a successful political reorganization. Great differences exist in the state of civilization also of the masses of the people of the different provinces. The highest advancement is found in the Italian provinces, where agriculture is carried to the highest perfection, and among the inhabitants of the German provinces. In a lower grade are the Bohemians, Silcsians, and Moravians, who...
Page 117 - M'Culloch. being laid across, ropes constructed of bejucos, a species of thin elastic cane, of the length required, arc thrown over. Six of these ropes are stretched from one side of the river to the other ; two, intended to serve as parapets, being considerably higher than the other four ; and the latter being covered with sticks laid in a transverse direction, the bridge is passed by men, while the mules, being divested of their burdens, are made to swim across. All travellers have spoken of the...
Page 119 - The banana leaves having in the meantime been unrolled, are now spread over the above work, so as to cover it like the tiles of a house. These huts, thus hastily built, are cool and commodious, and Humboldt mentions that he passed several days in the valley of Boquia under one of these leafy tents, which was perfectly dry though...
Page 203 - In 1497, Vasco de Gama doubled the Cape of Good Hope, and...
Page 254 - It prescribes the course and the distribution of the hours of study, from which not the slightest deviation is permitted ; and the scholars of the few private schools are forced to attend the examinations of the public institutions, to ensure their being taught according to the prescribed system.